The Daily Caller

The Daily Caller
 Frank Antenori  

1st potential candidate for Giffords seat emerges

PHOENIX (AP) — Is Rep. Gabrielle Giffords running for re-election?

That’s a question State Sen. Frank Antenori of Tucson wants to answer before the May 15 deadline for submitting nominating petitions. The first potential candidate to publicly declare an interest in running for the southern Arizona post, Antenori said Thursday he feels Democrats are exploiting a perception that she’s running for re-election as a way to blunt attempts by the GOP to win the seat.

“You are not going to use this strategy for a political purpose and try to keep Republicans out of the race until May. Ain’t gonna happen,” Antenori said, explaining that such a late announcement by Giffords would leave GOP candidates flat-footed.

Giffords, who is in her third term in Congress but has spent the past eight months recovering from a gunshot wound she suffered during a meeting with voters, hasn’t publicly said whether she’ll seek re-election. She also has been mentioned as a potential candidate for a U.S. Senate seat next year.

Arizona Democratic Party spokeswoman Jennifer Johnson said the decision on whether Giffords will run is for the congresswoman and her family to make. “Her recovery isn’t based on (Antenori’s) political ambitions,” Johnson said.

Speculation on Giffords’ future has buzzed since her surprise return to Congress earlier this month to cast her first vote since the Jan. 8 shooting in Tucson that wounded 12 others and killed six people, including one of her aides. Her return to vote on the debt ceiling deal was celebrated as proof she could possibly return full-time to politics.

Giffords campaign chairman Michael McNulty didn’t immediately return calls placed Thursday.

Some Republicans have privately expressed reluctance in speaking publicly about the future of the seat because of sensitivities of commenting on her career as she was recovering.

Antenori, who formed an exploratory committee for a potential congressional run, said three weeks ago he thought Giffords was going to run, but now is left to wonder after a loyal Giffords aide took another job and, he charges, the Democratic Party is testing the waters for other possible candidates for the post.

“If she is capable and has the physical ability to represent the district, I think she would be a formidable — almost unbeatable — foe,” Antenori said. He’s the only candidate so far who has said publicly he’s even considering a run — but he also says he will probably cancel those plans if Giffords decides to make another bid for her seat.

Johnson said the party isn’t shopping around possible candidates for the post. “Congresswoman Giffords is our incumbent,” Johnson said. “If she decides not to run, then that’s the only appropriate time for us to be discussing other Democratic candidates.”

Antenori said he plans to announce whether he’s running in January or February after the state finishes drawing new boundaries for the congressional district. He believes Giffords ought to make her announcement within the first two months of 2012, too.

Antenori, who served in the Army in Afghanistan and Iraq before retiring from the military in 2004, lost a 2006 run for the congressional post, finishing second to last in a primary field of five Republicans. He went on to win a 2008 state House race and crushed his Democratic opponent in a 2010 race for the state Senate.

If Giffords decides to run again, she will have plenty of goodwill and money at her disposal. Democratic colleagues have held several fundraisers on her behalf in recent months and many are also donating to her campaign. As of June 30, they had helped her campaign generate more than $639,000 in donations.

According to the latest quarterly report filed with the Federal Election Commission, Giffords’ campaign has nearly $788,000 in the bank.

Bruce Merrill, a longtime pollster in Arizona and senior research fellow at Arizona State University’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy, said Antenori is trying to put his name out to voters in case Giffords decides against running for re-election. “People should, rightfully, try to position themselves,” Merrill said.

But Merrill, who believes the Democrat is unbeatable if she seeks re-election, also speculated that Giffords probably wants as much time as possible to assess her health and whether she wants to run again.

“There is no reason, in my opinion, for her to announce until May,” Merrill said.

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Associated Press writer Kevin Freking in Washington contributed to this report.

  • Anonymous

    Before lovable and likeable Gabby Giffords was shot she had already shown that she did not understand and did not want FairTax (H.R. 25). Now, with her injuries it becomes far more unlikely that she will be able to grasp the wisdom of H.R. 25. So it becomes extremely important that her staff show that they appreciate how effective H.R. 25 would be in bringing about near full employment. They need understand it; then they will demand it!

    JOBS, JOBS, JOBS
    by
    Stephen Uhl, Ph.D.

    As our unemployment rate hangs above 9% nationwide the loud cry for more jobs becomes more and more urgent, even angry—and legitimately so. The angry impatience of the unemployed and underemployed demands a practical response from government and industry; human compassion drives the rest of us to work for drastic improvement in the employment picture.

    Companies large and small are the real job creators.

    As Tom Braithwaite wrote in The Daily Progress (2/22/2011), there is great need to reduce costs of doing business in the United States. He pointed out that companies are currently overburdened with both regulations and taxes; these expenses are naturally embedded in the prices that companies have to charge for their products. Since corporations are taxed more heavily in U.S. than in most other countries, and since complex tax regulations burden our productive corporations so heavily, international companies are leaving billions of profits offshore where they are not taxed up to 35%.

    As international companies produce more cheaply offshore while selling to the world’s largest market (U.S.), we go begging for jobs as we contribute to the serious export-import imbalance. Up to $13 trillion of overseas business remains overseas while great companies like Microsoft, G.E., Cisco, etc. hire foreign workers and leave their huge profits offshore—mainly to avoid paying U.S. income taxes. As Mr. Braithwaite brings out, with reasonable regulations and no corporate income taxes we would likely enjoy full employment here on our shores. FairTax (H.R. 25 & S. 13) would accomplish this.

    Certified Financial Planner, Ken Clark, in The Idiot’s Pocket Guide to The FairTax, p. 103, writes: “The FairTax’s most legitimate chance to contribute to economic growth comes from its ability to change the balance of U.S. foreign trade… U.S. goods will finally be able to compete on equal footing with foreign goods… .” This same Certified Financial Planner says that under FairTax “… imported goods will lose any tax-based price advantage they had, increasing the demand for some domestic alternatives … ” (p.105)

    Full employment results as MADE IN AMERICA becomes popular once again.

    An increasing volume of research and unpleasant experiences make it ever more clear that the current income tax system of over 70,000 pages of loopholes and political favoritism cannot be fixed; it needs to be totally replaced. Since it is income based, it taxes the conscientious while being so gameable that about 50% of Americans (including many rich corporations) do not carry their fair share. The underground economy of perhaps 1.5 trillion dollars currently goes untaxed.

    The FairTax Act (HR.25, S.13) abolishes all federal personal and corporate income taxes, gift, estate, capital gains, alternative minimum, Social Security, Medicare, and self-employment taxes and replaces them with one simple, visible, federal retail sales tax administered primarily by existing state sales tax authorities.
    The FairTax taxes us only on what we choose to spend on new goods or services, not on what we earn. The FairTax, endorsed enthusiastically by the National Small Business Association, is an efficient, transparent, and intelligent solution to the frustration and inequity of our current tax system. FairTax with its prebate is very progressive and leaves the poor completely untaxed. For everyone April 15 is just another spring day; the I.R.S. no longer intrudes on our lives.

    Workers keep their entire paychecks; retirees keep their entire pensions; corporations fill our shelves and showrooms with new goods for about 20% to 25% less imbedded costs. Pimps, prostitutes, pushers of drugs and the rest of the huge underground economy all pay their share at the checkout counter. Similarly the millions of visitors, legal and illegal, contribute to carrying our tax burden as they purchase new (not used) products.

    The details of FairTax (H.R. 25 & S. 13) can be found in an increasing abundance of sources beyond the pocket guide mentioned above. For introductory concepts the reader can go to http://www.FairTax.org and http://www.fairtaxnation.com. Another rich and concentrated source of information is FairTax: The Truth: Answering the Critics, by Boortz. Many varied sources can be found by simply Googling FairTax. For the more legal minded, the 130 page proposed law is readily available via internet.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Aaron-Cornett/1430770675 Aaron Cornett

    Her seat should have been vacated months ago because she can’t represent her district. Plain and simple, She has not spoken publicly since the shooting and only showed up for a vote on the debt ceiling and did not comment or speak to the press.  Makes you wonder. 

    Bet if this was a republican the press would be all over this like stink on a monkey.