Senator Kirsten Gillibrand to Announce Presidential Run
And then there were 4. Or 5. Or 6. Depends on who you are counting as officially running for the Democratic Nomination for President in 2020. But this probably bears watching closely, as some of the powers that be have already expressed excitement for Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.
Gillibrand is scheduled to appear on the CBS late night program on Tuesday night. If she announces her exploratory committee, as expected, she would become the second U.S. senator — and second female senator — to announce plans to begin the legal process of running for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020. The 52-year old is one of the most active and outspoken critics of President Trump and she earned acclaim from party activists when she began voting against all of the president’s cabinet and senior government nominees in early 2017.
Gillibrand would join a Democratic presidential field beginning to take shape. Over the weekend, former Housing and Urban Development (HUD) secretary Julián Castro formally launched his presidential bid, while Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, launched an exploratory committee on New Year’s Eve. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, said over the weekend that she plans to form an exploratory committee in the coming days. Several other senators, current and former governors and mayors, and former Vice President Joe Biden are still mulling potential campaigns.
Sen. Gillibrand came to the Senate as the replacement for Hillary Clinton, who had resigned to take the Secretary of State post for then-president Barack Obama. Her education credentials including Dartmouth and UCLA Law School, she formerly worked for Andrew Cuomo and made some news when she garnered attention for being the Democratic Senator to call for Al Franken to resign during the former Senator’s Me Too moment. She will be slotted in the upper-tier of candidates from the outset, and there are quite a few that feel she balances several factors necessary to stand out from what will be a historically crowded field. But with at least three (and maybe more) other senators either running or expected to run, she will need to find a coherent message, and quickly, to stand out from the crowd besides just her credentials. She will be one of several women running, and will be somewhere in the middle by most folks standard of political spectrum measurement for the Democratic party. What path she plans to the nomination remains to be seen.
Finally. This is who I wanted to be the Democratic nominee in 2020.Report
The Franken thing is bs, but I got to think her pre-Senate record (much more blue dog-ish) is going to be a liability – more than even Harris’s. (or Warren’s, who was notionally a Republican once upon a time)
And New York people always have significant connections to Wall Street (as do New Jersey people, c.f. Booker)
but then again, someone has to win the nomination.Report
The Franken thing won’t be a big deal with the voters. Hard to say if it’ll be a problem during the invisible primary but if it hurts her that’s where it’ll sting. Fortunately Frankens seat stayed blue so I think the damage is limited.Report
You too, huh?
How come?Report
The best thing about KG is she always represents her constituents.
Back when she was confined to representing a bunch of upstate hicks, she was all “Guns !! Hoo-yes!! Yee-Haw! Bangbangbang!” But now that she represents real New Yorkers she can drop all of that crap. She has her fingers (or at least her pollsters) on the pulse of the nation and will immediately align her beliefs to reflect the popular will.Report
Not crazy about the “Northeastern Liberal” thing but I think that she’s probably got the best shot out of anybody.
Say what you will about the Franken thing, but she did not flinch from the “BSDI” argument but instead bit the bullet. I reckon that the Party Establishment will tear her to shreds, but I could see her beating Trumpler.Report
All these law and order anti-due process fanatics ain’t my type. I hope for her swift defeat.Report