A Bush, a Cheney, and a Carter will be on the ballot next year, but this is no ’80s flashback or stroll down memory lane.
In the 2014 midterm races, the children and grandchildren of former presidents and a vice president are all trying to make their own political names.
The latest addition to a growing list is Jason Carter, the grandson of former President Jimmy Carter, who announced Thursday he’s running for governor of Georgia. The Democratic state senator will try to unseat incumbent Republican Gov. Nathan Deal.
Meanwhile, Liz Cheney — the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney — is challenging incumbent Sen. Mike Enzi (R-Wy.) in the Cowboy State’s GOP primary.
And while it’s not a federal race, George P. Bush — the grandson of one president (George H.W. Bush), the nephew of another (George W. Bush), and the son of a former governor (Jeb Bush) — is running for land commissioner in Texas.
They’re not the only ones whose surnames could help them in tough political campaigns. Three of the most vulnerable Democratic senators running for re-election next year — Mark Begich in Alaska, Mary Landrieu in Louisiana and Mark Pryor in Arkansas — all hail from famous political families in their states.
In West Virginia, moreover, Republicans are hoping for a similar advantage with Rep. Shelley Moore Capito — the daughter of former Gov. Arch Moore — as their likely nominee in the Senate race to replace retiring Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller.
Then there’s Michelle Nunn, the daughter of former Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., who is making her first foray into politics after a working with several volunteer organizations. Like Carter, she has an uphill fight in the conservative Peach State, but with Republicans facing a divisive primary, Democrats smell an opening, especially if they can pull in some “Nunn Democrats.”
Across the border in Florida, Democrats are looking to another senatorial daughter in a competitive House seat. Gwen Graham — daughter of Bob Graham, the former governor and senator — is hoping to unseat GOP Rep. Steve Southerland in the Tallahassee district.
From Carter to Nunn to Graham, could it be a renaissance in the South for Democrats as they try to lean on some old names and save the current ones?









