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Last Updated: March 15, 2008 - 3:24 PM
Bye Bye Bill
By Julia Goldberg
Published: January 10, 2008
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As the crowd chanted his name, the governor of New Mexico
entered the Roundhouse, where he will next week oversee the beginning
of the ’08 legislative session, and told the supporters and media
packing the Rotunda that as of Jan. 10 his presidential campaign has ended and he’s
home.
Looking cheerful and cracking jokes, Richardson characterized his
year-long campaign as “a remarkable process,” and one, he said, from
which he learned “I don’t have all the answers,” prompting
laughter from the heavily Democratic audience.
Richardson credited his campaign as having influenced the
discourse of the 2008 presidential race, noting that, “A year ago, we
were the only major campaign calling for the removal of all of our
troops within a year’s time from Iraq. We were the only campaign
calling for a complete reform of education in this country…and we were
the campaign with the most aggressive clean energy plan and the most
ambitious standards for reducing global warming…now all of the
remaining candidates are coming to our point of view.”
But Richardson—who has emphasized his dislike for personal attacks
among candidates—also paid due to the other past and present Democrat
contenders, singling each out with words of praise. He noted John
Edwards as a “singular voice for the most downtrodden and forgotten
among us,” Illinois Sen. Barack Obama as “a bright light of hope and
optimism” and New York Sen. Hillary Clinton as someone whose “poise in
the face of adversity is matched only by her lifetime of achievement
and deep understanding of the challenges we face.”
Richardson said he would not be endorsing any of the remaining
candidates, but urged those who had supported him “to take a long and
thoughtful look at the remaining Democrats. They are all strong
contenders who each, in their own way, would bring desperately needed
change to our country.”
Richardson said that with the end of his presidential run, he plans to
continue his international missions, ride his horse and work for the
election of New Mexico Congressman Tom Udall, who is running for the US
Senate seat to replace Pete Domenici. Udall, who introduced Richardson,
gave the governor props for running the most “substantive” campaign and
told him, and the crowd: “You worked the hardest Gov. Richardson.”
Richardson’s announcement follows lackluster showings in the Iowa and
New Hampshire caucuses, where he garnered 2 and 5 percent,
respectively. He did not take questions from the media following the
press conference, and did not speak to the ongoing question of whether
he hopes to secure either a slot as a Vice Presidential running mate
for whomever wins the Dem nomination or, as is often mentioned, an
appointment as Secretary of State. Although Richardson has dropped out
of the race, he will still be listed as a candidate for New Mexico’s
Feb. 5 Democratic caucus, which is part of the so-called Super Tuesday
races.
Richardson did acknowledge the next legislative session, which begins
Jan. 15, and his universal health-care proposal, which he has made his
top priority.
In addition to thanking his wife, Barbara Richardson, staff and
supporters, Richardson ended his speech by calling himself “the
luckiest man I know.”
“I am married to my high school sweetheart. I live in a place called
the Land of Enchantment. I have the best job in the world. And I just
got to run for president of the Untied States.”
And to legislators and citizens, he said he had a message: “I am back.”
© Copyright 2000-2008 by the Santa Fe Reporter
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