Dems Seek to Put Mondale on Ballot
By ASHLEY H. GRANT
Associated Press Writer
October 26, 2002, 6:32 PM EDT
ST. PAUL, Minn. --
Leading Democrats reached out to former Vice President Walter
Mondale on Saturday, seeking a potent replacement candidate for
the late Paul Wellstone in a race that could determine control
of the Senate in the new Congress.
As federal investigators searched the wreckage of the small plane
that carried Wellstone and seven others to their death, Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle and the head of the party's campaign
committee both talked with Mondale by phone.
The 74-year-old former vice president and Minnesota senator made
no public comment, and none seemed likely before Wellstone's funeral.
However, several Democratic Party officials, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said Mondale had not rejected the overtures that
began within hours of Wellstone's death on Friday, and they took
that as a sign he might be receptive.
"No one has been ruled in or out," said Sen. Patty Murray,
D-Wash., who heads the Democratic campaign committee. She said
she had spoken with Mondale "as well as a number of state
officials in Minnesota."
"He is very clear that he wants to respect the mourning the
families are going through," she said of Mondale. A memorial
service for Wellstone and the crash victims associated with his
campaign was set for Tuesday.
Party officials said Daschle, too, had spoken with the former
vice president, an attorney who lives in the Minneapolis area.
Democratic sources said prominent labor leaders had expressed
interest in Mondale as well.
Wellstone, a 58-year-old liberal who died in the final days of
a tough race for a third term, had fought to a narrow lead in
the polls against former St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman. The Minnesota
race was one of a half-dozen or so expected to determine which
party will control the Senate next year.
The senator, his wife, his daughter, three campaign workers and
two pilots died when their plane went down in freezing rain Friday
morning in northern Minnesota as they headed to a funeral.
Only the burned tail section of the private plane was still intact,
Carol Carmody, acting chairwoman of the National Transportation
Safety Board said Saturday. Everything else was destroyed.
"It's a complicated site, very marshy, lots of trees,"
Carmody said. "It takes us time to sort through the evidence."
It appeared the engines were powered when the plane went down,
but it likely will take weeks to determine why the twin-engine
Beech King Air A100 crashed, Carmody said. She said there was
no cockpit voice recorder.
State Democratic Party Chairman Mike Erlandson said officials
won't decide who will replace Wellstone on the ballot until after
the family has made funeral arrangements. Several party officials
also said a decision would wait until Wellstone's sons, Mark,
30, and Paul Jr., 37, who goes by David, and could be contacted
to see if either had an interest in entering politics.
The list of potential replacements includes several politicians
a generation younger than Mondale. Among them are his son, Ted
Mondale, and Skip Humphrey, the son of another former vice president,
but all have been tarnished politically, having lost statewide
races in recent years.
Also mentioned as a potential replacement candidate is Alan Page,
a member of the state Supreme Court and a former Minnesota Vikings
star. He showed no interest in a U.S. Senate campaign when he
was approached two years ago.
While Democrats considered that question, Gov. Jesse Ventura met
with legal advisers to discuss appointing a temporary replacement
for Wellstone to finish the final months of the congressman's
second term. He said he likely would appoint a Democrat.
"To me, that's only fair," Ventura said. He said Minnesotans
elected a Democrat for a term that runs through January so the
seat should stay with the party for now. He also said he would
favor someone who doesn't plan to run for the office.
"I don't want it to become political," he said.
Ventura said he is concerned about leaving the seat open until
election results are certified.
"What if something happens? We have to have a senator,"
he said. "If terrorism hits and they call a special session,
we have to have someone to go out there."
The process to nominate a replacement candidate for the ballot
will take at least three days for the required notice to about
1,000 state central committee members of the date of a nominating
meeting.
"This is the most difficult challenge that's faced the party
probably since 1944, when it was created," Erlandson said.
"The good news is we know the spirit of Senator Wellstone
is guiding us. I know Senator Wellstone would want us to continue,
continue the fight for Democratic values and traditions."
He described Mondale, 74, as "a wonderful statesman."
Other potential replacements for Wellstone could include former
Secretary of State Joan Growe and former Hennepin County prosecutor
Mike Freeman, the son of former Minnesota Gov. Orville Freeman.
Separate groups of state officials were working Saturday on the
legalities of the election.
It appeared that it would not be legal to leave Wellstone's name
on the ballot because under Minnesota law, a death creates a vacancy
on a ballot. The candidate's party can nominate someone to fill
that spot, but that candidate would have to fulfill certain requirements,
including being alive, state Attorney General Mike Hatch said.
Two years ago, when Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan was killed in a
plane crash three weeks before the election while running for
the Senate, his name remained on the ballot and he beat Republican
Sen. John Ashcroft, now the U.S. attorney general. Carnahan's
widow, Jean, was appointed to serve in his place and is now seeking
election.
"In Missouri, they actually provide that a deceased candidate
could remain on the ballot," Hatch said. Minnesota law has
no similar provision.
If someone challenges that interpretation of law, the state Supreme
Court would have to settle the dispute, he said.
* __
Associated Press writers David Espo in Washington and Mike Wilson
in Eveleth, Minn., contributed to this report.
Copyright © 2002, The Associated Press
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