Carol Moseley Braun Announces 2004 Run
1 hour, 12 minutes ago
By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Democrat Carol Moseley Braun, the only black woman to
serve in the U.S. Senate, formally declared her candidacy for the
president Monday, forging ahead with a long-shot bid in an otherwise
all-male contest for the White House.
AP Photo
AP Photo
Slideshow: Carol Moseley Braun
Carol Moseley Braun Announces 2004 Run
(AP Video)
"I am uniquely qualified to do the job of president, and I offer the
clearest alternative to this current administration, whose only new
idea has been pre-emptive war and a huge new bureaucracy," Braun said
in a low-key appearance at Howard University. Her only introduction
came from her 26-year-old son, Matthew Braun.
"A woman can fix the mess they have created, because we are
practical, we are not afraid of partnerships and we are committed to
making the world better for our children."
Braun stunned the political establishment in 1992 — the "Year of the
Woman" — unseating an incumbent Democratic senator in the primary,
two-term lawmaker Alan Dixon, on her way to what was once considered
an improbable victory in November.
Her election was heralded as an advance for women and minorities, but
her popularity fell amid accusations that she exercised poor judgment
in visiting Nigeria's brutal former dictator Sani Abacha and misused
campaign funds.
A campaign finance investigation cleared Braun, but she lost her seat
to well-funded Republican challenger Peter Fitzgerald in 1998. After
the defeat, President Clinton (news - web sites) appointed her
ambassador to New Zealand.
Braun used her announcement speech to present her vision for the
future — "an American renaissance" — and criticize President Bush
(news - web sites)'s record on national security and the economy.
Unlike the official campaign announcements by some of her nine
rivals, Braun took questions from a handful of Howard University
students and reporters following her speech. She fielded broad
questions about poverty and children, and more specific queries about
the command and control of U.S. troops in Iraq (news - web sites).
A fierce opponent of the U.S.-led war against Iraq, Braun said the
United States will work to ensure a peaceful Iraq. "Americans don't
cut and run, we have to see this misadventure through," she said.
Monday's kickoff schedule started with speeches at two historically
black colleges — Howard and Benedict College in Columbia, S.C.
Braun's final appearance was scheduled in her home town of Chicago,
where she got her start in politics 25 years ago with election to the
Illinois Legislature.
During months of campaigning, Braun has struggled to build a fund-
raising network. She has pleaded for financial support, especially
when speaking to women's groups, but raised less than $250,000 in the
first half of the year.
Last month, she picked up her first two major endorsements from the
National Organization for Women (news - web sites) and the National
Women's Political Caucus. Leaders of both groups said they would help
raise money for her among their members, and their support gave Braun
encouragement to continue her bid beyond the exploratory phase.
Braun ranks near the bottom in most surveys, but some polls show her
with more support than some of her better-financed rivals. She ranks
higher in some polls of black voters.
She has avoided much of the intra-party fighting of her rivals who
confront each other in an effort to rise to the top of the field. Her
criticism has been focused on President Bush's policies at home and
abroad.
"America is at a tipping point — if we stay the course we are on now,
we won't recognize this country five years from now," she said in
Monday's speech. "But if we shift gears, try another way, tap some of
the talent that has been relegated to the sidelines of leadership, we
can heal and renew and save our country."
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On the Net:
Braun's campaign:
http://www.carolforpresident.com