Some announcements, meaning the impossibly large field is unfortunately not shrinking.
Gingrich Tiptoes Toward a White House Bid
Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the House, may be edging closer to a run for president, with supporters planning to announce Monday that he is starting a Web site to raise money and that they will begin a “feasibility assessment” of his chances.
Mr. Gingrich, the former speaker of the House, has said that if he can raise $30 million by Oct. 21, he will join the race.
Gingrich is more or less everything Republicans stupidly thought they were getting from Thompson.
Keyes Makes 3rd Bid for Presidency
Alan Keyes, a Republican whose two previous runs for president ended in failure, is making a third try for the White House.
The Maryland conservative announced on his Web site that he filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on Friday to make his candidacy official. He joins a crowded Republican field of nine candidates and is scheduled to participate Monday night at a debate involving lesser-known candidates in Florida.
Keyes, a former State Department official under President Reagan, made unsuccessful presidential runs in 1996 and 2000. He also has been a Senate candidate from Maryland, and, in 2004, he suffered a 43-percentage point loss to Democrat Barack Obama in the Senate race in Illinois. Republicans drafted Keyes after primary winner Jack Ryan dropped out amid a scandal.
In an interview with radio talk show host Janet Parshall, Keyes noted the wide-open nature of the GOP race. "There isn't a standout," Keyes said. "I'm like a lot of folks, who have just looked at it and been unmoved."
There is nothing really to say about Alan Keyes at this point. Everytime he's in the race, I think everyone wishes it was J.C. Watts instead.