|
Edited on Thu Jan-07-10 02:47 AM by burning rain
the only really interesting thing, was when Dorgan predicted drug reimportation would pass in 2010 after all, ascribing its failure this time around not to nefariousness, but a "strange bedfellows" group of No-voters. I very much doubt it will pass, myself.
And it was endearing and moving how Ed kept pleading with him to change his mind and run again, with Dorgan modestly but firmly insisting that he had a right to retire after 40 years of public service.
Dorgan also made the very salient point that he didn't need to fear for his reelection in 2010, as he'd beaten Republicans who'd led him in polls at times in previous years. After all, Dorgan won election to the House in the Reagan landslide years of 1980 (in which year North Dakotans also elected Republican Mark Andrews to the US Senate) and 1984; 1988, when George H. W. Bush trounced Dukakis in North Dakota; to the Senate in 1992 despite the fact that Bill Clinton lost the state; and again in 2004 against the Republican presidential tide. The idea that Dorgan could not survive a tough election year for Democrats is mistaken: he has clearly demonstrated the ability to defeat Republicans in bad years for Democrats, time and time again.
|