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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Huckleberries Online

SR Edit: Jerry Brady More Effective As Guv

Full editorial here

In Idaho, Republican congressmen have had a sense of entitlement for the last eight years to return home as the state’s duly anointed governor. U.S. Sen. Dirk Kempthorne took the baton from Gov. Phil Batt and handed it off for safe-keeping to Lt. Gov. Jim Risch when Kempthorne left office early to become the Interior secretary in the Bush administration. If all goes according to plan for the Republicans, Risch will give the baton to U.S. Rep. Butch Otter in January – and then wait his turn until he gets a clear shot at the governor’s seat in four or eight years, if he’s still interested. Multimillionaire Otter is acting like the governor-elect already, opting for a Rose Garden strategy that keeps him away from Democratic challenger Jerry Brady and two other candidates as much as possible. In an Associated Press article, political science expert Jim Weatherby termed Otter’s strategy "good politics." Weatherby said: "Otter is hard to pin down." Otter may be pursuing a sure-fire strategy to win an election in a solid Republican state. But it isn’t a strategy that inspires confidence that he will be a "buck-stops-here" governor like Risch or that he’ll run an open government. Opponent Brady, meanwhile, has a long record of accomplishment in both the public and private arenas, ranging from his days as a law student who founded a small-business assistance program in Latin America to his role as a newspaper owner in establishing a job-creation program in southeastern Idaho. He’s a visionary in the mold of former Gov. Cecil Andrus. As governor, he’d be a check on a supermajority of Republican legislators who at times run amok. Brady’s not a career politician like Otter. He’s simply the better candidate.

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Huckleberries Online

D.F. Oliveria started Huckleberries Online on Feb. 16, 2004. Oliveria's Sunday print Huckleberries is a past winner of the national Herb Caen Memorial Column contest.