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Frist abandons 2008 presidential bid: Decision makes wide-open race more unpredictable

Frist abandons 2008 presidential bid: Decision makes wide-open race more unpredictable

FRIST
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist says he won?t seek the White House in 2008, an early dropout from the most wide-open presidential race in decades.

“In the Bible, God tells us for everything there is a season, and for me, for now, this season of being an elected official has come to a close,” said the Tennessee Republican, a surgeon before he entered politics in 1994.

While the first national convention delegates won’t be chosen for more than a year, jockeying among potential presidential contenders is well under way.

Frist made his announcement Wednesday as several potential GOP hopefuls were descending on Miami for the annual meeting of the Republican Governors? Association. Among them were Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, outgoing head of the group, and Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., planned private meetings with governors Thursday followed by a reception.

The roster of potential candidates in both parties is long in the first White House campaign since 1928 in which neither an incumbent president nor vice president is in the early mix of candidates.

Frist?s brief statement did not specify a reason for dropping out of a race he had eyed for more than a year, and had included trips to the key early states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

In a statement, he said he ?will take a sabbatical from public life? and ?return to my professional roots as a healer and to refocus my creative energies on innovative solutions to seemingly insurmountable challenges Americans face.?

His decision capped a 12-year career in politics marked by a speedy rise but an uncertain tenure at the peak of Senate power.

He won his Senate seat in 1994 and pledged to serve no longer than two six-year terms.

His launching pad to national power was the chairmanship of the Senate GOP campaign committee, which gained seats under his direction in 2002. That, in turn, positioned him to become majority leader when Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott made racially insensitive comments after the election and was forced to step aside.

As majority leader, Frist worked to implement President Bush?s agenda, from passage of tax cuts to confirmation of conservative judges. He played a significant role in legislation that overhauled Medicare and created a prescription drug benefit.

His politics and his medical training collided in 2005 in the case of Terri Schiavo, and he was widely criticized for pandering to religious conservatives by injecting himself into the debate over the brain-damaged woman. Doctors in the case said she was in a persistent vegetative state. Frist, in his office in the Capitol, viewed a videotape of her, then publicly questioned the diagnosis.

An autopsy later confirmed their judgment, not his.

Apart from McCain, Huckabee and Romney, other potential GOP contenders for the White House include Sens. Sam Brownback of Kansas and Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, Gov. George Pataki of New York; Rep. Duncan Hunter of California; former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Democratic Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Barack Obama of Illinois are the best known nationally; outgoing Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack was the first to formally declare his candidacy yesterday.

Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh and former Sen. John Edwards are expected to run, and Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico may, as well.

Former Democratic Gov. Mark Warner of Virginia has announced he will not run for the presidency in 2008. Warner, like Frist, had begun putting in place a campaign organization to raise money and line up supporters in early caucus and primary states, as well as nationally.

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