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| Feature: Running for Office | ||
| Shallow Roots
Elizabeth Harris 09/01/2006 |
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Kelly Doran, a Democrat whose self-funded campaign for governor of Minnesota was off to a promising start earlier this year, now says he realizes he underestimated the power of the entrenched party system.
Doran says that the long days of campaigning became difficult for his four children, aged 5 to 17. But more troublesome for Doran was the fallout from the maverick stance he took by rejecting his party’s traditional candidate vetting process: local caucuses. Doran now admits that staying out of the caucuses made political powerbrokers feel "you haven’t earned your stripes . . . . You haven’t been here long enough to merit our consideration." He ran a fledgling fundraising operation, but found it difficult to raise
capital when supporters knew he had his own money to contribute. "For a
nontraditional candidate like me, in reality, if I were a plumber and I wanted
to run for governor, there’s no way I could do it," Doran says. "So I
fortunately had the opportunity to fund the start of this campaign and to do it
that way—[but] it’s kind of a sad story that basically there are so many
obstacles for people to participate." |