Ryan Quitting Campaign for Senate
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, June 25, 2004
WASHINGTON – Illinois Republican senatorial candidate Jack
Ryan, his candidacy in turmoil over sex club allegations, decided
to quit his quest for Congress on Friday. "I am today withdrawing
from the race," he said in a statement prepared by his campaign.
"It's clear to me that a vigorous debate on the issues most
likely could not take place if I remain in the race," added the
statement, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.
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"What would take place, rather, is a brutal, scorched-earth
campaign - the kind of campaign that has turned off so many voters,
the kind of politics I refuse to play."
Illinois GOP leaders would select another candidate in the event
of a withdrawal. Ryan's replacement would become an instant
underdog in a campaign against Democrat state Sen. Barack Obama.
Ryan conducted an overnight poll to gauge his support in the
wake of the allegations made by his ex-wife in divorce records
unsealed earlier this week. Aides said in advance his only options
were to withdraw or to redouble his campaign efforts with a massive
infusion of money from his personal wealth.
After reviewing the polling results, Ryan's advisers told the
candidate Friday morning that he could survive the scandal but only
after an extremely negative and expensive response. "I won't do
that," Ryan replied, according to a participant in the meeting.
"That's not me."
The internal polling had Ryan trailing Obama 20 to 25 percent,
the official said. That figure didn't worry aides as much as
results showing that conservatives were abandoning Ryan. They
concluded that the only way to get Ryan's base back would be to go
negative immediately on Obama and not let up.
Illinois Republican Party leaders convened a teleconference in
the hours before Ryan made his announcement, although it wasn't
clear whether they had yet turned to discussion of who might
replace Ryan some four months before the November election.
Several names immediately surfaced, including state Sen. Steve
Rauschenberger and dairy owner Jim Oberweis, both of whom lost to
Ryan in the primary, and former state Board of Education chairman
Ron Gidwitz. Additionally, other GOP officials floated the name of
Patrick Fitzgerald, a U.S. attorney in Illinois.
Polls have shown Ryan trailing Obama from the start of their
race. Even so, several party strategists said they were concerned
about the impact on Republicans running for the state legislature
and other offices if he stayed on the ballot.
The Senate election is to replace Republican Peter Fitzgerald,
who decided not to seek a second term.
Ryan has been struggling for political survival since Monday,
when divorce records were released showing that his ex-wife,
actress Jeri Ryan, said he took her to sex clubs and tried to
pressure her to perform sex acts while others watched. Ryan has
denied the allegations.
Media 'out of Control'
In his statement, Ryan sharply attacked the media for
its involvement in winning the release of sealed records.
"The media has gotten out of control. The fact that The Chicago
Tribune sues for access to sealed custody documents and then takes
unto itself the right to public details of a custody dispute - over
the objections of two parents who agree that the re-airing of their
arguments will hurt their ability to co-parent their child and hurt
their child - is truly outrageous," he said.
Although Fitzgerald and the National Republican Senatorial
Committee stood by Ryan, he came under immediate pressure from many
GOP officials in his home state to relinquish his nomination.
Members of the state's GOP congressional delegation met with
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., on Thursday to discuss the
issue, and one official said afterward that the speaker concurred
that Ryan needed to step aside.
Fitzgerald said Friday that he had encouraged Ryan to stay in
the race and called the response to the scandal "grotesque."
"I told him that it troubled me greatly that so many party
leaders who had no trouble stomaching years and years of corruption
and insider deals and scandals under George Ryan were now lining up
to throw stones at Jack [no relation to George Ryan]," Fitzgerald
said.
Ryan, 44, was seen by many as the party's best hope of
revitalization after a devastating 2002 election, in which Illinois
Republicans lost control of the governor's office and nearly every
statewide office, and a corruption scandal involving
former Gov. George Ryan, who has since been indicted.
But those hopes were dashed by the unsealing of his divorce
records. Ryan had fought the unsealing, saying it would harm his
9-year-old son. The Tribune and Chicago TV station WLS sued
to have the records released.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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