Fortunate Sons Test Limits of Dads' Famous Names in Senate Bids
By James Rowley
Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Four Senate candidates are about to
test anew whether, when it comes to U.S. politics, the son also
rises.
Republican Thomas Kean Jr. in New Jersey and Democrats Bob
Casey Jr. in Pennsylvania and Harold Ford Jr. in Tennessee -- all
making their first Senate bids -- are in tight races. Republican
Senator Lincoln Chafee is fighting for survival as he seeks a
second term in Rhode Island.
In a country where George W. Bush is president and Hillary
Clinton is the leading Democratic contender for the White House
in 2008, it isn't surprising that family ties help. ``The
importance of family in politics is as American as apple pie,''
said Julian Zelizer, a history professor at Boston University who
has written books about Congress.
Six current senators are the offspring of former senators:
Democrats Chris Dodd of Connecticut, Evan Bayh of Indiana and
Mark Pryor of Arkansas; and Republicans Chafee, Robert Bennett of
Utah and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.
Numerous others in Congress are carrying on a family
tradition -- by marriage as well as by blood -- including
Clinton, a senator from New York, and Senator Elizabeth Dole of
North Carolina. Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton,
defeated Dole's, former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, in the
1996 presidential election.
Heirs
Other heirs to political legacies who are running this year
include Jack Carter, son of former President Jimmy Carter and the
Democratic nominee for the Senate in Nevada; Democrat Chet
Culver, son of a former senator, who's running for governor in
Iowa; and Beau Biden, son of Democratic Senator Joseph Biden,
seeking to become Delaware's next attorney general. Democrat John
Sarbanes, running for a House seat from Maryland, is the oldest
son of retiring Senator Paul Sarbanes.
The races involving Casey, Kean, Ford and Chafee are among
the ones political observers are watching closely as they assess
Democrats' chances of picking up the six seats needed to gain
control of the Senate.
Casey, campaigning to unseat Republican Senator Rick
Santorum in Pennsylvania, is discovering that a political legacy
can be double-edged. While Casey got his start in politics with
help from his father, former Governor Robert P. Casey, Santorum
tried to throw Casey's family connections in his face during a
debate.
Needling Casey
Santorum, 48, seeking a third term, needled Casey by saying
his father ``would be very upset if he were alive today'' by his
son's support for the so-called morning-after pill favored by
abortion-rights advocates to prevent pregnancies.
Democrats picked state Treasurer Casey, 46, in part because
of his appeal to anti-abortion Democrats who have supported
Santorum in his two previous Senate runs.
Political ancestry is most valuable for a challenger because
it confers name recognition. ``You don't have to work nearly as
hard to get your name known to the voters,'' said Wendy Schiller,
a political scientist at Brown University in Providence, Rhode
Island.
By this reasoning, Kean, 38, who traces his lineage back to
a delegate to the Continental Congress, should be the biggest
beneficiary. A New Jersey state senator, he is the son of former
Republican Governor Tom Kean Sr.
``It's the biggest name in Jersey state politics,'' said
David Rebovich, a political scientist at Rider University in
Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
Family Ties
The elder Kean, who was also co-chairman of the bipartisan
commission that investigated the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
joined his son on the campaign trail last week at Kean University
in Union. The institution, founded in 1855, moved to its current
campus on Kean family property in 1958.
``Let me say this, and seriously, I support this candidate,''
Tom Kean Sr. said to laughter from the audience. ``It's not just
the family relationship. In Tom Kean Jr. we have the kind of young
man that I have been trying to encourage for a long, long time to
run for office.''
The younger Kean is trying to unseat Democratic Senator
Robert Menendez, 52, appointed by Governor Jon Corzine earlier
this year to fill the Senate seat Corzine resigned to become
governor. Menendez is considered by political strategists to be
the nation's most vulnerable incumbent Democratic senator.
Ford, currently a congressman from Memphis, is seeking the
Senate seat being vacated by Majority Leader Bill Frist. Ford was
just 26 when he was first elected to the House in 1996, following
the retirement of his father, Harold Ford Sr., who had held the
seat since 1975.
A Burden
The Ford family name comes with a burden. The day after Ford
announced his Senate candidacy, his uncle, state Senator John
Ford, was accused of taking $55,000 in bribes from a phony
company set up by an FBI sting dubbed ``Operation Tennessee
Waltz.''
The congressman's father successfully fought fraud charges
stemming from a loan he received from banks controlled by Jake
Butcher and his brother, who went to prison following the
collapse of their financial empire.
Ford, 36, who would be the first black senator from the
South since 1881, has said he should rise or fall on his own
record. He is running against former Chattanooga Mayor Bob
Corker, 53.
Chafee Pressed
The political legacy that helped Chafee, 56, get his job may
not be enough this year. He is trailing Democrat Sheldon
Whitehouse, 51, polls show.
The Republican Chafee is trying to win a second term in an
overwhelmingly Democratic state by highlighting his opposition to
some of Bush's policies, notably the Iraq war. Chafee was
appointed to the Senate in 1999 upon the death of his father,
four-term Senator John Chafee.
The Chafee name presents a challenge for Whitehouse because
John Chafee ``was someone who over a very long period of time
earned the respect of people'' in both parties, said Bill Lynch,
chairman of the Rhode Island Democratic Party. Still, Lynch said,
voters ```see a tremendous difference'' between father and son
because the Republican Party has changed since the elder Chafee's
day. ``We now have a situation where that seat is very much in
play,'' he said.
A famous father only gets a candidate so far, said Boston
University's Zelizer. ``All sorts of issues can trump name
recognition,'' he said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
James Rowley in Washington
jarowley@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 24, 2006 00:07 EDT