Former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-S.D.) said Monday that she won’t run for Senate, making the Democrats’ fight to keep the seat in their column even more difficult.
“While I know you share my confidence that working together we could win a statewide race next year, I’m also confident that the decision not to run is the right decision for Max, Zachary, me and our entire family,” Herseth Sandlin wrote on her Facebook page.
The former congresswoman’s pass leaves Rick Weiland, a former aide to Tom Daschle, as the only Democrat yet in the race. Weiland has the former Senate majority leader’s blessing for his bid, and in his announcement last week indicated that another top Democratic prospect, Johnson’s son and U.S. Attorney Brendan Johnson, would also take a pass.
Weiland isn’t in the top crop of recruits Democrats had wished for here: He’s lost two primaries for the state’s lone seat in Congress, including to Herseth Sandlin in 2002. Progressives have met his candidacy positively but that may not be a boon to him in a state that President Obama lost by 22 points last year.
For now, Democrats’ best hope seems to be wishing for a bruising GOP primary. It could come to fruition. Former Gov. Mike Rounds is already in the race, but he’s not the favorite of some conservative groups, and Rep. Kristi Noem, who defeated Herseth Sandlin in 2010, is still weighing a bid. But whoever emerges, and no matter how messy the primary gets, that’s still a risky strategy for Democrats, and either Rounds or Noem would start out with an advantage in the increasingly red state.









