Looks like Howard Dean's three-year ride as chairman of the Democratic National Committee is about to get hit by the game-over button.
Aides to Barack Obama are already in negotiations to put their own people in charge of the DNC once Obama formally and finally clinches the party's presidential nomination, and that means replacing Dean with an Obama loyalist like Paul Tewes, a key architect of the Illinois senator's victories in Iowa and elsehere. That's according to AP writer Nedra Pickler's story on the wire today (Click
HERE for the full story).
The irony of all this is that many political observers see Dean's own upstart bid for the presidential nomination in 2004 as the precursor to Obama's success, in terms of the netroots' connection, the appeal to the young, and the similarity between Obama's "Yes We Can" chant and Dean's "You've got the power" mantra.
So what's next for Dean? He's managed to turn himself into a national figure and has been in politics now for nearly 30 years, but he's only 59 years old and undoubtably doesn't want to fade into the sunset just yet.
So how do he do as DNC chairman? What's up next for him? A post in an Obama administration, if it happens? A return to Vermont politics? A return to Democracy for America or something like it?
-- Sam Hemingway