Opinion

SPITZ-QUIT BOOSTS B’BERG

THE disgraced Eliot Spitzer had hardly re signed as governor of New York when Re publican strategists began calculating a re turn to power in Albany via New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Lt. Gov. David Paterson, Spitzer’s successor as governor, is considered a weak prospect for the 2010 election and might not even be the Democratic nominee. Bloomberg, finishing two successful terms as mayor in 2009, might find life as a private citizen boring enough to try for governor. The mayor, who changed his affiliation from Republican to independent, could obtain the Independence Party nomination for governor, and then be endorsed by the GOP.

A footnote: Democratic state legislators watching TV Monday cheered when they heard the disliked Spitzer admit his guilt. But that joy faded as the Democrats contemplated that Spitzer’s fall could trigger a GOP comeback in 2010. Democrats contemplate a takeover of all branches of the state government to control decennial redistricting.

*

EARLY-morning trainers and exercisers at the Greenville, Miss., YMCA on Mississippi primary day last Tuesday got a taste of Sen. Barack Obama‘s reclusiveness, which the traveling press corps has learned to accept.

After speaking at Tougaloo College on Monday night, Obama went to the “Y” at 6:30 a.m. for a workout. He greeted nobody and did not respond when people there called out to him. That aloofness has been the pattern in the Democratic presidential candidate’s behavior toward reporters who cover him.

After finishing his workout, Obama returned to his gregarious campaign mode with a visit to black-owned Buck’s restaurant in Greenville before leaving the state. He won Mississippi comfortably against Sen. Hillary Clinton.

*

FORMER conservative colleagues in the House of Representatives are boosting Christopher Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission since 2005, to be Sen. John McCain‘s vice presidential running mate.

A White House aide under President Ronald Reagan, Cox served 16 years as a congressman from Orange County, Calif., and was chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee. He was named as a federal appeals court judge to begin President Bush‘s administration, but withdrew after Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer of California announced her opposition.

Former Rep. Rob Portman of Ohio, who also was a member of the House leadership before joining the Bush Cabinet, is being promoted for vice president by Washington insiders. But Cox’s backers in the House argue that Portman lacks Cox’s stature in the conservative movement, which they say McCain needs.

*

IMPORTANT Illinois Republicans are urging dairy mogul Jim Oberweis, who last Saturday lost the district previously held by Speaker Dennis Hastert, to drop out of the competition for a full term. However, it is unlikely Oberweis would consider stepping aside.

Oberweis, who’d lost three previous bids for statewide office, won nominations both to fill the unexpired term of the resigned Hastert and for the two-year term. After losing his self-financed campaign to businessman-scientist Bill Foster for the short term, he is given little chance in a November rerun.

Winning Hastert’s predominantly GOP district suggests Democrats can gain two to four more congressional seats from Illinois in this year’s elections.