Harold Ford: I Coulda Been A Contender

SARA KUGLER   03/ 2/10 11:00 AM ET   AP

Harold Ford Jr

NEW YORK — Former Congressman Harold Ford Jr. returned to his job as an MSNBC pundit on Tuesday, one day after announcing he wouldn't run for U.S. Senate in New York, and said he would have won the primary but worried that the intraparty battle would have emboldened Republicans.

Ford, who represented a Tennessee district in the U.S. House, had been publicly exploring a possible Democratic primary challenge in New York, but announced Monday night in a New York Times op-ed that he wouldn't run. He said Tuesday on MSNBC that he hopes "another opportunity presents itself."

Ford said he doesn't want to divide the party and risk strengthening the Republicans' chance to take Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's seat. She was appointed last year when Hillary Rodham Clinton became U.S. secretary of state.

"It would have been a close, tough, tough fight," he said Tuesday. "The last thing I wanted to see was for this seat to go Republican."

Ford moved to New York after losing the 2006 U.S. Senate race in Tennessee, taking a job with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. He had spent the past seven weeks traveling the state and meeting with voters, Democratic dignitaries and elected officials to gauge support for a potential campaign.

Many in the Democratic establishment are backing Gillibrand, including the White House and New York Sen. Charles Schumer, and sought to discourage Ford from running. In Ford's op-ed, he complained of the party's "campaign to bully me out of the race," claiming it showed Democrats are nervous.

Gillibrand ignored Ford when he first declared he was testing the waters. But after Ford began regularly challenging her, the race that was not yet a race quickly turned ugly.

Ford called Gillibrand various names, including a hypocrite, a liar, an unelected senator and a parakeet who takes positions based on whatever party leaders tell her to do.

Gillibrand sought to paint Ford as a wealthy carpetbagger who cares only about his Wall Street friends and who has tried to hide the conservative streak that made him popular in Tennessee.

As a congressman, Ford described himself as "pro-life," said illegal immigrants should be deported if caught and voted for a constitutional amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

Gillibrand spokesman Glen Caplin said that no matter who her opponent is this fall she would "wage a vigorous campaign on her strong record and her vision for New York."

The news about Ford was greeted with relief by some Democrats who feared a protracted primary battle would leave them vulnerable to a Republican challenge in November. State party chairman Jay Jacobs said Ford "sacrificed his opportunity for the greater good."

"I'm very pleased that he made that decision," Jacobs said. "I had stressed to him we need the Democratic party unified."

Those believed to be considering runs on the GOP line include real estate tycoon and Daily News publisher Mortimer Zuckerman and former George W. Bush administration adviser Dan Senor. Attorney Bruce Blakeman has declared his candidacy.

Ford would have faced the challenge of running without wide support from New York's Democratic power brokers.

Gillibrand has spent months lining up endorsements from labor unions, politicians and interest groups crucial to Democrats running statewide races. She has been endorsed by leaders of 59 of New York's 62 county party organizations, including those in Democrat-heavy Manhattan and the Bronx.

___

Associated Press writer Michael Hill contributed to this story from Albany.

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NEW YORK — Former Congressman Harold Ford Jr. returned to his job as an MSNBC pundit on Tuesday, one day after announcing he wouldn't run for U.S. Senate in New York, and said he would have won ...
NEW YORK — Former Congressman Harold Ford Jr. returned to his job as an MSNBC pundit on Tuesday, one day after announcing he wouldn't run for U.S. Senate in New York, and said he would have won ...
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09:05 AM on 03/03/2010
How could Ford have won the primary when the polls showed that Gillibrand was beating him by thirty points, down from twenty last week?

The fact that he's blaming Schumer and the party regulars for his departure fools nobody. The public dislike he generated was his own fault entirely.
03:44 AM on 03/03/2010
wow worked for Bank of America for the last 4 years??

sounds like the real reason he dropped out.
01:11 AM on 03/03/2010
He's the only support he had . . .well . . .his family of course. Hailing from Nashville, I can say that nobody here cares, since he ran and lost here first. What on earth would make him think he could win New York? Because his wife worked for the fashion industry?
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kynycmbp
11:00 PM on 03/02/2010
Mr. Ford. Believe whatever you want, just stay out of New York politics.
09:53 PM on 03/02/2010
He says he knows he could have won. If that was true, which it isn't, he would not have given up.
When will they learn, you cannot parachute into some place you don't belong.
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07:32 PM on 03/02/2010
The political book that has been written on Harold Ford after his amateurish attempt at the senate seat for New York has left him unelectable anywhere else in the country. That makes it tough for him to also sramble for some political appointment.
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robjh1
That Job Just Isn't Into You!
06:21 PM on 03/02/2010
He was a better congressman in Tennessee. He was conservative which I liked, but to wake up one day and decide let's run for Senator of New York and change positions on everything is a bit too much for me to swallow. I listened to his spill on MSNBC this morning. He came across as sincere and true to the cause but the overnight obvious flip flop (which all politicians do mind you) was to up in your face (not that others aren't).

While comtemplating a run, he seemed more concerned on making a name for himself in NYC being a darling of the town than being true to himself and beliefs on politics. Now that he isn't running he wants to blame the party. Well hello Harold when you don't do what the party wants of course they are going to bully you. Get over it! It's called politics. What do you expect. The same would happen if he were in the potential opponents shoes.

"and we are not saved..."
04:13 PM on 03/02/2010
we never bought it, ford. go away.
03:59 PM on 03/02/2010
Maybe I'm nitpicking here but "coulda"? Seriously? Out of all the times people say "could have" they choose to write that he said "coulda"? COULDA?
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03:32 PM on 03/02/2010
Not to worry. We are not likely to run out of contenders for the Greatest Show On Earth...the US Congress.
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Eris23
Justice is in indefinite detention.
03:18 PM on 03/02/2010
Don't go away mad. Just go away.
03:18 PM on 03/02/2010
if thats true why give up ? Gillibrand, isn't great - Schummer is worse.
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melton244
02:00 PM on 03/02/2010
You can keep telling yourself that....but it is a LIE. Will you just please go away and go spend your 2 million dollars that you got paid for nothing out of the TARP???... You are the morning ho that will not go away.
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ECB
Your micro-bio is empty
01:34 PM on 03/02/2010
If "If" and "buts" were Candy and Nuts we would all have a Merry Christmas.
01:01 PM on 03/02/2010
Mr. Ford, having read your NYT explanation of why you did not run, I have one thing to say: 'Grow up'.

If you are not inline with the state party that you want to represent, they will not support you.

You have created the impression you are more in tune with the highly unpopular wall street people, then the people on the street.