Page 2 of 2   <      

Campaign Is a Yawner No Longer

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Miller describes himself variously as a "Virginia Democrat" and "Mark Warner Democrat" and has put together an aggressive team of workers from the winning campaigns of the former governor and his successor, Timothy M. Kaine. (Both men say they are neutral in the primary, although Warner attended a Miller fundraiser scheduled before Webb got in the race.)

But at the gathering in Fairfax, Miller still looked more like the behind-the-scenes guy than the candidate. He gave a somewhat generic Democratic stump speech that was heavy on criticizing Allen for being a "rubber stamp" for Bush.

"George Allen agrees with George Bush 97 percent of the time," Miller said, referring to analyses of Allen's voting record. "I don't even agree with my wife, Deborah, that much, and she's a lot smarter than George Bush."

But Miller carries some liabilities for a Democrat. His role as president of the Information Technology Association of America is more simply translated by the Webb campaign as "lobbyist," not the optimum job title for an office seeker in the post-Jack Abramoff era. And his position on privatizing some public-sector jobs has brought grumbling from organized labor, an important force in the Democratic primary.

Democrats looking for breaks with the party's orthodoxy will find a treasure trove with Webb, who, besides serving as President Reagan's secretary of the Navy, has challenged the party's positions on women in the military, gun control and affirmative action, to name just a few. He has made scorching comments about some of the party's presidents and presidential contenders. Researchers for Miller and Allen are still reading through his seven books and numerous op-ed articles for ammunition.

Webb's unlikely campaign has provided the juice in the race; not many candidates appear on Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report" even before phone lines have been installed in campaign headquarters.

His early opposition to the war in Iraq and his military-expert's critique of the administration's implementation moved his netroots supporters to start an online movement to draft him to run. He has big fans on the liberal Web site DailyKos.com; former Nebraska senator Bob Kerrey is his national finance chairman; and retired Army Gen. Wesley K. Clark, a former presidential candidate, has endorsed his campaign.

"When I was speaking out against the war, very few people -- Republicans or Democrats -- wanted to speak out, but Jim Webb did," said Leslie L. Byrne, the former congresswoman and state senator. "I've seen people who call themselves Democrats, but they don't stand up for Democratic values.''

Off-line and in person, the red-haired, 60-year-old Webb seems an awkward and reluctant campaigner. (Steve Jarding and David "Mudcat" Saunders, the Democratic populists who helped craft Warner's winning 2001 message, will be his tutors.) Trailing behind Byrne at the Fairfax school, he waited to be introduced to the party activists. He seems uninterested in small talk, but he is comfortable talking about the issues he wants to talk about -- defense, societal fairness and what he says is an "overreach" by Bush that has put the country "on the verge of a constitutional crisis." His audience cheered.

But asked by a retired teacher what part of the federal No Child Left Behind law should be abandoned, he said, in essence, that he had no clue. And he gave a long, rambling response to a question about Virginia's proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages, which will be on the November ballot: He is for civil unions, believes marriage is a question best left for religions and expresses concern about the broad nature of the ballot language. "Why not just vote against it?" someone in the audience finally offered.

Allen, 54, is acknowledged, even by Democrats, to be a consummate campaigner, and he started the year with more than $6 million in his campaign fund. But the commonwealth's junior senator also has been less than sure-footed lately as he tries to balance his reelection campaign and his presidential ambitions.

While campaigning in Iowa, he told a New York Times reporter that the Senate was "too slow" for him. Democrats pounced on what they hope will be a key issue: that Allen is not really interested in serving another term in the Senate.

"If he's that bored, he should quit," Miller said.

Instead, Allen's chief of staff, Dick Wadhams, hired to shepherd Allen's national ambitions, announced that he was taking a leave from the Senate office to run Allen's reelection effort in Virginia.


<       2


More from Virginia

[The Presidential Field]

Blog: Virginia Politics

Here's a place to help you keep up with Virginia's overcaffeinated political culture.

Local Blog Directory

Find a Local Blog

Plug into the region's blogs, by location or area of interest.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2006 The Washington Post Company