This will come as welcome news to some Democrats, but not so much in his supposedly safe haven of Massachusetts. Many Dems in his home state, like pretty much their entire congressional delegation, were amassing huge sums of money for a shot at a potential open Senate seat.
During 2005 there were rumblings that Kerry, with his huge e-mail list and quarter of a billion dollar fundraising feat from 2004, considered himself the frontrunner for 2008. But the numbers, and reality, said otherwise. He's as well-known as John Edwards and Hillary Clinton, and slightly moreso than Barack Obama; but he's polling in the mid-to-low single digits. Not even a factor.
His "botched joke" prior to election day 2006, confirmed to many Democrats what they already suspected. That his overall political skills just aren't that sharp. When basically no one came to his defense, Kerry finally got the message.
On a brighter note though, the 2008 field is finally starting to take shape. Clark and Gore are now the only holdouts. Clark seems to be a maybe, Gore is doubtful. Also, Sen. Kerry will now spend more of his time using his clout as a U.S. Senator to get our troops out of Iraq.
MyDD has a list of Iowa polls they've compiled. It ain't pretty:
Candidate St.Vis./ Zogby/ ARG/ R. 2000
Edwards 25 27 20 22
Obama 17 17 10 22
Vilsack 16 16 17 12
Clinton 15 16 31 10
Biden 4 3 2 1
Kerry 3 3 2 5
Clark 2 - 1 4
Richardson 1 1 1 1
Dodd 1 - 2 -
Kucinich 1 1 5 4
Undecided 15 13 8 11
Dear Lowell,I wanted to start by just saying thank you -- thank you to each and every one of you who have come together in the johnkerry.com community.
Thanks to you, we have a new Democratic Congress that is fighting to stop the administration's disastrous course in Iraq, thanks to you we can be a Congress that addresses issues like climate change and health care, and thanks to you, change is coming to Washington.
Over the last two years, when you could've walked off the field after getting knocked down in 2004, you didn't walk away, you kept fighting. Together, three million strong, you helped provide $14 million to more than 260 candidates, committees and progressive causes. Nineteen of those candidates received over $100,000 each in donations from our community. Just think of the special support that you helped us provide to veterans running for office -- helping to make Chris Carney, Tim Walz, Joe Sestak, and Patrick Murphy members of Congress today. And because you dug in early when a lot of people said it couldn't be done, you helped a courageous Vietnam veteran Jim Webb on his march to become the 51st Senator and give Democrats our majority in the Senate.
I hope you are as proud of what you've accomplished as I am. But this isn't a time to rest on our accomplishments.
The work isn't over. Today I hope you'll help me with another big mission.
35 years ago, I got into public life to end a war that was wrong. I believe now as strongly as I did then that it is wrong to ask more young Americans to die for anyone's mistakes. And I believe that a Congress that shares responsibility for getting us into this war must bear responsibility for getting us out.
Americans went to the polls and voted for change in Iraq. They sent a strong and clear message to all of us, on both sides of the aisle, that they wanted real change in Iraq. They certainly did not vote for us to sit by while some national leaders actually advocate escalating the war and sending more American troops into the middle of an Iraqi civil war. We must stand for a change in Iraq, or we don't stand for anything at all.
This mission, this responsibility, is something all of us must accept. As someone who voted for the resolution that gave the president the authority to go to war, I feel the weight of a personal responsibility to act.
I sought the presidency to lead us on a different course. There are powerful reasons to want to continue that fight now. But I've concluded this isn't the time for me to mount a presidential campaign. It is the time to put my energy to work as part of the new Democratic majority in the Senate, to do all I can to end this war and strengthen our security and our ability to fight the real war on terror.
The people of Massachusetts have given me an incredible privilege to serve in the Senate, to represent the birthplace of freedom, the cradle of liberty, and a state where in Faneuil Hall patriotic dissenters stood on principle. I want to continue representing Massachusetts, and that's why I am running for reelection so I can use my voice all day every day to end this war and galvanize grassroots action to force Washington and our Democratic Party to live up to its responsibility.
Together, all of us, starting with the three million of you who have built this online community, must remain steadfast in protecting the principles we fought for every day of our campaign. You have a responsibility to urge those who are running this time to step up and address those issues, and particularly on Iraq to find not just a new way forward, but the right way forward.
Above all else, the mission we must all join is to end the war in Iraq.
Our first step toward that goal is to force President Bush to set a deadline to redeploy our troops.
I hope you will come to http://www.setadeadl... and take the opportunity to speak out on the importance of setting a deadline to redeploy our troops and bring our heroes home. Speak out at http://www.setadeadl...
Now that a new Democratic Congressional majority has convened in the U.S. Capitol, a deadline must be set. Working together as Americans, holding leaders accountable, is our best hope to ensure that it is.
Please come to http://www.setadeadl... and get on board.
Thank you,
John Kerry
Sorry, Kerry messed up his own Presidential chances time and time again.
Thank you Kerry for making the mature choice and not run again in 2008. Now, you can be yourself finally.
The Dems just took control of Congress, Kerry is Chair of the Small Business Com., and is third in ranking on the SFRC, he has also been named Chairman of Near East and South And Central Asian Affairs subcommittee. This subcommittee deals with U.S. diplomatic relations with these countries : Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.
There is a lot of fixing that needs to be done now, and Kerry would not be able to continue his fight to end the war in Iraq and do the investigating that needs to be done, on so many different fronts, on a campaign trail.
John Kerry has always been himself, and he has always put the country first.
Anyway, now that he's out, I am officially undecided for the '08 primary. And I don't see myself backing another candidate in the near future.