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Bob Kerrey Announces He Won't Run For Nebraska Senate Seat In 2012

Bob Kerrey Nebraska Senate

MARGERY A. BECK   02/ 7/12 05:16 PM ET  AP

OMAHA, Neb. — Former Sen. Bob Kerrey on Tuesday rejected a comeback run for Senate, dashing Democrats' hopes of holding a coveted Nebraska seat and leaving the party to scramble for a race all but guaranteed to go Republicans' way.

Many saw Kerrey, a 1992 presidential candidate and former governor, as Nebraska Democrats' only chance to avoid delivering Republicans one of four seats they must net in November to take control of the Senate.

Kerrey kept Democrats on hold for more than a month while contemplating whether to seek the seat being vacated at the end of the year by Ben Nelson, the lone remaining Democrat in the state congressional delegation.

"I have given the decision of becoming a candidate for the U.S. Senate very serious thought and prayer," Kerrey said in an email announcing his decision. "To those who urged me to do so, I am sorry, very sorry to have disappointed you. I hope you understand that I have chosen what I believe is best for my family and me."

He also said he was "very sorry to have disappointed" those who urged him to run, but later rejected the assertion that his decision essentially ceded the seat to the GOP in the increasingly conservative state.

"Do the odds favor whoever wins the Republican primary winning the general election? The answer is yes. The numbers show that. Does that mean that absolutely that they're going to win? No," Kerry said in a telephone interview from his office in New York City.

Democratic strategist Doug Schoen, who worked for President Bill Clinton, flatly disagreed.

"I think the seat is lost," he said.

That Democrats' best hope was Kerrey, who left the Senate and the state more than a decade ago, reflects the lack of depth on the state's Democratic bench. The party now must find someone to run as little more than a placeholder at the top of the ticket. And the filing deadline for anyone already holding an elected office is next Wednesday.

"There are a lot of things we will be looking at in a very compressed period of time," said Democratic Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha, who has expressed interest in the seat. "I think there are always challenges, even when you have two years to run for office."

Democrats already have lost one touted prospect in Kim Robak, who served as lieutenant governor under Nelson in the 1990s. Robak, now a lawyer and lobbyist in Lincoln, said she doesn't feel she would have enough time to raise the money for an effective campaign.

"There is the potential for somebody who wants to spend the time and energy – who is able to spend the time and energy," Robak said.

University of Nebraska Regent Chuck Hassebrook also said he is interested in running. Three others have filed for the Democratic primary, but none have held public office and only one has reported having any money on hand for a campaign.

Conservative groups already had been running anti-Kerrey ads in anticipation of a run, but Republicans now will be able to focus on a slew of other states – including Missouri, Wisconsin, Ohio and Virginia – where they believe they have a good shot at turning Democratically held seats.

"Kerrey's decision to stay in New York is a blow to the Democrats' hopes of holding their Senate majority and reiterates why we believe Nebraskans will elect a fiscally-responsible, conservative Republican senator next fall," the National Republican Senatorial Committee said in a statement.

The GOP's Senate primary ticket in Nebraska already is crowded. It includes state Attorney General Jon Bruning, state Treasurer Don Stenberg, state Sen. Deb Fischer, and investment adviser Pat Flynn. A fifth candidate, Steven Zimmerman, has filed for candidacy, but has raised no money since joining the race last year.

But Matt Canter, a spokesman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said the party is not giving up on the state and implied the crowded GOP ticket could work to Democrats' advantage.

"As we have seen in the last several weeks, Republicans are at each other's throats in Nebraska," he said.

____

Associated Press writer Grant Schulte in Lincoln contributed to this report.

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OMAHA, Neb. — Former Sen. Bob Kerrey on Tuesday rejected a comeback run for Senate, dashing Democrats' hopes of holding a coveted Nebraska seat and leaving the party to scramble for a race all b...
OMAHA, Neb. — Former Sen. Bob Kerrey on Tuesday rejected a comeback run for Senate, dashing Democrats' hopes of holding a coveted Nebraska seat and leaving the party to scramble for a race all b...
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07:26 AM on 02/08/2012
No surprise here. This is a center-right nation with little room for the left.

How can you tell this is a center-right nation?
Just look at how b.a.d off this country has become. That speaks volumes.
10:46 PM on 02/07/2012
What is WRONG with Kerry???? Democrats and Republicans alike are resigning or refusing to run for the the House or the Sebate, The T.P. has for the short term destroyed the whole Congress!!! GREAT JOB! They have made the Legislature the pariah of Governent. Um Miss Palin I am curious if Santorum gets a free $1.4 million house for 2 terms in the Senate, what does he get for 4 primary viictories> A Big Ass Boat I bet! Just when the sweater vest was about done with just 1 Iowa dead heat,.winning 3 primaries and one has no delegates???? Why run???? Ohhhh but they do! Anyone have a one way ticket to Costa Rica? Ok for all the hell I have been put thru this cycle..I deserve a Hillary v Santorum match up in 2016,,,,or wull
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Logicalthinker10
Meet the new boss, the same as the old one.
10:35 PM on 02/07/2012
Wow, dropping like flies.
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FreedToChoose
...excepting when I'm not.
09:42 PM on 02/07/2012
The Democrats have twenty some seats up for grabs in 2012 versus ten or so for the Republicans. They need excellent candidates to hold their mini-majority. With Kerry declining in Nebraska and Feingold opting out in Wisconsin, they lose two good candidates, both known and respected.

Not suggesting they should run. Anyone who has spent more than an hour in a state or national campaign understands the commitment needed to win.
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ntr721
Democrat for the people.
09:29 PM on 02/07/2012
At times when I hear a person say they wont run, as they have to do what is best for their family. And I wonder, if they realize that they might be helping their family best, by doing what is also best for the Country. I guess living and spending so much time in New York, his family has lost their taste for the cold rural state of Nebraska. ( can´t blame them for that.)
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Bloodhound41
08:59 PM on 02/07/2012
Shouldn't make much difference. Nelson voted with the Republicans more than he did with the Democrats anyway.
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FreedToChoose
...excepting when I'm not.
09:44 PM on 02/07/2012
Kerry is a Democrat, a real one.
08:59 PM on 02/07/2012
Whenever I see Bob Kerrey, I am reminded of his Vietnam past. In particular how he cut an old peasant's throat so that he was sure his position was not compromised. Kerrey's Raiders was the name a group of especially 'dedicated' fighters.
He killed 21 women and children and got a Bronze star, because he said he killed 21 VietCong.
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/sixties-l/3118.html
Hard to run on those facts.
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07:10 AM on 02/08/2012
Navy team leaders/Swift Boat commanders write their own after action reports on which awards are based.
squat6971
59 *was* divine -- 60? not so much
08:47 PM on 02/07/2012
I can't help feeling we dodged a bullet by NOT having Kerry run.

He's too Blue, as in Blue Dog Democrat, waaay too often for my taste.

Let's find a progressive Kansan, a real one, not a DINO.
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RMorr2002
09:19 PM on 02/07/2012
You seem to have a problem with reading comprehension.....this was for the Nebraska Senate seat.
squat6971
59 *was* divine -- 60? not so much
08:45 PM on 02/08/2012
Been to both. Same difference. :}
01:15 AM on 02/08/2012
He was one of the 14 senators who originally voted against DOMA and he also led the opposition in the Senate to the proposed flag burning amendment.
Sadly he was not among the 8 Senators voted against repealling Glass–Steagall Act.
In comparison to Ben Nelson, he is no blue dog.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The ORF in Largo
Louder than a fart a hurricane
08:15 PM on 02/07/2012
Looks like Nebraska's last best hope to get a real Democratic Senator instead of a Blue Dog will
result in a Real Republican in this red state stronghold
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SPacific
Get a clue, then get a life
06:55 PM on 02/07/2012
I hear Alan Keyes is available..........
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Sam-I-Am
I came for the free beer.
05:58 PM on 02/07/2012
Although I'm disappointed that Bob Kerrey has decided not to run one of the other possible candidates, Chuck Hassebrook, is not exactly an unknown in Nebraska. Many people respect his work in the Center for Rural Affairs and later as a Regent for the University of Nebraska. I think he'd make a great U.S. Senator and I'm not prepared to write this seat off to the GOP just yet. Every one of the candidates on the GOP side is a hard right flake who has little to no appeal to moderates or independent voters. It will be a hard fought battle for the nomination on the Republican side, but I don't see the party uniting behind any single candidate. Under the circumstances I believe the right Democrat could retain this seat, and Hassebrook has a better chance than most.
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legalclubs
05:32 PM on 02/07/2012
Why this isn't the lead news story on the politics page is beyond me. Kerrey had an excellent change of winning and now the Democratic Party is instead just going to write off this Senate seat. That's one step closer to the Republicans taking the Senate in November.
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dragon69
wishing all republicans would move to their own co
04:00 PM on 02/07/2012
i saw we just go ahead and split the country in half one side democrats and the future, the other republicans and a return to the past
George Picard
Send lawyers, guns and money
10:08 PM on 02/07/2012
You take New England NJ NY and the West Coast we take the rest?
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MathIsTruth
11:26 PM on 02/07/2012
I think we'd also have to get most of the big cities. Of course we'd both end up with insignificant countries, but it might just be worth it.
03:55 PM on 02/07/2012
Democrats should try to draft former republican Senator Chuck Hagel.
While I oppose most of Hagel's positions, many Ds in Nebraska ( a conservative state) crossed the aisle to elect him when he first ran. He would provide an alternative to the rabidly right republicans & would likely capture many indy votes. No, he's not progressive by a long-shot, but he did want a timetable for withdrawal from the Iraq war. And he isn't of the "Obama's a Muslim ilk."
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rigmoten
Occupy the Micro-bio.
08:41 PM on 02/07/2012
Hagel's earned my respect, despite my disagreement with him on several issues he's not a knuckle-dragger.
09:42 PM on 02/07/2012
He would stand a good chance of winning on a D ticket, and no, he's not a knuckle dragger. I think one of the reasons he got out is because he could see the way his party was going.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
03:19 PM on 02/07/2012
So out of this entire Senate District there are only 2 possible Dem candidates?

Ben only counted as a Dem when it came to the number of Dems in the Senate or on a Committee, but when it came time to vote, look for him on the other side of the Leger.