The hunt for the next Barack Obama is off to a slow start.
Just months away from when presidential wannabees typically announce their candidacy, Elizabeth Warren made her first trip to the critical primary state of Iowa on Sunday and hit it out of the park. But she says she’s not running for president, leaving no obvious progressive superstar to challenge Hillary Clinton from the left for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016.
%22There%27s%20an%20appetite%20for%20an%20alternative.%20And%20there%27s%20a%20general%20sense%20of%20a%20bit%20of%20unease%20with%20Clinton.%22′
At roughly this point in 2006, Obama was already surfacing as a threat. A CNN poll taken over the last few days of October had the young senator trailing Clinton by just 11 points. “Obama has emerged as the leading rival to Sen. Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Party’s nomination,” a Pew survey found in November.
Democratic leaders like Harry Reid covertly abetted the Obama insurgency, while influential mega-donors prepared to snub Clinton.
This time around, however, the former secretary of state is leaving the rest of the potential field in her dust, with at least 49 percentage points separating Clinton from her nearest challenger in every poll. Reid sends fundraising emails on behalf of the pro-Clinton super PAC Ready for Hillary. And the members of the “People Formerly Mad at Hillary Club” are lining up to open their wallets and get back in the fold.
It’s Warren, however, who is the obvious successor to the Obama mantle. She excites the progressive base unlike any politician since him, has a national donor and support network, and is one of only two non-Clintons who poll in the double digits (the other is Vice President Joe Biden, who is also unlikely to run if Clinton does).
The only problem: She doesn’t want the job. And the effort to draft her into the race is still finding its legs almost two years after Clinton’s army started gathering. The base of the party may be ready for Warren, but she’s not ready for them — and neither are many other potential alternatives.
“There’s an appetite for an alternative. And there’s a general sense of a bit of unease with Clinton. On the other hand, there’s not a lot of people that are jumping in front of the spotlight to be ready to run an alternative campaign. Right now, there really doesn’t seem to be an alternative,” said Guy Saperstein, part owner of the Oakland Athletics baseball team who is a major donor to Democratic and progressive causes.
Saperstein provided the seed money for Ready for Warren, the super PAC hoping to get Warren into the presidential race. On Friday, the Oakland-based lawyer met with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been visiting Iowa and New Hampshire as he contemplates a presidential bid.
Warren has become a rock star on the left, with her populist-infused economic message leading many progressives to identify themselves as hailing from the “Warren wing” of the Democratic Party.
But some organizers were surprised, if pleasantly, when Ready for Warren appeared suddenly at the liberal Netroots National conference in July. There was no major outreach effort, and some found out about the group just hours before the first news articles appeared. Ready for Warren didn’t have their legal status squared away with the Federal Election Commission, so the group couldn’t accept donations during the burst of publicity they received around their creation.
It’s a grassroots effort, contrasted with the deep-pocketed and professionalized Ready for Hillary campaign, which had the benefit of starting in January 2013 when few people were paying attention.
“Our name sort of invites the comparison, but it’s obviously completely different,” said Erica Sagrans, a former Obama campaign staffer who now runs Ready for Warren.
Sagrans impressed many of her peers earlier this year by managing the successful primary campaign of a 26-year-old former Huffington Post editor who took on the Chicago Democratic machine by ousting an incumbent state representative — the daughter of the local party chairman. Sagrans’ candidate fell 125 votes short in a 2012 bid for the same seat, but pushed the incumbent to the left before taking her on again.
“Our strength is that we have momentum and excitement and grassroots energy,” Sagrans said. “The money and all that can come later.”
Some money has come in already. One day early on, an online donation of $5,000 — a lot of money for a group that raised just $58,000 in its first three months of existence — came in out of the blue.
On other end of the check was not a financier or lawyer. It was a 2012 college graduate just beginning a career as a Democratic political strategist named Daniel Buk. He doesn’t have a ton of money, but pours much of what he gets from a life insurance annuity into political causes he believes in, instead of the idle pursuits millennials are said to crave.
He discovered Ready for Warren on Google and made his first contribution. After getting more involved in the group, he went to write another check for $20,000 to help the super PAC secure a professional fundraiser. That makes Buk the group’s largest donor, responsible for almost 40% of the cash they brought in in their first quarter of existence.
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He’s even applied for a job to be Ready for Warren’s deputy campaign manager, one of at least four new jobs that will be filled sometime after the midterm elections. It’s that kind of organic enthusiasm that makes Warren one of the most compelling figures in Democratic politics.
Buk explained that he loved Warren, but that he doesn’t see his support for her as mutually exclusive of Clinton. “We obviously want Elizabeth Warren to enter the primary, but in case she doesn’t, we need to make Hillary realize that she needs to expand her versatility,” Buk explained.
As Buk acknowledges, the problem for the Warren-ites is that the senator has so far said she’s not interested in being drafted. Through a lawyer, she disavowed Ready for Warren. Though a spokesperson, she’s said she does not support the effort.
Warren added her signature to a secret letter signed by all the Democratic women in the Senate urging Clinton to run. And campaigning for other Democratic candidates this year, Warren has until Sunday danced around Iowa and New Hampshire (despite requests from in the state) to avoid arousing 2016 suspicions.









