http://www.madison.com/tct/opinion//index.php?ntid=23286&ntpid=9 By John Nichols
January 4, 2005
Can there be any question that the most essential official in state government at this point is Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager?
Despite all the miseries that were visited upon her in 2004 - clashes with Gov. Jim Doyle over environmental protection issues, the media frenzy that surrounded her arrest for driving while intoxicated, and a nasty bout with cancer - Lautenschlager has refused to become the cautious bureaucrat that the governor and so much of the political establishment desperately want her to be.
Instead, Lautenschlager ended 2004 on a series of high notes that signaled her determination to remain an honest player in a statehouse that offers few rewards for putting principle ahead of politics.
The attorney general has taken two steps in recent days that will distinguish the remainder of her term, and should position her as a credible contender for re-election in 2006.
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I originally posted the Beloit editorial because I think this will be an important question that Dems need to settle before we get into the swing of the election cycle. We need to be confident in our candidate or we need to encourage the Peg to move on. Either way, I think the sooner it gets worked out, the better.
So I also humbly post this counterpoint to the Beloit editorial for your consideration
on edit: spelling