One of the interesting discussions I had at the blogger shindig last night (I’ll get a report up on it later) had to do with, what else, who’s the best candidate for president? There was certainly a strong Obama contingent, ably represented by Philip Baruth and Neil Jensen–did I get that right?–but that may not be the end of it.
Bill Simmon has been arguing for Bill Richardson as a dark horse. Well, he’s obviously a dark horse, but does that mean he’s nowhere? Bill was pointing out a lot of good points for Richardson: many years in Congress, experience at the Cabinet level, he’s a governor, he’s Hispanic. All of those things are correct, but that doesn’t necessarily make him a winner. Funnily enough, though, David Brooks makes all the same points in his column ($$) today.
I’m not much to take advice from conservatives, and I find Brooks particularly annoying, but that doesn’t mean he’s wrong. From what I know of Richardson I think he’s an attractive candidate. The biggest question is how he gets from where he is now, which is pretty much nowhere, to the top of the charts. The way Dean did it four years ago was to be first out of the gate as an antiwar candidate. I didn’t exactly buy his conversion from conservative DINO governor to antiwar diehard Dem, but he sure attracted a lot of people and attention.
Unfortunately Richardson doesn’t have that going for him. I still think the Democratic field is going to shape up as Hillary vs. someone else, or maybe Hillary/Obama vs. someone else. If that’s the way it is I lean toward John Edwards, but I think that Richardson has a shot there. Maybe a long shot, but he’s not Kucinich or Vilsack.