For immediate releaseU.S. Senate race
Editor’s note:
These stories are produced by University of Montana journalism students under the supervision of Professor Dennis Swibold. They may be used without charge, provided editorsretain the students’ bylines. Please Swibold (www.dennis.swibold@umontana.edu) with anyquestions. You can also find this story and other information on the upcoming election atwww.montanaschoice2008.blogspot.com.)
Baucus Seeks Historic Win; Kelleher Wants a Parliament
By MARK PAGECommunity News ServiceUM School of Journalism
No one is more surprised than Bob Kelleher that he’s Montana’s Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate.“I’m still trying to figure out where those 27,000 votes came from, besides my own,” hesaid of his June primary victory. Not that he’s complaining. A perennial fixture on the fringe of Montana politics, 85-year-old Kelleher has run for office 16 times. His primary victory over a crowded field in June is onlyhis second win.His first came in his first race. He represented Yellowstone County at the state’s 1972Constitutional Convention, in which his current rival, five-term U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, served asan administrative staffer.It was there that Kelleher first struck the idea that has driven his long-shot campaignsever since: switching the U.S to a parliamentary form of government. Kelleher believesAmerica’s system, with its separation of powers and a strong executive, keeps power out of thehands of the people.As interesting as the parliamentary debate may be, it’s hard to imagine the idea gainingenough momentum to topple Baucus, the longest-serving senator in Montana history.Baucus has amassed an $11 million war chest for this campaign. Kelleher has spent $20,000 andfigures he’ll spend about $20,000 more.“He has his millions,” said Kelleher. “He could buy the whole state with his $11 million.”Kelleher is campaigning with his own money, earned through his law practice in Billingsand Butte. He takes on mostly personal injury, workers’ compensation and estate settlementcases.Before coming to Montana in the 50s, Kelleher, a native of Oak Park, Ill., worked for theU.S. Department of Justice as a prosecutor. He said back then he was asked to prosecute peoplefor lifestyle choices. He and with desk mate Robert F. Kennedy fought against this.“If somebody was gay or a commie they could be prosecuted,” Kelleher said. “I refusedto prosecute gays, and as I remember Bobby Kennedy refused to prosecute gays.”Baucus, 66, was a child when Kelleher and Kennedy worked together. But he rocketed to power as a young lawyer out of Stanford University. A Helena native, Baucus worked for threeyears at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission before entering politics in 1971. By 1974Baucus was in the House of Representatives and two years later he became a U.S. senator.
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