Minnesota
Related: About this forumFresh from big Minnesota win, Sen. Amy Klobuchar swept up in presidential speculation
WASHINTON Two weeks before she was resoundingly re-elected to a third term, Sen. Amy Klobuchar took a day off the campaign trail in Minnesota to stump for local candidates in a state shes visited a handful of times in her political career: Iowa.
Visits by ambitious politicians to the state with the first-in-the-nation caucus always fuel presidential speculation, and Klobuchar in recent months has experienced her turn in that national media spotlight. With a high-profile role in the U.S. Senate fight over Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh followed by her overwhelming win in the politically pivotal Midwest, Klobuchar is the subject of presidential buzz as Democrats start to search for an opponent to President Donald Trump in two years.
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Klobuchar has had at least one conversation about a national campaign, with a man whos been a political mentor and who once led a presidential ticket himself. Former Vice President Walter Mondale said in an interview that, about five months ago, he urged Klobuchar to run for president. She got that engine that Humphrey had, Mondale said, in reference to another Minnesota politician who ran nationally, Hubert Humphrey, who also served as vice president. They never get tired they just go and go and go.
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If Klobuchar gets in, it will test of whether her centrist, low-key style can translate onto the national stage. She has not embraced some issues championed by rising stars of the left, like Medicare for all. Her fellow senators from coastal states like California and New York are closer by proximity to the partys largest donor bases. And with Latino and black voters key to Democrats campaign strategy, Klobuchars political base in a less diverse state like Minnesota leaves her without a track record of mobilizing voters of color.
Klobuchar is disadvantaged because she does not already have a national profile, and may be too moderate to excite a Democratic base, said Jennifer Victor, a political-science professor at George Mason University.
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http://www.startribune.com/fresh-from-big-minnesota-win-amy-klobuchar-swept-up-in-presidential-speculation/501184021/
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I am not sure. I think that after Obama, and Sanders, and Trump, a presidential candidate has to be able to excite audience during campaign stops. And I don't think she can run as a V.P. - traditionally the "attack dog."
dem4decades
(11,917 posts)InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,559 posts)question everything
(48,839 posts)The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,913 posts)She doesn't have much charisma, and as a senator (she's one of mine) she has tended in the past to be pretty wishy-washy on really controversial issues. I will say that she seems to have improved a bit in that respect and she did very well at the Kavanaugh hearing. I don't see her as a very effective presidential candidate, though.
geardaddy
(25,346 posts)I think she'd be a good VP pick or have a seat in a Dem cabinet. She definitely was wishy-washy when she started out. I'm pleased to see her taking a bit more of a stand on things now, though.
Eric J in MN
(35,620 posts)But if the next president is a centrist then I hope its Klobuchar.