Minneapolis »

By neighborhood:

St. Paul »

By neighborhood:

Ventura watch: Does Bloomberg visit suggest a Senate run?

July 06, 2008

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is coming to town later this month to raise money for the Independence Party of Minnesota. The media mogul’s appearance at the Nicollet Island Pavilion in Minneapolis should provide welcome financial tonic for a party that hasn’t been much of a factor in recent elections.


Two years ago the party’s most credible statewide candidate was Peter Hutchinson, who pulled just 6 percent of the vote in the governor’s race. In 2006 Congressional races Tammy Lee won support from 21 percent of voters in the Democrat-dominated Fifth District, while John Binkowski was backed by 8 percent of voters in the Sixth District race won by Michele Bachmann.

This electoral cycle the IP’s prospects hardly look brighter. The party’s endorsed just four candidates, according to its web site, including Southern Minnesota farmer Stephen Williams in the U.S. Senate race. The only candidate with widespread-name recognition is Elwyn Tinklenberg — and of course he’s also backed by the Democratic Party.

So why would Bloomberg, who’s frequently been touted as a future presidential candidate, throw in his lot with this motley bunch? It’s impossible to say for certain, but one intriguing possibility is Jesse Ventura. The former governor has been skulking around the margins of the U.S. Senate race, threatening to jump into the fray. But if Ventura is truly serious about running, he would face a massive financial disadvantage in what’s expected to be the most expensive Senate race in the country. Might Bloomberg’s visit be a hint that Ventura is actually serious about running and provide a jump-start to his fundraising efforts?

John Wodele, who filled the unenviable job of press secretary during Ventura’s often turbulent four years as governor, says he doesn’t know whether his former boss intends to enter the U.S. Senate race. “I talked to him yesterday and he’s still keeping everybody guessing,” he notes.

With just 12 days left until the filing deadline, Wodele says he asked the former governor if he’d made up his mind about the contest. The response: “It’s way too early for that, John.”

Article Tags:

Comments

Anonymous's picture

Speculation: Independence

Speculation: Independence Party of New York Chairman Frank MacKay was trying to get Bloomberg to run for President by starting an Independence Party of America and making himself chairman of that. So far NY and Minn are the only significant parts. Maybe Bloomberg is doing MacKay a favor to prop up the Minnesota party in case something unexpectedly develops for four years from now.

Edward Rynearson's picture

Recent Jesse Ventura Interviews

I would support any independent candidate this time around.

http://www.radiodujour.com/people/ventura_jesse

MN-Citizen's picture

It is what it is.

Jesse doesn’t need money. He has a million guys like me. He will dominate the senate race.

Minnesota still has some freedom and integrity, and we will use that to our advantage. Smart folk here.

luangtom's picture

Jesse Ventura Running For Senate....

If Jesse Ventura were running for US Senate, I may move back to MN to cast my ballot for him. His term as Governor was the highlight of MN politics, as far as I am concerned. Too many voters are disenchanted with what they have to choose from within the Democrats or Republicans. John McCain is living in the past and Barack Hussein Obama has no direction. He advocates changes, but has no clear-cut remedy for anything he complains about. The same holds true in MN. Norm Coleman rubber-stamps anything Republican, be it good or bad. And, Al Franken is comedic, a carpet-bagging one at that. So, Jesse just may have the inside line on running for the US Senate in MN. He would get my vote if I still lived there…..we retired to get away from the problems in MN…..taxes and all.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
3 + 5 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

News you can use

Mississippi Watershed group retools grants program, hopes to reach diverse communities

A Twin Cities watershed organization has a quarter million dollars of grant money to divvy up over the next few months, and they’re hoping groups that have traditionally not applied for funding will show up for an information meeting on Monday, September 8.

“Look at the demographics of our watershed,” explains Jenny Winkelman, Education & Outreach Coordinator for the Mississippi Watershed Management Organization (MWMO), which covers portions of the cities of Minneapolis, St. Paul, Lauderdale, and St. Anthony. “We have a huge audience we’re trying to reach, many of them fairly recent immigrant communities, such as the Hmong and Somali communities. Most traditional watershed materials are produced for a literate, English-speaking audience and may miss important populations.” MORE »