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2016 Postmortem
Showing Original Post only (View all)Are Republicans Scared of Al Franken? [View all]
SNL star-turned-senator isn't drawing much early GOP opposition.
By Michael Catalini
Updated: January 9, 2013 | 8:57 a.m.
January 9, 2013 | 9:00 a.m.
After winning election by the narrowest of margins in 2008, Sen. Al Franken looked like one of the GOPs most inviting Senate targets in 2014. But instead, the party is facing the reality that Franken is proving to be a much more resilient opponent than expected, and his uncontroversial first term is raising doubts about whether Republicans can even recruit a first-tier candidate against the former Saturday Night Live funnyman.
"You can't play handball in an open field. At this point there's been no candidate," said former GOP Sen. Norm Coleman, who lost to Franken in the 2008 race. "He's been pretty much invisible. In that sense he hasn't created a lot of enemies. I don't know if that's his strategy, but it's a pretty good strategy if it is.
The list of potential, formidable candidates is short. Coleman, in an interview with National Journal, categorically said he wasnt going to run for the Senate in 2014, denying the GOP one of its best-known possible challengers. Rep. Erik Paulsen, a popular House member from the Twin Cities suburbs, telegraphed his own hesitance about jumping into the Senate race on a local radio show. Coleman touted Rep. John Kline, another swing-district Republican, but he has passed up previous statewide bids in favor of building up tenure in the House. And Rep. Michele Bachmann, who would be formidable in a primary, would be the Democrats dream challenger, given her high unfavorables even back home. She barely won re-election in a solidly-Republican House district in 2012.
Whats clear is that Minnesota Republicans are wary of jumping head first into the contest, despite the obvious opportunities against Franken. After the 2012 elections, Republican Senate candidates Shelley Moore Capito and former South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds immediately announced their campaigns against Sens. Jay Rockefeller and Tim Johnson. By contrast, theres barely been a peep from potential Franken challengers.
-snip-
http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/are-republicans-scared-of-al-franken-20130109
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Invisible? In the sense that's he's not bloviating on the TV every other night, yeah,
gkhouston
Jan 2013
#10