Georgia Insurance Commissioner Running for Governor

By | April 18, 2008

Georgia’s insurance commissioner said Wednesday he’s running for governor in 2010, making him the first to enter what could be a crowded field of Republican heavyweights jockeying to replace Sonny Perdue.

John Oxendine said gridlock in the recent legislative session helped convince him to get into the race. Bickering between House Speaker Glenn Richardson and Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle doomed plans for a promised tax cut.

“As a taxpayer I was disappointed that we did not see meaningful tax relief,” Oxendine said.

He said he was also frustrated that the state Legislature failed to approve a plan to fund transportation improvements and to create a steady stream of funding for the state’s trauma network.

Cagle and Richardson are among those often mentioned as likely candidates to succeed Perdue when his second term expires.

But Oxendine, previewing a possible line of attack in the race, said animosity between the House and the Senate makes a neutral candidate more attractive.

“I think in the current climate for the next governor to come from the House or the Senate would be very difficult from an effective government standpoint,” he said.

Perdue became Georgia’s first Republican governor since Reconstruction when he defeated Democratic incumbent Roy Barnes in 2002. And the state’s GOP stars are said to be interested in following him into the governor’s mansion.

In addition to Cagle and Richardson, U.S. Reps. Lynn Westmoreland and Jack Kingston are also mentioned as potential candidates.

But all eyes are on U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, who would likely be the immediate front-runner if he decides to return to Georgia to run. An Isakson candidacy would also shift the political landscape by opening up the U.S. Senate seat.

On the Democratic side, House Minority Leader DuBose Porter is said to be in the mix. And some suggest that Barnes might be interested in running again.

Oxendine, of Duluth, launched a 2005 bid for lieutenant governor but abandoned the plans soon afterward. He called the No. 2 job “ineffectual” and said he’s rather serve a second term as insurance and fire safety commissioner.

Some suggested Oxendine withdrew because well-known conservative activist Ralph Reed had joined the race. Reed went on to lose to Cagle, then a state senator.

Oxendine said Wednesday that he will file the paperwork in the coming days to allow him to raise money for the gubernatorial race, still more than two years away. One thing is for certain he will need to hit the fund raising trail hard.

“It’s going to take an extraordinary amount of money,” he said.

Topics USA Georgia

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Latest Comments

  • July 10, 2008 at 7:43 am
    Southern Insurance Lady says:
    You have a valid complaint and the mistakes he made regarding you, your son and your business resulted in Oxendine withdrawing from the Lt. Governor race during the previous e... read more
  • July 9, 2008 at 5:58 am
    Geoff Waterhouse says:
    I have just read your article about Oxendine running for Governor. It is always good to have accomplished liars in political office and the higher the office, the more accompl... read more
  • April 21, 2008 at 10:50 am
    Plymn says:
    I still think that this is a poor excuse for that behavior. Try explaining his reason for driving like that if he had caused an accident especially if there was a death or inj... read more

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