Posted on 01/14/2004 11:51:11 AM PST by WKB
Trent Lotts fall from political grace a year ago dashed the hopes of Mississippians who saw the then-Senate majority leader as presidential material.
A Mississippian has never occupied the White House, and in Lott a polished, handsome politician with national name recognition many in the state saw a native son who would finally break the presidential drought.
In the fall of 2002, when Lott suffered a rare lapse of judgement and decided to wax nostalgic about the 1940s segregationist candidacy of Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond, a second prominent Mississippian had long been harboring and pursuing his own presidential ambitions, Republican insiders suggest.
Haley Barbour was sworn in Tuesday as Mississippis 63rd governor, but its the possibility of a much grander inauguration that motivated the Yazoo City residents re-entry into electoral politics after two decades as a successful lobbyist and Republican power broker.
Haley for President. In 2008.
No joke.
Three prominent Mississippi Republicans, none of whom claimed first-hand knowledge of Barbours presidential plans, told this columnist that all signs point to a Barbour run to succeed a term-limited President Bush, who is heavily favored to win re-election this year. Contacted Friday, Barbour spokesman Quinton Dickerson discounted the presidential talk, saying the governor-elect is focused on serving Mississippians for the next four years.
Barbours own actions, however, are consistent with a presidential aspirant.
There was the nagging question two years ago, when Barbours name first surfaced as a possible gubernatorial contender, of why he would leave the prestige and wealth of a multimillion-dollar Washington lobbying firm that he built from scratch, divest himself of its substantial profits, and take a job in Mississippi that pays less than $200,000 a year. Im not doubting Barbours sincerity about serving the people of his home state. One of the many failed components of Gov. Ronnie Musgroves re-election campaign was trying to cast Barbour as a Washington outsider who came home to Yazoo City only to run for governor.
Fact is, Barbour never left. As publisher of the weekly newspaper in Yazoo City during the late 1990s, Id often go to the office on Saturday mornings to catch up on paperwork. A familiar site was Barbour strolling up the sidewalk, dropping his quarters in the coin-operated rack and pulling out his weekend copy of The Yazoo Herald. When the work week ended on Friday, Barbour was on a plane to Mississippi to be with his wife and kids, whove never lived in Washington.
Barbours affection for his home state is genuine, and voters rightly rejected Musgroves suggestion that Barbour decided to re-embrace his Yazoo City roots for political expediency. That said, there are many wealthy native sons from John Grisham to Jim Barksdale to Bob Pittman who are passionate about their home state and its success but who arent giving up millions to run for governor. If Barbour indeed has presidential ambitions, he needed an elected platform from which to make the jump. The jump from lobbyist and national party chairman to presidential candidate is improbable, if not impossible. Southern governors, on the other hand, have beaten a relatively smooth path to the White House over the past quarter-century.
See Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. For Barbour, the timing is right. A Bush re-election victory this year leaves the GOP nomination wide open in 2008 with no obvious front-runners. The presidents brother, Jeb, wants the job, but the GOP is unlikely to nominate consecutive Bushes. Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and, to a lesser extent, New York Gov. George Pataki have star power in the wake of Sept. 11, but a pro-choice New Yorker is unlikely to fare well in GOP primaries, where conservatives dominate. Barbours biggest competition could be former U.S. Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, who has kept a high profile by pinch-hitting for conservative talk-show host Bill OReilly on the Fox News Network. If the circumstances are right for a Barbour presidential bid, so are his credentials.
Barbour shattered all fund-raising records in claiming the Mississippi Governors Mansion. Imagine how much he could raise on the national level. The contacts Barbour built as national Republican Party chairman and as a successful lobbyist extend around the world. In addition to his fund-raising prowess, Barbour, in just a few hours on the telephone, could put together volunteer networks in all 50 states, much like he did on a county-by-county basis in Mississippi. After years on the Sunday morning and weeknight talk-show circuits, hes got good name recognition from coast to coast.
Hes as skilled a campaigner and strategist as any Republican out there. Barbour charted new territory during his recent gubernatorial campaign by utilizing the latest technology to help turn out a record number of voters. (Whens the last time we ordinary Joes got a phone call from the president of the United States asking us to vote for a Mississippi gubernatorial candidate?)
Barbour is comfortable before any audience. His Southern charm and easy mannerisms play well on television. As party chairman in the 1990s, Barbour plotted a middle-of-the-road course that served Republicans well with swing voters. Hes conservative enough to pacify the partys right wing, but not so strident as to turn off moderate Republicans and so-called Reagan Democrats.
Having not held elected office in Washington, Barbour wont have a voting record for opponents to dissect. In Mississippi, the issues Barbour will deal with as governor wont offer much fodder for a national campaign.
His biggest challenge will be defending some of his lobbying associations, from Big Tobacco to the Mexican government. But Barbour got good practice on that front, fending off Musgroves relentless attacks during the fall.
The best Barbour scenario is a good four years as governor, fueled by a rebounding economy, setting up a presidential announcement in 2007. Look out, Hillary.
Steve Stewart is former editor and publisher of The Yazoo Herald and is presently editor and publisher of the Clarksdale Press Register.
Agreed. Gov. Owens of Colorado...Gov. Benson of NH...Sen. George Allen of VA...Gov. Jeb Bush of FL...Marc Racicot...
Personally, I don't see Haley Barbour as a POTUS candidate...
Unless you count the one in Richmond, Virginia...
Are you serious? Think "Haley's Comet," and not some over-the-hill English actress who starred in Disney films three or four decades ago.
Names do matter in politics which is why I knew GORE would not win. But a first name of Haley is a girl's name and an impediment to the presidency? No way. I'll grant you some "modern day parents" have taking to naming their girls Haley, but they've not hi-jacked the name to feminism entirely.
His full name is Haley Reeves Barbour, and I'll bet that were he a democrat governor, many babies would be named after him. Heck, some smart parents still might.
Now, I'll grant you we'll not ever elect a president or a mayor named walkingfeather. :)
He looks and sounds Southern 'cause he is. He's charming, he's smart, he's from the humblest of beginnings, and there's not a finer or more wholesome, self-made man in politics today.
I agree with you, however, "he'll either gain traction of he won't." If folks give him a chance, they'll love him. Haley is one pol, whose life is a open book and its pages are all clean.
WHO DAT?
You have the mindset of a democrat. Barbour and Rice would be unbeatable or vice versa.
Funny, 'cause I find that New England, Yankee accent of JFK and the like, absolutely unbearable.
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