Caroline Kennedy to Seek Appointment to N.Y. Senate Seat
UPDATE, 9:00 p.m.: Stefan Friedman, a spokesman for Caroline Kennedy confirmed to the Fix this evening she is seeking the Senate appointment. Kennedy made a round of calls today to influential New York Democrats, added Friedman. She spoke to, among others, Rep. Louise Slaughter who offered an endorsement this evening, as well as New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.
Original Post
Caroline Kennedy, the press-shy daughter of President John F. Kennedy, has decided to seek appointment to the Senate seat being vacated by Hillary Rodham Clinton, according to a Democratic source familiar with the decision.
"I've talked to Caroline Kennedy and she is clearly interested," said New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, the immediate past chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. "The Governor and I talk regularly on this but we have decided to keep each other's counsel."
Kennedy's decision comes several weeks after her name was first floated as a possible replacement for Clinton, following a phone conversation she had with New York Gov. David Paterson. Paterson, who took over for Gov. Eliot Spitzer earlier this year, has the sole power to appoint the next senator.
Paterson, speaking today about the Kennedy news, was decidedly noncommittal. "I've had a number of conversations with a number of people who are interested," Paterson said, according to the New York Daily News. "I have returned a couple of calls from her but have not spoken to her since the initial conversation. Obviously people are interested and would like to come in and present their case, and if they ask for that time I'll grant it to them."
In the intervening weeks since Kennedy's name was floated there has been a behind-the scenes battle -- that has occasionally spilled out publicly -- between backers of Kennedy and those of Clinton.
The Clintonites have made clear that they remain less than pleased that Caroline Kennedy endorsed President-elect Barack Obama during the Democratic presidential primaries and have voiced concern that Clinton's Senate seat would be handed off to a New Yorker who didn't support her national bid.
The Kennedy forces -- led by Kerry Kennedy, who, interestingly, is divorced from New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, the other frontrunner fot the appointment -- have taken to the television airwaves to make the case for Caroline.
That case in a nutshell: she is the heir to the most famous political legacy in American politics, she has universal name identification and the ability to raise untold amounts of money, and she is personally close to the president-elect.
Rev. Al Sharpton, who per Politico's Ben Smith, spoke with Kennedy this afternoon about her interest, put out a statement testifying to her qualifications. "Since the possibility of Ms. Kennedy's candidacy for the Senate has, understandably, already generated a fair degree of debate and discussion, I feel compelled to state that I unequivocally disagree with those that say she is not qualified and could not bring needed leadership to this state and country," said Sharpton.
It was not immediately clear what prompted Kennedy's interest in the race although her active support of Obama -- she endorsed him and then helped lead the search for his vice president -- suggests that the election of the Illinois Senator may have played a significant role.
Kennedy's decision to make her interest known marks a significant break with her past shunning of the public eye. While Kennedy is almost certainly now the frontrunner for the appointment, her acknowledgment of her interest now transforms her from a largely private to an almost-entirely public figure.
Should she win the appointment, Kennedy will face a 2010 special election for the remaining two years in Clinton's term and then another election in 2012 for the full six year term.
Republicans insist that despite New York's decided Democratic lean they will make a serious run at the seat in 2010 with former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Rep. Peter King the most well-known potential candidates.
Aside from Kennedy and Cuomo, Democrats mentioned for the appointment include: Reps. Kirsten Gillibrand, Carolyn Maloney, Brian Higgins and Steve Israel as well as Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown and Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi.
The news of Kennedy's interest was first reported by Nicholas Confessore of the New York Times.
Posted by Chris Cillizza
blog.washingtonpost.com/thefix/