McAuliffe wants nod for governor
P. Kevin Morley / Times-Dispatch
Terry McAuliffe entered the race for governor Wednesday and vowed to donate his salary to charity if he wins.
SLIDESHOW:
McAuliffe enters governor’s race
Published: January 8, 2009
-- Terry McAuliffe doesn't need the money, but he wants the job.
The boisterous multimillionaire national political operative yesterday formally entered the Democratic contest for governor, concluding a five-month campaign strip tease.
McAuliffe promised to donate the governor's $175,000-a-year salary to charity should he be elected.
Unlike the two veterans of Virginia politics he faces in the June 9 Democratic primary, McAuliffe is an outsider. At a Richmond stop, he cast that as a positive, saying if he takes over state government, he will "shake it up."
McAuliffe is a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee -- a post to be filled this month by the man he hopes to succeed: Timothy M. Kaine. McAuliffe, 51, of McLean, also is a confidante of Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Emphasizing his credentials as an investor and manager, McAuliffe said Virginia needs a business plan to jump-start job creation and lure big corporations that are locating elsewhere.
Expanded employment would be a priority from the moment "I get out of bed every day," McAuliffe told about 70 people during a town hall-type meeting at the Science Museum of Virginia.
McAuliffe's candidacy heightens interest in the Virginia election, adding celebrity to a contest that along with the only other gubernatorial race this year, in New Jersey, might be viewed as an early referendum on the Obama presidency.
Earlier yesterday, McAuliffe opened a weeklong, 16-stop swing in Norfolk. In Richmond he urged mandatory requirements for power companies to use renewable energy.
McAuliffe also vowed improvements that have partially or fully eluded Kaine and former Gov. Mark R. Warner, now a U.S. senator: expanded pre-kindergarten for 4-year-olds and pushing teacher salaries to the national average.
That McAuliffe is new to Virginia politics and the demands of a candidacy seemed evident.
In his remarks, McAuliffe referred to himself as the "next governor of Richmond." And during a question-and-answer session with his audience, McAuliffe was gently chided by one man as a "come-here" -- Virginia shorthand for a nonnative.
"I doubt that anyone who has lived in the state 20 years . . . doesn't understand the issues here in Virginia," replied McAuliffe.
McAuliffe said he will not criticize his primary opponents, former Del. Brian J. Moran of Alexandria and state Sen. R. Creigh Deeds of Bath. McAuliffe said both are "good, honorable men."
McAuliffe blasted the all-but-certain Republican nominee, Attorney General Bob McDonnell, as a conservative ideologue who had thwarted Kaine on new funding for roads and rails, and Warner on additional dollars for schools, police and human services.
Both relied on new taxes opposed by McDonnell, who was endorsed yesterday by former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Kaine failed three times to raise taxes, but Warner won a $1.4 billion biennial increase in 2004.
McAuliffe would not rule out higher taxes, but said they are indefensible during a recession.
McAuliffe, accompanied by his wife, Dorothy, and their five private-school-educated children, picked up what may be his first legislative endorsement: Del. Franklin P. Hall, D-Richmond.
Hall, toppled as House minority leader in a 2006 coup led, in part, by Moran, said he is backing McAuliffe because, "It's hard to say no to the man who gave your son his first job out of college."
Contact Jeff E. Schapiro at (804) 649-6814 or
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Reader Reactions
What a “scumbag”!
bobcitydoc: Man, talk about ‘fightin’ words’! As for the part about kids in private schools for security. What does that say about the public schools? Don’t you think all kids need to be secure and safe in all schools? Why aren’t politicians talking about that instead of ‘leaving no child behind’? Oh, and if you don’t want the navy base then provide your own protection. As for the W.Va. remark, well ‘ I resemble that remark’! Wanta hear muh hog call? SOOOOOOOOEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
Without NOVA, Virginia is nothing more than West Va with a beach and a Navy base. That said, perhaps instead of pointing out that his children attend private school, you should tell us when an elite of any stripe sends their kids to public school, that would be newsworthy. Anyway, as long as he pays his taxes, him sending his kids to private school merely affords more resources to those kids in public school. Plus, the rich send their kids to private schools at the urging of the executive protection firms they hire.
Northern Virginia is not the state of Virginia. It’s Southern Connecticut. Living in NoVa does not qualify McAuliffe. In fact, McAuliffe has no qualifications. I’m really disappointed in Frank Hall. I understand him doing all he can to get rid of Moran, but don’t shuffle into the Clinton slime with this guy.
It’s not clear just what Terry McAuliffe hopes to achieve as governor of Virginia. Or governor of anywhere. How is it that raising buckets of money qualifies him to run a government? It’s a sad commentary on what “government” consists of in this country today. As for this story, it is another example of the partisan name-calling the Times-Dispatch engages in and expects us to accept it as news.
‘has lived in the state 20 years’—Living in northern Virginia while serving in the federal government doesn’t serve to acquaint a person with ‘issues in Virginia’. He understands ‘issues in Virginia’ like Kaine does. Both think the ‘issues in Virginia’ are to remake the state in the image of a Democratic wonderland. You know, statist centralization, nanny state sensibilities and power-to-the-highest bidder. It’s bad enough watching it in other states and in D.C. Do we really want to jump on the bandwagon?
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