I'm all for it. And frankly if he DID run (which unfortunately he probably won't), he'd win on his popularity and a reputation of getting the job done when the pressure is on.Posted Friday, September 04, 2009 10:56 AM
Why Curt Schilling Could Win Teddy's Seat
Mark Starr
There were a lot of smirks adorning the faces of Bostonians yesterday morning, presumably a collective judgment on the revelation that retired Red Sox pitching ace Curt Schilling is contemplating a run for the late Teddy Kennedy’s Senate seat. Of course, those are probably many of the same folks who gave up the ghost back in 2004 when Schilling, bleeding team colors from an ankle tendon that had been stitched up in Rube Goldberg fashion, limped out to the mound against the New York Yankees in a desperate moment on Boston’s path to its first championship in 86 years. So could Schilling’s path to Washington and Congress be any more improbable than that?
It has long been assumed that Schilling, 42, with his outspoken activism including high-profile campaigns to raise money to fight ALS and to boost awareness of the dangers of skin cancer, harbored political ambitions. But most believed he would run for the Senate from Arizona, where he also pitched a team to a World Series title and where his strident conservatism and born-again faith would be more in fashion with voters than in the blue-state bastion of Massachusetts. But Arizona appears blocked, with Jon Kyl ensconced as Senate minority whip and John McCain showing no sign of wanting to retire to any of his homes. Massachusetts has the obvious virtue of an open seat with no obvious successor to Kennedy. So far Schilling has only allowed─on his popular blog, 38pitches.com─that he is considering the possibility of a Senate run, but that “many, many things would have to align themselves for that to truly happen.”
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I wonder what you Massachusetts residents think of that.
- Bill