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The Washington Times Online Edition

GOP governors upbeat over 2010

AUSTIN, Texas | Republicans governors are in a buoyant mood at their annual gathering here, with Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour arguing his partys Nov. 3 gubernatorial victories in Virginia and New Jersey presage a repeat of the historic 1994 GOP congressional elections sweep.

“Everybody is focusing on 2012 — its 2010 thats going to be the key,” said Mr. Barbour, chairman of the Republican Governors Association, noting that next year there will be 37 gubernatorial races to contest.

RGA officials also say the organization is also regaining its prowess as a money-raising electoral force. On Tuesday night, Fred Malek, a prominent and wealthy Republican whose roots in the party date back to the Nixon era, organized a fund-raiser at the Austin Museum that attracted some 60 donors from around the country. The minimum to attend the event put on by the ‘s newly formed “Executive Roundtable” was $25,000 per person.

Mr. Malek heads the Roundtable.

Mr. Barbour noted that in 1993 the GOP candidates for governor — George Allen in Virginia and Christie Todd Whitman — also prevailed over their Democratic rivals.

After those wins, an unusually large and impressive number of Republicans challengers were emboldened to declare for House and Senate seats, leading to a GOP takeover of both houses of Congress for the first time in 40 years and a record 32 Republicans presiding in statehouses around the country.

The Virginia and New Jersey wins this month will bring the total of Republican governors to 24 come January.

Led by Mr. Barbour, the RGA raised and contributed $7.3 million to the campaign of New Jersey candidate Chris Christie, allowing him to put up enough TV advertising to hold off both a late-surging Jon Corzine, the Democratic incumbent, and independent Chris Daggett. The result for the crime-busting former U.S. attorney, Mr. Christie, was a big victory by about the same percentage as Mr. Allens in 1993.

At least 17 of the 22 current GOP governors are attending this years three-day meeting at Lone Pines, a secluded resort 13 miles east of Austin, where eight years ago George W. Bush cut short his second term as governor when he was elected president in 2000.

Mr. Barbour, who was Republican Party chairman in the mid-1990s, long has predicted that it will be governors who lead the GOPs comeback following the recent losses of majorities in the Congress, the White House, state legislatures and governorships. In 2011, the 37 governors elected next year will, with their state legislatures, redraw legislative districts according the 2010 census — with major longterm consequences for the balance of power in Washington.

Eager to encourage donors, RGA officials have been reminding them that governors will have considerable influence in determining district boundaries in many states.

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About the Author
Ralph Z. Hallow

Ralph Z. Hallow

Chief political writer Ralph Z. Hallow served on the Chicago Tribune, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Washington Times editorial boards, was Ford Foundation Fellow in Urban Journalism at Northwestern University, resident at Columbia University Editorial-Page Editors Seminar and has filed from Berlin, Bonn, London, Paris, Geneva, Vienna, Amman, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Belgrade, Bucharest, Panama and Guatemala.

 

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