The attack on Gillespie
I have known Ed Gillespie for a long time. He is a good guy. He is honest as
the day is long. He is a hard worker. He is a smart strategist and he
understands policy.
When President Bush called on him to work in the White House, Gillespie left
his thriving strategic advocacy firm (Quinn Gillespie, a firm that I will be
joining at the end of this month, in full disclosure), at considerable personal
expense, to help out the president.
Gillespie felt that if called to service by the president, you don’t tell the
president no. It is that sense of patriotic duty that drives Gillespie.
Sure, Ed is a conservative, but he has enough Democrats in his family tree to
understand how Democrats think. He teamed with Jack Quinn to help him create
his bipartisan firm, and he gets along famously with Terry McAuliffe, the
former Democratic National Committee (DNC) chairman.
Gillespie is smart enough to abide by the laws of the land and patriotic enough
to believe in the laws of the land. He is not some dark force that is
attempting to spread evil around the universe.
But that is not how the DNC sees it. They see Gillespie as the devil incarnate.
They have a new ad that blasts Gillespie, Karl Rove (his predecessor in the
White House) and, implausibly, the Chamber of Commerce, by accusing them of
funneling secret money from China into political campaigns.
I have been racking my brain trying to figure out why they are picking on Ed
Gillespie. It is not like he is on the ballot anywhere (not yet, anyway). It is
not like he is some famous figure, like a Newt Gingrich or a George Bush.
Gillespie is famous inside the Beltway, but I doubt that most folks in Peoria
would know who he is.
Then I started thinking: Who is head of the DNC? Tim Kaine. Where is Tim Kaine
from? Virginia. What is Tim Kaine going to do next? Possibly run for the
Senate.
Who might Tim Kaine’s opponent be?
Well, none other than Ed Gillespie, who also lives in Virginia. Gillespie is
being touted in some circles as a natural to run against either Mark Warner or,
more likely, Jim Webb. Kaine, who can’t be too excited with Webb’s performance
as senator, might very well run in a primary against him.
Are these DNC ads the first shot in the Senate campaign of 2012?
That makes more sense than the idea that these news ads are having any impact
on this current midterm election.
Attacking the Chamber of Commerce makes no sense. Attacking Karl Rove, who is
never going to run for office, makes little sense. Attacking Ed Gillespie? Well,
that only makes sense in the mind of Tim Kaine, who sees a potential rival in
the next election.
If I were a Democrat, I would be pretty angry that Tim Kaine is using DNC money
to try to further his own career by running ads against Ed Gillespie. Of course,
these days, I am pretty glad I am not a Democrat.
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