LOOKING
AHEAD
Graham, Sanford in Oval Office? Could
happen
LEE BANDY
NEW YORKLindsey Graham vs. Mark Sanford for president in
2008?
Don't laugh, it could happen.
Given that 2008 could be wide open, there is a steady hum about
future candidates among those gathered in New York for the
Republican National Convention, which closed Thursday.
They include South Carolina's soon-to-be-senior U.S. senator and
one of his best pals, the occupant of the S.C. Governor's
Mansion.
Graham has been mentioned as a possible candidate by The New York
Times and Congressional Quarterly.
The senator also will make his second trip to Iowa on Oct. 2 to
address a Christian Coalition leadership conference. Three months
ago, he was the keynote speaker at the annual Iowa Republican
Convention. Iowa holds the nation's first presidential caucus.
Sanford has been in New York meeting with prominent business
leaders and doing some networking. He spoke to a group called the
Club for Growth, whose members meet with potential candidates, grade
them and decide whether to support them with money.
Both Graham and Sanford downplay the White House talk - they have
to.
No one talks publicly about seeking the White House. It would be
considered bad form to overlook the current battle between President
Bush and Democratic nominee John Kerry.
The GOP convention is all about 2004 and the re-election of
President Bush.
But there is also a distinct whiff of 2008 about the gathering as
possible contenders for the nomination in four years take the
opportunity to make connections, establish their national
credentials and cater to those who have a say in the primaries.
Graham said he is flattered by all the talk that people think he
has a future beyond the Senate.
"If you want to be promotable," he said, "do the best you can in
the job you've got.
"That's been my philosophy in life. Focus on the moment. Do as
good as you can. Make yourself promotable if that comes along."
State GOP Chairman Katon Dawson said Sanford has a web of
connections across the country that is remarkable.
"I'm in awe of the network of people that he has all over the
country, not only in personal friends but in his ability to
fund-raise. Mark has raised money in 20 to 30 states for himself and
for the Republican Party."
Dawson said Sanford has a lot of support out there. "Mark has got
that kind of star power, that kind of stuff, he says. Mark has a
presence on the national stage. He's a rising star."
Sanford brushes it all off, saying a White House bid is the last
thing on his mind.
The convention is fertile territory for raising one's profile,
and the candidates-in-waiting are not missing any opportunities.
Supporters of both Graham and Sanford say they are really
positioning themselves to be somebody's running mate in 2008.
Should Graham or Sanford choose to seek the presidency, he would
be the first South Carolinian to do so since U.S. Sen. Ernest
"Fritz" Hollings' failed bid for the Democratic nomination in
1984.
Other South Carolinians who have sought the highest office were
the late Strom Thurmond, who ran in 1948 as a segregationist
Dixiecrat; John C. Calhoun, who cut an Electoral College deal with
John Quincy Adams and became vice president; Charles Cotesworth
Pinckney, who lost three bids as a Federalist candidate in 1800,
1804 and 1808; and Thomas Pinckney, who lost in 1796.
Other names being whispered - some more loudly than others - as
potential presidential candidates for 2008 are U.S. Sens. Bill Frist
of Tennessee, John McCain of Arizona, George Allen of Virginia,
Chuck Hagel of Nebraska and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania; Govs.
Mitt Romney of Massachusetts and George Pataki of New York; and
former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Contact Bandy, a political reporter for The (Columbia) State,
at
1-800-288-2727. |