Will remain active in politics, he says
By Janette Neuwahl, Globe Correspondent | January 25, 2005
Robert Reich, an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor in 2002, yesterday said he will not run in 2006.
"I feel I took my best shot in 2002," Reich said by telephone from the Richard and Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, where he is teaching for the semester.
Reich, 58, plans to continue teaching at Brandeis University, where he is a professor of public and social policy. A former secretary of labor in the Clinton administration, Reich currently is an adviser to Democratic candidates across the country and is a radio commentator. He has also written 10 books on labor issues and politics.
"I'm always working on projects and will continue to be involved in politics. I was enormously pleased with the legacy of the 2002 campaign in terms of the number of people who came into politics who had never been politically active before and the number of young people who got involved," he added.
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http://www.boston.com/news/politics/governors/articles/2005/01/25/reich_rules_out_run_for_governor_in_2006/