Badly injured, Harry Reid’s political future was left for dead.
It was early 2009, and the Senate Democratic Leader was reeling from the revelation that he praised Barack Obama’s “light skin” and lack of a “Negro dialect.” Polls showed Reid going to the way of his predecessor, Tom Daschle, who lost reelection in 2004, as the Nevadan faced revolt both at home and in Washington, and on both the right and left. Just a third Nevadans said they would vote in 2010 to re-elect Reid, whose unpopularity was seen as dragging down even his son’s career.
And yet Reid, a former police officer and boxer who survived a mafia-backed bombing attempt as Nevada’s gaming commissioner, held on. He always has.
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But today, Reid’s enemy may be more powerful than Republicans or even the mob. As the 75-year old goes into surgery Monday for an injury that may cost him vision in one eye, he’ll have to decide if he’s up for yet another uphill fight of a reelection campaign in 2016.
Just a few days before Reid was due back in Washington to surrender his gavel to arch-rival Mitch McConnell this month, he added injury to the insult of the November election when he fell badly while working out at home in Nevada. He broke six ribs and badly damaged his right eye, which will be operated on at George Washington University hospital in Washington Monday, where doctors hope to help the senator retain vision in his eye.
Reid skipped last week’s State of the Union address and the earlier swearing-in ceremonies for new members of the Senate, along with many of the chamber’s first votes of the year, raising questions about his fitness to continue to lead his caucus this session, let alone wage another grueling reelection bid next year.
But he’s making efforts to show he is still working and in charge of his caucus — if no longer the Senate — spending hours on the phone with his caucus members and showing off his eye patch in a video released by his office. He told reporters last week that he’s pushing ahead with plans to run again. “Everything’s online. We’re off and running,” he said. “At this stage I’m fully intending to run.”
Those who know him say it will take more than a spill to knock Reid out of politics. “This is Harry Reid,” said Josh Orton, a former Reid spokesperson. “Anyone who knows his story knows a whack in the eye isn’t going to slow him down.”
Inside his sprawling political and legislative operations on Capitol Hill, Reid’s staff are continuing to operate under the assumption that he’s running again, and senator has personally indicated as much to aides. He’s started planning a series of fundraisers for a bid, his campaign committee has been ramping up its emails to supporters, and he looks ready to tap a campaign manager soon.
He even recently sold his house in his hometown of Searchlight to move to Las Vegas, in part so that he could be closer to his campaign team and political power base. “I’ve got a re-election coming up. I’ve been through a few elections commuting from Searchlight and it’s hard, so this will make that part of it much easier,” the senator said in a video announcing the move in June.
If anything, some close to Reid say, the injury might the famously defiant Democrat even more eager to run again.
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Reid’s toughness is legendary among his staff and the large diaspora of former aides and allies that populate Washington. In addition to the boxing, brushes with the mob and his stint with the Capitol Police, there was the time he was hospitalized for working too hard in 2013, and the time he survived a serious car crash the year before. Growing up in a desert shack without running water or electricity, a 14-year-old Reid and his brother pinned down their father to force him to stop beating their mother.
Nearly every reelection has been a brush with death for Reid, with nail biting campaigns that end in victories with the slimmest of margins. Jim Manley, another former spokesperson, said Reid gets a “certain satisfaction” from the doubters and will not be daunted by the injury or questions it raises.









