The job of a “shadow senator” from the District of Columbia is to convince Congress to grant D.C. statehood. That already Sisyphean challenge was made more difficult when Republicans took control of both chambers of Congress last year, so you have to get creative. For D.C. shadow Sen. Paul Strauss, that includes flirting with a run for president.
It’s not every day that Washington municipal officials show up in Iowa, but Strauss will be appearing at an event Sunday hosted by the Polk County Democrats in Des Moines, Iowa, billed as a chance to meet the shadow senator. Democrats, including likely 2016 front runner Hillary Clinton, have made favorable noises about giving D.C. more political representation, but have generally stopped short of endorsing full statehood. At 2012’s Democratic National Convention, statehood activists failed to get their cause added to the party’s platform.
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Washington’s two shadow senators, unlike D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, have no legal power in Congress, but they serve as the city’s official elected lobbyists for statehood. They receive no budget or pay from the government, but do have offices provided by the city. Strauss’s job was previously held by Jesse Jackson, who ran for president twice, and few politicians make accidental trips to Iowa, so it seemed worth asking — is he considering a White House bid?
“Does anybody ever say ‘no’ when you ask them about their trips to Iowa and New Hampshire?” he told msnbc. Strauss has also spoken at the New Hampshire Statehouse. “It’s certainly my intention to make D.C. statehood part of the national discussion, and that would include the presidential campaign.”









