Sunday, April 17, 2005

Election '08: Wes In

According to Mark Kleiman, it looks like Wes Clark is in for '08. It will be interesting to see him take on (presumably) Hillary Clinton, given that the General was Clinton's private choice for the '04 nomination after Kerry's early primary campaign looked moribund. Personally, I'm interested in hearing what Clark has to say. I was against him in '04, but only because I couldn't be sure this guy was a Democrat. It was, after all, his first political campaign ever. But the man seems to have stuck with it, so I guess he deserves a look.

On a side note, prior to joining the '04 fracas, Clark was seen as a good friend to Dean, a candidate who was disliked by the Clinton wing and now the head of the Democratic party. How that will affect the '08 primaries is anyone's guess.

4 comments:

Garrett said...

I believe the only reason right now to even have Hillary running is so Republicans will spend tons of money destroying her, and hopefully won't have enough in the tank to trash whoever actually gets the nomination.

Pepper said...

It will not be Rice. Not because she said she wouldn't run (we all know that means nothing), but for the same reason it won't be McCain. The church fundies won't vote for her. That's the consequence of 20+ years of sucking up to the Christian right, at first you own them, now they own you.

Garrett said...

I agree. There won't be a pro-affirmative action or pro-life GOP candidate any time particularly soon.

Anonymous said...

2008 is way too soon for the US to see a two-woman presidental race. If the Dems put Hillary up, the GOP would be sure to have a traditional alternative, or imagine the outrage from the far right. Rice wouldn't make it through the primaries.

Clark was a quality candidate who just entered way too late... If everyone hadn't falled into the electability trap with Kerry, they might have seen that there were other candidiates who could have been dynamic and GOTV. I particularly like that Clark's health-insurance-for-all-kids plan (traditional Democrat stuff in '04, but) defined "kids" as up to age 22 to make sure college students could still get coverage from somewhere.