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Tipper Gore Huddles to Mull Senate Run

Politics: Democrats, including Sen. Clinton, encourage the wife of the former vice president to seek the Tennessee seat.

The Nation

March 16, 2002|RONALD BROWNSTEIN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON — Cutting short a trip to California, Tipper Gore was scheduled to huddle with friends and family this weekend to discuss whether to run for the U.S. Senate from Tennessee, according to several sources who have spoken with her.

"Clearly, there are enough people making a convincing argument that she doesn't want to dismiss it out of hand," a Gore family intimate said Friday. "She wants the weekend. She knows she's got to move quickly."


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Leading Democratic strategists still think it most likely that Gore, 53, will not join the race for the Senate seat her husband, former Vice President Al Gore, once held. But several said that, after his decision not to run again for it, she appeared to be seriously examining the possibility.

And that prospect drew a notably enthusiastic response from several party leaders, including Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), the former first lady whose political path Tipper Gore would be following.

Clinton actively encouraged Gore to seek the seat Sen. Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.) is vacating, saying the possibility of her candidacy was generating "a lot of excitement" among Democratic senators.

"If she decides to run," Clinton said on CNN on Friday, "I am going to be her most enthusiastic supporter."

Added a top party operative: "It would be fair to say that, such as it is, the Democratic establishment thinks it is an interesting proposition. . . . She is very intelligent, very attractive and [would make] a very exciting candidate. She can raise an awful lot of money in a very short time, which is important in this race."

Aside from the nationwide publicity her candidacy would generate, it would potentially add Tennessee to the relatively small list of tightly contested Senate races that will determine which party controls the chamber after the November election.

Former Gov. Lamar Alexander, a two-time contender for the Republican presidential nomination, is the front-runner for the Republican nod. Also in the field is Rep. Ed Bryant.

On the Democratic side, Rep. Bob Clement has scheduled a news conference Monday in Nashville, where he was expected to announce his candidacy. The other three Democratic House members from the state have effectively ceded the field to Clement, announcing they would not run if he did.

Gore intimates said she had been urged to consider the race by Tennessee supporters who believe the party needs a stronger nominee to beat Alexander.

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