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...Helms does bow out, Elizabeth Dole has been spreading the word in Washington and North Carolina that she'd be interested in running for his seat. A former cabinet secretary and president of the American Red Cross, Dole, 65, was reared in Salisbury, North Carolina and visits her mother there regularly. Bob Dole, former Senate Republican leader and 1996 presidential candidate, has told his wife he'd love to return to the Senate as a spouse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Would a Post-Helms Senate Look Like? | 8/21/2001 | See Source »

...Liddy Dole ran a lousy campaign for president in 2000, but in North Carolina she'd be the candidate to beat. The Republicans who might challenge her in a primary are a motley collection of congressmen, wealthy unknowns, or candidates who've lost previous statewide elections. The Democrats have so far offered up only second-string candidates as well. Their three best hopes for taking the seat - former Gov. Jim Hunt, former Clinton chief of staff Erskine Bowles, and Congressman Robert Etheridge - have all said they won't run. Democrats also don't believe they'd get much mileage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Would a Post-Helms Senate Look Like? | 8/21/2001 | See Source »

...Democrats still run strong in key pockets around the state and have managed to get moderates elected, including John Edwards, North Carolina's other senator, who's often mentioned as a presidential candidate in 2004. And though the carpetbagger charge won't stick, Democrats believe the fact the Dole hasn't served on so much as a city council in North Carolina will resonate. "She's really never held an elective office," says Barbara K. Allen, who chairs the North Carolina Democratic Party. "You've got to be better than just being great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Would a Post-Helms Senate Look Like? | 8/21/2001 | See Source »

...Republicans in Washington dearly hope Liddy Dole would have the charm to hold a seat they can't afford to lose. The GOP, of course, wants to take back the Senate, which it lost last May when Vermont Sen. Jim Jeffords defected to the Democrats. But that may become an uphill battle: The numbers in the 2002 election seem to favor the Democrats putting some padding on their one-vote lead in the Senate. Twenty seats now held by Republicans are up for grabs, while the Democrats have only 14 seats at stake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Would a Post-Helms Senate Look Like? | 8/21/2001 | See Source »

...raised nearly $1 million in the comparable period before his last election, and who spent a robust $8 million on his bitterly contested 1996 campaign. Helms? wife Dorothy is on the record as "adamantly" opposing another run. He even has a high-profile lady-in-waiting: Elizabeth Dole, a native of Salisbury, North Carolina, has publicly expressed interest in the seat. (As, of course, have many others, including former Senator and fellow conservative Republican Lauch Faircloth, and State Rep. Dan Blue, a Democrat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jesse Helms, the Face of Hard-Core Conservatism, Will Call it Quits | 8/21/2001 | See Source »

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