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Tuesday, March 28, 2006 

Mark Warner Funds Centrists

He is focusing on Democrats, but I am excited at the possibilities that a similarly inclined leading Republican can parallel his efforts at promoting moderates and Centrism.

Warner spreads funds across key states
By Christina Bellantoni
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
March 27, 2006

Congressional candidates in Iowa, South Carolina and Missouri have a friend in common -- former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, the object of widespread speculation as a 2008 presidential hopeful.
Mr. Warner has opened his political action committee's checkbook to candidates in those key presidential states and others. The Democrat said he wants to help centrists who will make Washington more efficient, but his efforts also are building crucial ground support where he needs it most.
Mr. Warner said he supports candidates with "the same kind of common-sense, results-driven approach to politics that we brought in Virginia," where he was popular despite raising taxes by $1.38 billion in 2004 to balance the state's budget.
"We can claim that sensible center [and] expand on our Democratic family by also including disaffected Republicans [and] independents who are afraid of the rightward drift of the Republican Party in this country," he said.
Mr. Warner is holding a fundraiser next month for Democrat Claire McCaskill, the state auditor of Missouri, who is challenging Republican Sen. Jim Talent.
Mr. Warner is a "positive leader" for the Democratic Party, who is well-respected by the same type of fiscally minded independents Mrs. McCaskill is courting for votes, McCaskill campaign spokeswoman Adrianne Marsh said. The Hotline On Call political blog, hotlineblog.nationaljournal.com, recently posted a quote from a leading Missouri Democrat who called Mr. Warner a "map-changer" who can turn a "red" state "blue."
Mr. Warner also is traveling to boost his own name recognition, which will be critical if he mounts a challenge to the presumed Democratic front-runner for president, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. The New York senator and former first lady tops nearly all the early presidential polls.
But Mr. Warner, a self-made millionaire, has fundraising skills of his own; his Forward Together Political Action Committee so far has brought in more than $4 million from donors nationwide. And candidates such as Mrs. McCaskill and Rep. James E. Clyburn, South Carolina Democrat, are benefiting from his cash.
Mr. Warner, 51, left office in January and jumped right into a travel schedule that included a New Hampshire Democratic dinner and the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. He gets back to business with an April keynote speech in Missouri and a Democratic gala in Wisconsin, where he will be the headliner.
Also next month, he will host a fundraiser in Iowa for Democratic Rep. Leonard L. Boswell, who enjoys introducing White House contenders to Iowans, particularly a "fresh face" such as Mr. Warner, said Mr. Boswell's chief of staff, Ned Michalek.
While the former governor is collecting friends in red states, some of his political enemies are preparing for his presidential run.
"There are a number of people who won't be president in 2009, and Mark Warner is one of them," said Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform. The group plans to remind voters in 2008 that Mr. Warner broke a gubernatorial campaign promise in 2001 that he would not raise taxes.

Apparently there are several hundred leadership PACs on records, several with more than a few million dollars. These are PACs controlled by Candidates so they can help out the campaigns of allies. Hilliary has one that is very active, as does McCain. These may lead us to one of the more expedient paths for Centrists to influence elections: Contributing to the PACs that Contribute to the Centrists. Imagine if we encouraged the community of moderate voters to direct contributions to the leading Centrist candidates and those of the DLC PAC, Republican Main Street Partnership PAC, It’s my party too PAC. We can start by concentrating on the close elections.

Or of course you can contribute directly to the Centrist of your choice. My point is that Centrists can’t get elected without raising the large amounts of money as their ideologically more extreme opponents. I gave $500 to Warner’s Forward Together PAC

http://www.forwardtogetherblog.com/story/2006/3/27/144646/921

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