Dean's drop-out reshapes DNC chair fight
Politico:
DENVER Keith Ellison came to Colorado seeking to cement his position as the front-runner for Democratic National Committee chairman. But the Minnesota congressman ended the week in worse shape than when it started.
Just hours after Ellisons role as the favorite was thrown into question by a stinging condemnation of his past statements about Israel by the Anti-Defamation League a move Ellison and his allies vigorously rebutted former Chairman Howard Dean dropped his comeback bid and bowed out of the race, scrambling an already complicated contest.
The three remaining announced candidates for the chairmanship Ellison, New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Raymond Buckley, and South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Jaime Harrison spoke to state party officials from across the country for nearly two-and-a-half hours here at the Association of State Democratic Chairs meeting, exhaustively laying out their hopes for a rejuvenated party in displays that appeared to leave the DNC membership just as unsure of its next leader's identity as when it entered the room.
The result is a race thats even more of a muddle, with the likelihood of additional candidates jumping in prior to Februarys vote. Ellison himself appeared to recognize his tenuous position, and pledged in his strongest terms yet to consider giving up his House seat if he gets the chairs role. He pleaded with attendees to keep an open mind as he insisted the DNC would be his top priority, while the other candidates and Dean, in his pre-recorded video insisted over and over that the decimated party needs a full-time chair.