Oregonian endorses Dudley, Kitzhaber

 Oregonian endorses Dudley, KitzhaberBelow is the weekend endorsement of the state’s largests newspaper for the governor race:

Send Kitzhaber and Dudley on to a fall race for governor
The Oregonian Editorial Board, April 24, 2010

The Oregonian Editorial Board’s endorsements for the 2010 election.
The experienced two-term governor is the best choice for Democrats, while the charismatic former NBA player is the most promising GOP candidate. Oregon’s party primaries are about nominating the candidates most likely to run strong in November. For Democrats seeking to keep their 24-year-long grip on the governorship, that has always been John Kitzhaber. And for Republicans, that is now Chris Dudley. There is a third impressive candidate on the May 18 ballot, Republican Allen Alley, an entrepreneur and business executive. Alley has much to offer a state battling 10 percent unemployment, a deep deficit and a growing reputation as a place unfriendly to business. However, what Oregon most needs in the fall general election is the true choice, the stark contrast, between Kitzhaber’s broad experience and perspective from decades of public service and Dudley’s appealing call for change and fresh eyes from a life spent entirely outside politics.
Kitzhaber, 63, is challenged in the Democratic primary by an old friend and erstwhile political ally, Bill Bradbury, a former secretary of state and senator with a public record nearly as long as Kitzhaber’s. But while Kitzhaber has re-entered Oregon’s political arena with a campaign of hard-edged pragmatism, Bradbury has run on a starry-eyed promise of delivering $2 billion more for schools.

Bradbury’s head-in-the-clouds campaign won the endorsement of the state teachers union but cost him any chance of making a credible case that he’s prepared to balance a state budget projected to be $2.5 billion in the red when the next governor takes office.

Kitzhaber, meanwhile, is running a campaign grounded in the hard experience of his eight years as governor, ending in 2003. Kitzhaber is forthright about the lessons he learned from his bitter fights with the Republican-controlled Legislature and his frustrated exit seven years ago, when he described the state as ungovernable.

He speaks now of reclaiming Oregon’s political center, which he persuasively argues is the only way this state can pull together the support to confront its economic problems and its partisan, shortsighted politics, which have damaged its university system and left the state wholly unprepared for recession.

It’s true that over the years the former emergency room physician has been better at diagnosing Oregon’s problems than curing them. But Kitzhaber’s years away from government seem to have given him a clearer, better perspective of what Oregon needs in its governor. He vows, for example, to be a more hands-on manager of state agencies. Oregon has not had that kind of governor in a long time.

It has never had a serious candidate for governor like Chris Dudley. His résumé is short: sixteen years in the National Basketball Association, philanthropist, diabetes fundraiser and financial planner. Dudley has no political experience — he’s even been only a sometimes voter over the years.

the 6-foot-11 Dudley is long on the personal qualities that have quickly won over many established Republican groups and party financial supporters. His size and his open, engaging personality give him a star presence that Oregonians have seldom seen on the campaign trail.

Yes, Dudley has run a cautious campaign so far, offering more generalities than specifics on issues such as education, the economy and health care. For now, he lacks the depth and command of the details that other candidates, especially Alley, Republican John Lim and Kitzhaber, bring to gubernatorial debates.

Yet when you meet Dudley, you understand why Oregon’s GOP establishment has so quickly embraced him, showering him with more than $1 million in campaign funds and most of the party’s major endorsements. The Yale graduate is a quick learner, he’s humble and likable and perhaps most of all, he’s more or less Kitzhaber’s polar and political opposite.

Of all the candidates, Dudley speaks most clearly to the frustrations of Oregonians fed up, as he puts it, with “being 43rd in everything,” from school reform to higher education funding to job growth, and looking for something new, someone different, in a governor.

Yes, it is a leap of faith to nominate for governor a candidate with no political experience. But if there was ever a time to break from the past and from political convention, it is now. Republicans should nominate Dudley to challenge Kitzhaber and give voters a true choice for governor in the November general election.

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Posted by at 06:33 | Posted in Measure 37 | 12 Comments |Email This Post Email This Post |Print This Post Print This Post
  • Brendan Monaghan

    Best backhanded endorsement I’ve ever read! I mean, honestly, you have to admire the cajones of passing off thinly-veiled insults as a positive endorsement.

    “His résumé is short . . . Dudley has no political experience — he’s even been only a sometimes
    voter over the years.”

    “Yes, Dudley has run a cautious campaign so far, offering more generalities than specifics on issues such as education, the economy and health care. For now, he lacks the depth and command of the details that other candidates, especially Alley, Republican John Lim and Kitzhaber, bring to gubernatorial debates.”

    “Yes, it is a leap of faith to nominate for governor a candidate with no political experience.”

    Try harder next time, Obamagonian! Either start at least *pretending* to support Republican candidates in primaries or write what you really think: that all Republicans suck and we’re not endorsing anybody!

    • a retired professor

      You don’t think Dudley is the strongest Republican candidate? Who is? Alley? (endorsed by the Register Guard for what it’s worth) Lim? Sizemore?

      • Anonymous

        Alley. He is conservative enough on the business issues that have the most impact on Oregon’s economy today, and moderate enough on other issues to win over some liberal voters without disenfranchising the GOP base. He has demonstrated the ability to work in a bipartisan manner, having been both a GOP nominee for statewide office and a member of Kulongoski’s staff. He has a ton of experience in the private sector plus good experience in state government and in party politics.

  • Bob Tiernan

    *Retired Professor:*

    You don’t think Dudley is the strongest Republican candidate?

    *Bob T:*

    The Big Zero doesn’t merely endorse candidates who are the strongest. This endorsement is a joke and perhaps was done because they know Dudley is not the best one. For a better take on Dudley, read the dissenting column by out=voted editoial board member David S.

    Bob Tiernan
    Portland

  • capor

    There is no question in my mind that this is exactly what the Kitz campaign would want. Dudley will be eaten alive by the Kitz camp in the general. The only strong point that boy has is his out of state bank account. Come on people. Do not vote for this guy. Allen Alley is not the perfect candidate, but is the only one that is a solid contender against Kitz in the fall.

    • Ted

      Well the thing is, I don’t think too many registered Republican voters in Oregon take the Oregonian all that seriously. This endorsement won’t do all that much.

      But yes, I see what you’re saying.

  • Anonymous

    Obvioulsy the one who got the Oregonains In Action endorsement is best candidate.

    But with every measurement Alley is superior to Dudley. I suspect Dudley himself is haiving regrets about running now that it is evident Alley is the better candidate.

  • Not Your Pal

    Face it CONS! Alley has all the charm of lukewarm dishwater. Of course, so does the former “Do Nothing” running against him. At least Dudley would bring a new face to Salem instead of the same tired “solutions”.

  • Anonymous

    Dudley just smells of elitism and privilege. He has ZERO relevant experience. But he is a wealthy celebrity who went to an Ivy League school so we should just accept his greatness??? I DON’T THINK SO!!! I could have taken him seriously if he had at least, oh, I don’t know, VOTED in the past. Everything about him just comes across as “I got nothing better to do today and running for office sounds like fun.” Well why didn’t he try out a “fun run” in 2006 or 2008 for a local office, get some experience, build a tangible record on issues voters can see, and THEN run for governor? At least Alley was previously the GOP nominee for Treasurer (where he did surprisingly well against heavyweight Ben Westlund) and can point to both private sector experience and experience working for the governor.

    • Hiya Jerk!

      Alley’s “Business Experience” consists largely of driving Pixelworks into near BANKRUPTCY while collecting a fat six figure salary. The putz is just like the ASSHAT Governor – both couldn’t run a lemonade stand without going into the red.
      And as we all know any idiot in Oregon can vote – even ILLEGALS. Keep on drinking the Hard Right koolaid. And you clowns wonder why you NEVER win any political races…

      • Anonymous

        Gee, the dot-com bubble burst combined with the post 9/11 recession didn’t have anything to do with that…

        Meanwhile, do you have any constructive comments to say about… well, anything?

  • MooreOrLess

    I believe that the Oregonian chose Dudley because the want another oppressive er, I mean progressive in office. The Rino’s are on the rampage against Americans too and don’t want anyone to rock their boat. Well, we don’t want to rock it, we want to repossess it!

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