It’s official! Kaine takes DNC post

It’s official! Kaine takes DNC post

AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

President-elect Barack Obama announces Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine as the new Democratic National Committee chairman in Washington.

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WASHINGTON — President-elect Barack Obama introduced Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine as the new chairman of the Democratic National Committee yesterday, saying the two men share a “pragmatic progressive” political philosophy.

During a short appearance at the party’s headquarters on Capitol Hill, Obama called Virginia “a state that reflects America” and referred to Kaine as a “good friend,“ who governs “not by appealing to our divisions but by appealing to our common hopes.“

“We must build a movement for change that can endure beyond a single election,“ Obama said, a theme Kaine echoed.

“We’re not the ideologues, the obstructionists, the gridlock folks. We’re the problem-solvers,“ Kaine said.

Kaine, who has a year remaining in his term as governor, said shortly after the No vember election that he had no interest in the job.

But he suggested Obama had convinced him otherwise.

“You proved to me in this discussion what you proved to Americans in the year before — that you are a very persuasive individual,“ said Kaine said.

As the incoming president, Obama is the de facto party head. The president custom arily designates his party’s chairman.

Kaine, a national co-chair man of Obama’s campaign, was the first governor outside of Illinois to endorse Obama outside of Illinois. He later was a finalist to be Obama’s running mate.

Virginia Republican Party chairman Jeffrey M. Frederick called Kaine’s appointment disappointing. When Virginia “needs its elected leaders to come together,“ [Kaine] “breaks yet another pledge, this time taking a job he said he wouldn’t accept,“ Frederick said.

Kaine said shortly after Election Day that the party chairmanship would take “my eye too much off the ball.“

Then-Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore chaired the Republican National Committee during the final year of his gubernatorial term in 2001-02.

Despite predictions that Gilmore’s national leadership role would help Virginia Republicans, Virginia has votedbecome more Democratic since.

The shift was highlighted in November when Obama be came the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the stateVirginia in 44 years.

Kaine and Obama took no questions at their 10-minute joint appearance.

Kaine inherits the chairman ship of the Democratic Party from former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who launched a 50-state strategy to grow the party’s base and expanded the use of voter-contact technology first tested in Virginia state Senate elections in 2007.

Obama credited Dean with ushering in a “new era in Washington,“ involving more people in politics. The party re
ported it received 1.1 million new donors in the past three years, with the average donor giving $63.88.

 

Contact Neil H. Simon at (202) 662-7669 or .

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Flag Comment Posted by Dave on January 09, 2009 at 8:13 am

In times past people who did what Kaine is doing (and what Gilmore did too) were called ‘toadies’ and ‘lackeys’, but we live in more enlightened times when we call them ‘problem solvers’. In times past people also had a firmer grasp of concepts like honor and duty, but opportunism trumps all today.

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