Harkin’s retirement shakes up Iowa’s political scene

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As much as folks across the United States focus on Iowa every four years for the first stages of the presidential nominating process — and let’s face it, with a “lame duck” Obama presidency coming in 2016, the next time around is going to be wild — all eyes will be focused on the Hawkeye State’s political landscape for the foreseeable future.

U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin’s announcement Saturday that he will not seek re-election in 2014 has shaken the figurative ant farm that is the Iowa political scene. Democrats assumed Harkin would run again and had been focusing on how to unseat Gov. Terry Branstad during this “off-year” cycle. Now they have to find top-flight candidates for both of the top-of-the-ballot races.

And it’s not as though they’re lacking of candidates. And this early in the process, there are no “short lists.” Everyone who is anyone in the Iowa Democratic Party has to be weighing his or her options for both gubernatorial and senatorial runs.

And then you have Tom Latham’s congressional seat, which now represents Des Moines. Democrats can ill afford any Republican holding that seat for long and were likely to throw a big name and big-time money in an effort to bring down the 10-term incumbent. Adding Harkin’s seat into the mix certainly creates a few challenges there, not the least of which is money.

But the lynchpin on the Democratic side rests in Rep. Bruce Braley’s hands. He was already considered by many to be the frontrunner for the gubernatorial nomination. But, running for the U.S. Senate may be equally enticing. If he should decide to run for either post, a secondary cascade of events could begin rolling in Northeast Iowa.

Another key player in all of this could be U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, who previously served as the 40th Governor of Iowa. Or, his wife, Christie, could decide to take another shot at politics, as well.

On the Republican side, there had already been rumblings of possible grassroots efforts to primary Branstad. It’s no secret the old-guard types who have huddled around Iowa’s 16-year governor (two in his current term as 42nd Governor of Iowa plus 14 as the 39th) have been at war with the new-blood party officials, led by Iowa GOP Chairman A.J. Spiker since the Ron Paul-aligned Central Committee took over after the 2012 caucuses.

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