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Ship without a rudder

Tom Reilly’s chaotic campaign for governor
By ADAM REILLY  |  March 3, 2006

GAMBIT: If Reilly plays his cards right, he might turn his recent struggles into fodder for a new campaign narrative.It’s a simple question: other than the candidate — who has a day job, after all — who is running Attorney General Tom Reilly’s campaign for governor?

The answer is surprisingly elusive. Sometimes it’s everybody. Sometimes it’s nobody.

“One of the questions everyone asks is, ‘Who’s the go-to, day-to-day person helping Reilly with his decisions?’” says one astute Democrat. “Is there somebody who’s both serving as his consigliore and helping with field operations? It’s just very unclear.”

“In Deval’s campaign, it’s very clear that John Walsh is in charge,” adds a second Democratic observer, referring to the campaign manager for Deval Patrick, Reilly’s sole declared opponent in the Democratic primary. “In the Reilly campaign, I don’t think anyone’s in charge. And that’s a formula for disaster.”

This ambiguity seems only fitting. With the primary six and a half months away, Reilly is a deeply compromised figure: a tough guy who seems fragile, a political veteran who’s oddly naive, a onetime front-runner who’s looking like a loser. But Reilly also has far more money than Patrick; a deep knowledge of state politics that Patrick can only hope to approximate; high name recognition; and a cadre of committed supporters whose faith remains unshaken. He has also suffered the harshest scrutiny imaginable and managed to survive — which, to take a Nietzschean tack, should toughen him up for the campaign to come.

The truth is, Reilly could still be the Democratic nominee. For that to happen, though, he’ll need to do everything right in the coming months. Fixing the dysfunctional mechanics of his campaign would be a good place to start.

A gaggle of operatives
Based on conversations with several veteran Democratic observers, it appears that there’s no Karl Rove–esque figure coordinating Reilly’s campaign from week to week. Instead, what the candidate seems to have is an assortment of competing power centers. One group is made up of young operatives from the AG’s office and the Reilly campaign. They include Steve Kerrigan, the AG’s former chief of staff [see "Correction," below]; David Guarino, the former Herald reporter who was hired as the AG’s communications director last year; Corey Welford, the former AG spokesman who now functions in the same role for the campaign; and Steve Bilafer, another former chief of staff for Reilly.

Sean Sinclair — who’s Reilly’s titular campaign manager, although he seems to have far less influence than this title would suggest — also belongs in this group. Sinclair’s résumé features some impressive highlights: he managed Nevada senator Harry Reid’s re-election campaign in 2004; and he ran the successful gubernatorial campaign of Ted Kulongoski, an attorney general who was elected governor of Oregon in 2002. His knowledge of Massachusetts is minimal, however, and his ties to Reilly are relatively shallow. According to one reliable source, Sinclair played no role in the disastrous selection of state representative Marie St. Fleur as Reilly’s running mate last month. (St. Fleur quit after her checkered financial past became public knowledge.)

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Related: Reversal of fortune, Survivor: Worcester, The incompetence candidate, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Deval Patrick, Marie St. Fleur, Marie St. Fleur,  More more >
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Comments
Ship without a rudder
Last year twenty-three innocent victims of the Massachusetts legal system were released from prison after decades of false imprisonment. The attorney general promised that he and the district attorneys responsible for the false imprisonments would investigate themselves to the exclusion of everyone else. Titter, titter. The results of the alleged “investigation” would be released when they get around to it. Has this alleged investigation ever been conducted? Has anyone seen the results of the alleged investigation? Has the compensation promised the victims ever been paid? The last I heard, the attorney general was blocking that, too. Tom Reilly seems to think that his responsibilities end with covering up crime, not investigating and prosecuting crime. Can he be trusted to do any better as governor?
By Krogy on 03/04/2006 at 12:33:34

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