Fw: [Inside the Capitol] Revisions to 1-16 column
By  JAY MILLER
Syndicated Columnist
      SANTA FE -- Talk  about life imitating art. Gov. Bill Richardson's first campaign commercials  seemed like masterpieces of ironic humor. In them, Richardson applied for the  job of president and was found to be overqualified by a disinterested  interviewer and later by a disinterested panel. 
      Richardson paid  for the ads in Iowa but national news shows also ran them as an example of  really clever advertising. Bill got a big bang for his buck.  
      The problem is  that it was true. It really happened. After 40 years of building a nearly  perfect resume, Richardson decided to submit his application for president at  exactly the wrong time. Voters in Iowa and New Hampshire had grown disinterested  in substance and were more interested in style. 
      And that was a  playing field on which Richardson couldn't compete well. Voters liked his sense  of humor but he didn't have the flash and quick-thinking smoothness of the three  front runners.   
   And that is all-important in an  era of an expanding number of interview shows and televised debates. Bill's  performances unfortunately didn't measure up. 
   Actually his one-on-one personal  style works well only in small states like Iowa and New Hampshire, so if he  couldn't compete there, he had no hope.
   It is too bad that Richardson  couldn't have stayed in the race until it got out West. Nevada was next on the  list and he had invested significant effort in the state, even telling Nevadans  that it was his most important state.
   But he couldn't go there without  money. Disappointing finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire cut that flow to a drip.  In retrospect, using the Rudy Giuliani strategy of ignoring Iowa and New  Hampshire might have worked better for him.
   But as events developed, the  casino workers union, which Richardson had courted, went for Obama as a result  of his Iowa victory. Obama's endorsement is a little ironic since he was the  only Democratic candidate to ditch the first debate of the year, in Nevada, in  order to concentrate on Iowa. 
   At that debate, Richardson  appeared to receive the second most enthusiastic support. The winner clearly was  Hillary Clinton, who since has received a cold shoulder from the casino union,  whose members formed the majority of that audience.
   Richardson's chances for selection  as a vice-presidential running mate don't appear strong. He just isn't a good  balance for a ticket that includes either Hillary Clinton or Barak Obama. A  woman and a minority or two minorities on a ticket is just too far out of the  political mainstream. 
   He's from a small state that can't  deliver many electoral votes. He already has tapped New Mexico heavily for  campaign contributions so likely couldn't help much with fundraising. His  primary election performances didn't prove he will do much for a ticket. And he  never emerged as the choice of Hispanics.
   In one of the debates, Richardson  asked Clinton if she wouldn't agree that former governors make good presidents.  She smiled and answered that they make good vice presidents. The implication  seemed to be that she thought of him as vice-presidential stock and that she  might choose him as a running mate. 
   The answer may not have been one  she had thought much about. The last time a former governor was elected vice  president was nearly a century ago. It is much more common for a governor to run  for president  with a U.S. Senate  running mate.
   Richardson and Clinton had a flare  up on caucus day in Iowa when evidence indicated he and Obama may have cut a  deal on delegates. Richardson denied it and says he has smoothed that over with  Clinton. But sources say Bill Clinton still is furious.
   As for secretary of state, that  would require a Democratic victory. There may be some chance for an appointment  to that or another post by Clinton but look for Richardson to finish his term as  governor and become a high-powered Washington lobbyist  afterward.
WED,  1-16-08
JAY  MILLER, 3 La Tusa, Santa Fe, NM 87505
(ph)  982-2723, (fax) 984-0982, (e-mail)  insidethecapitol@hotmail.com
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Posted By Jay Miller to Inside the Capitol at 1/13/2008 10:36:00 AM

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