A full-length documentary was done on him when he was just a councilman in America’s 68th largest city.
He was touted as the man who could be the first black president before Barack Obama beat him to it.
Despite never running in a statewide election before, he’s been embraced by some of America’s biggest names, including Oprah Winfrey.
Now, Cory Booker must prove he’s been worthy all of the hype. After years of preparing for a career beyond Newark, Booker formally announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate over the weekend. He enters the race as a heavy favorite, with polls showing him with a 40-point lead over two U.S. House members who are also expected to run in a Democratic primary against Booker.
And the primary winner will be the overwhelming favorite in October in New Jersey, a reliably blue state in federal elections.
But the next few months are still very important for Booker. With such a strong lead, a defeat in the August Democratic primary or November election would likely end the Newark mayor’s political career.
He has already irritated Democrats nationally by openly criticizing the strategy of President Obama’s campaign last year and Democrats in his home state by running for a U.S. Senate that Democrats already hold instead of taking on the challenge of running against popular New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican.
More importantly, while he has never formally said so, Booker, like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and a few other prominent Democrats, is widely believed to be a potential candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in the future. (With Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden likely to run in 2016, a new generation of Democrats will likely opt for campaigns in 2020 or 2024.) This Senate campaign is Booker’s first formal foray into the national political scene and will be closely watched, in part because there are only a handful of major elections in 2013.









