Page 2 of 2   <      

Thompson Already in Race, Blogger Complains to FEC

Clinton Trip Aims to Prove She Can Go Home Again

Former U.S. senator Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.), left, visits the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on Friday. Supporter Mark Wampler holds a sign urging him to make his presidential bid official.
Former U.S. senator Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.), left, visits the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on Friday. Supporter Mark Wampler holds a sign urging him to make his presidential bid official. (By M. Spencer Green -- Associated Press)
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.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has been embracing the role of partisan warrior recently. She has an ad out in Iowa that says ordinary people are "invisible to this president," and during Sunday's debate in Des Moines she noted that she has been fighting against the Republican attack machine for "longer than anybody else up here."

But can Clinton -- whose biggest political problem is the perception that she's "polarizing" -- really afford to be on the attack all the time?

Apparently not. Yesterday, she traveled to Arkansas for an endorsement by the Democratic governor of the state , which voted for Bush in the past two election cycles. She was welcomed to Arkansas by three of the state's Democratic members of Congress and Sen. Mark Pryor, who have all endorsed her, according to the campaign.

Her advisers held up the endorsement trip back to her former home state as proof that Clinton can win support in "red" (Republican) states, making her as viable a general-election candidate as anyone else in the race -- especially Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), whose soothing bipartisan tone has been a hallmark of his campaign.

-- Anne E. Kornblut

AND NUNN FOR ALL

Former Georgia Senator Mulls Bid With Unity08

Former senator Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) has expressed interest in a presidential bid and is now one of 50 people who have discussed a bipartisan or independent presidential run with Unity08, a group founded by Democratic and Republican strategists who believe the two-party system is not helping to address the country's most important problems.

Doug Bailey, a GOP political strategist and adviser to President Gerald Ford who is one of the group's founders, said he and other officials of the group met recently with Nunn. Nunn, who is best known for his work on nuclear non-proliferation, served in the Senate from 1972 through 1996 and now runs an organization called the Nuclear Threat Initiative. He was out of the country yesterday and could not be reached to comment, but he told the Atlanta Journal Constitution in an article published on Sund ay that a presidential run "is a possibility, not a probability."

"My own thinking is it may be a time for the country to say 'Timeout.' The two-party system has served us well, historically, but it's not serving us now," Nunn, 68 told the newspaper.

Nunn would be a surprising Unity08 candidate both because of his longstanding ties to the Democratic Party and the fact that stopping the spread of nuclear weapons, his signature issue, is already represented -- or at least nearly represented -- in the 2008 race by Fred Thompson. The former senator from Tennessee, "Law & Order" TV star and all-but-certain GOP candidate even played the part of the president in a 2005 movie produced by Nunn's nuclear institute called "Last Best Chance," in which terrorists try to obtain materials for nuclear weapons. ("A wake-up call for America and the world," 9/11 commission heads Thomas H. Kean and Lee H. Hamilton said of the movie.)

Nunn is not the only potential office-seeker to have met with Unity08. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) is one of several dozen would-be candidates whom the group has briefed about the mechanics of running outside of the two-party structure.

While the group so far hasn't wooed the millions of supporters it wants, it does have a few high-profile allies, including its own "Law & Order" star power. Sam Waterston, who played Jack McCoy to Fred Thompson's Arthur Branch, is listed as a Unity08 supporter.

-- Perry Bacon Jr.


<       2


© 2007 The Washington Post Company