with Bob Gibson
Executive Director of the Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership and former Daily Progress political reporter


Bob Gibson
Daily Progress political blogger

    Republicans are having all the fun these days of having a wide-open presidential nomination contest—OK, guys named Tom and Duncan are likely to drop soon but they still have a Mitt, a Fred, a Rudy, a Ron, a Mike and a John—and now folks are lining up to take on Jim Gilmore.
   
    Jim, the first to drop from the presidential lineup, is by far the front-runner for the right be become the serious underdog to Democrat Mark Warner, another former governor looking for a 2008 Senate seat.

    Now a Chris and a Bob are looking seriously at getting in with Jim for a convention battle to see who gets to take on MarkNotJohn.

    Chris Saxman, a delegate from Staunton, is little-known outside of GOP circles but has few of the negatives people might attach to Jim Gilmore if they recall the split he helped engineer between Senate and House Republicans during his governorship.

    Bob Marshall, a veteran delegate from Prince William County, is better known as perhaps a truer conservative than mighty conservative Gilmore. Marshall is also mulling a Senate bid and notes that Gilmore is not held in high esteem by conservatives for saying he would allow abortions during a woman’s first trimester.

  “I’m just looking around,“ Marshall said the other day. “I like Jim. I’ve worked with him, but his hands-off first trimester abortions, that’s not going to enthuse anyone.“

  “Is it possible for me to do this? I think so,“ Marshall said.

    Is Gilmore a pure enough conservative for party activists? That question will be knocked around Friday night and Saturday at the GOP’s Advance in Arlington. There’s nothing like a little competition to keep a party kickin.

Posted by Bob Gibson @ 11:35 AM · (0) Trackbacks ·
Next entry: You just have to swallow the poi Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.
About
Bob Gibson

Bob Gibson was the Daily Progress political reporter for 17 years and also worked for seven years as city editor after covering the police and court beats. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia who hails from Arlington County. He is currently the Executive Director of the Sorenson Institute for Political Leadership.

Recent Entries
Petition seeks to revive public service TV show
Norfolk TV show facing death
Kennedy’s First Day
AG McDonnell holding edge?
Taking advantage of change
Recent Comments
By on:
Taking advantage of change
10/31/2008
By on:
Will Dickie Cranwell run for LG?
08/06/2008
By on:
Would Virginia bloggers like a gathering?
05/19/2008
Monthly Archives
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
August 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
Search


Advanced Search

Syndicate


Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement