[Mb-civic] Warner's Rising Star - David S. Broder - Washington Post
Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Nov 24 04:43:01 PST 2005
Warner's Rising Star
Following the 'Clinton Route' to the White House
By David S. Broder
Thursday, November 24, 2005; Page A35
RICHMOND -- As awards go, this one was nice enough. The honor that
Virginia Gov. Mark Warner received the other night from the Council of
Chief State School Officers saluted his work not just in his home state
but also in the broader movement to overhaul and improve high schools in
this country.
It was an honor previously bestowed on Bill Clinton, among others, and
was one more step in Warner's path along what might be called "the
Clinton route" toward the White House: the successful stewardship of a
conservative-leaning Southern state, a leadership role in the Education
Commission of the States and the National Governors Association, and a
growing following among fellow Democrats.
But the applause that greeted Warner at the ceremony here was hardly the
highlight of his week. Earlier in the day, in his first foray to New
Hampshire as an unannounced 2008 presidential hopeful, he had found a
turn-away luncheon crowd of 200 state legislators and political
activists at a Manchester restaurant and had been a hit. "An extremely
favorable reaction," state Sen. Lou D'Allesandro told me. "I don't know
him very well, but he's a very impressive guy."
Earlier in the week, Time magazine saluted Warner as one of the five
best governors in the country. And a week before that, he had the
satisfaction of seeing the Democrat for whom he had campaigned all over
Virginia, Lt. Gov. Tim Kaine, win an unexpectedly strong victory over
Republican Jerry Kilgore, who received a last-minute endorsement visit
from President Bush.
Bush won Virginia in both of his own races, but Warner -- barred from
seeking a second term by the state constitution -- has a towering 70
percent job approval rating and clearly provided coattails for Kaine.
"Timing is everything in politics," D'Allesandro remarked, "and Bush
gave him the best publicity in the world when he came into Virginia the
night before the election for Jerry Kilgore. What Warner said then was a
killer: 'If they want to compare what's happening in Washington with
what we've done in Virginia, that's a comparison I'll take any time.' "
When I interviewed Warner after the award ceremony here, his comment on
his good fortune was, "When it rains, it pours." And then he quickly
added that four years earlier, when he was preparing to take office, the
same thing seemed to apply -- in reverse.
His Republican predecessor had left the state with a budget deficit,
which soon ballooned to multibillion-dollar dimensions, as the high-tech
bubble burst and the economy slumped. The first two years of his term,
Warner was forced to cut programs and employees, trying to control the
damage.
At the start of his third year, with the economy recovering, he made a
critical gamble. He proposed a major tax overhaul, eliminating the sales
tax on food but raising other levies more, and toured the state, arguing
that added revenue was needed to fund education, transportation and
social services. With a major boost from business leaders who have a
long tradition of supporting Virginia's superior public universities, he
persuaded enough Republicans in the GOP-controlled legislature to join
him, and the program passed.
Today, with defense and homeland security spending flooding the state,
Virginia has one of the healthiest economies in the country.
As D'Allesandro -- a supporter of John Edwards in 2004 -- commented,
"Warner was able to talk about things he's actually done," an advantage
that governors have over senators. He has made it possible, for example,
for students in every Virginia high school to acquire at least one
semester of college credits -- recognized by even the state's elite
institutions -- along with their high school diplomas.
Warner is not alone in having a governor's credentials. At least two
other Democrats, Bill Richardson of New Mexico and Tom Vilsack of Iowa,
are considering the presidential race (along with three or four
Republican governors). And Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana talks at least as
much about what he did in his two terms as governor as he does about his
Senate career.
Warner and the other Democratic governors face two problems Clinton did
not have to confront. For one thing, the country is now at war -- and
foreign policy and national security loom much larger as qualifications
for the presidency. And for another, there is Hillary Clinton. The
senator from New York was an ally in her husband's climb to the White
House. She looms as a formidable potential challenge to Warner and the
other governors who fancy themselves traveling the same route. But
unlike her, they have all won in states that went for Bush in 2004.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/23/AR2005112301670.html?nav=hcmodule
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