Call & Times

Sen. Gillibrand ends presidenti­al bid

- By WILL WEISSERT

WASHINGTON — Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand dropped out of the presidenti­al race Wednesday, abruptly ending a campaign that once looked poised to ride strong #MeToo credential­s to formidabil­ity but instead collapsed amid surprising­ly low polling and major fundraisin­g struggles.

“I know this isn’t the result that we wanted,” the 52-year-old New York senator said in an online video in which she didn’t endorse any other 2020 Democratic White House hopeful. “But it’s important to know when it’s not your time.”

The decision came as Gillibrand failed to qualify for a debate coming next month in Houston by not hitting 2% in at least four approved public opinion polls while securing 130,000 unique donors – despite spending millions on online and TV ads to woo people contributi­ng as little as $1. That proved especially embarrassi­ng since candidates who began the race with far lower national profiles, including businessma­n Andrew Yang, made it.

On the eve of Wednesday’s qualifying deadline, Gillibrand sat down with her family and decided that if a pair of polls set to be released the following morning didn’t help her meet the polling threshold, she’d drop out.

Both ultimately showed her at 0%.

To get to the U.S. House, Gillibrand had topped an incumbent Republican in a con

servative part of upstate New York in 2007, and she was appointed to the Senate two years later, filling the seat vacated by Hillary Clinton. She later retained the seat during a 2010 special election, as well as in 2012 and 2018.

Vocal in the Senate on curbing sexual harassment and military sexual assault, and promoting equal pay for women and family leave, Gillibrand made those and her staunch defense of abortion rights the core of her presidenti­al bid. She stood out in the

packed Democratic presidenti­al field by becoming the first to declare she’d only appoint judges to the Supreme Court who consider the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion nationwide settled law, though most of her competitor­s quickly followed suit.

Gillibrand also used her run to highlight systemic racism and white privilege, speaking on the subject frequently on issues such as mass incarcerat­ion, urban gun violence and maternal mortality rates for

black women.

She initially hoped to stay in the race in a bid to qualify for October’s debates, but her financial situation made that impossible. Gillibrand finishes with just $800,000 left in her campaign bank account.

A campaign aide said Wednesday that getting media coverage that could help boost Gillibrand’s polling and fundraisin­g had become too difficult. Gillibrand met with staff at her campaign headquarte­rs in Troy, New York, on Wednesday afternoon to

tell them her race was over.

After forming an explorator­y committee in January and formally entering the race by calling President Donald Trump a “coward” in a March speech delivered near the New York City skyscraper bearing his name, Gillibrand began with $10.5-plus million left over from her landslide 2018 Senate victory in her presidenti­al campaign coffers.

That seemed like more than enough for the long haul. But Gillibrand was the first Senate Democrat in December 2017 to call for Minnesota Sen. Al Franken’s resignatio­n amid numerous allegation­s of sexual misconduct, and she has said for months that that alienated donors and some voters in neighborin­g Iowa, which kicks off presidenti­al primary voting with its caucuses Feb. 3.

Many of her Senate colleagues seeking the Democratic presidenti­al nomination – including Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Kamala

Harris of California and Bernie Sanders of Vermont – followed her lead in calling for Franken to step down before he quit in January 2018. But Gillibrand has faced the most questions about being too quick to condemn him.

Gillibrand said in July that she didn’t regret urging Franken’s resignatio­n but argued that female senators were being blamed more than male ones for a decision that Franken himself ultimately made.

“Women are asked to hold accountabl­e their colleagues. The men are not,” Gillibrand said. “It’s outrageous. It’s absurd.”

Harris tweeted moments after Gillibrand’s announceme­nt that the New Yorker “is a brave voice on some of the most critical issues facing our country today – from childcare to sexual assault. She is a champion and I know she’s not done fighting for women and families everywhere.” Trump offered a tweet appearing to scoff at Gillibrand’s low polling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States