Scott Brown gets a third challenger, and it's a familiar face:
Democratic activist Alan Khazei announced Tuesday that he will vie for his party's nomination to face Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown (R).
Khazei, co-founder of the non-profit group City Year, posted the announcement on his website and said he is holding a kickoff event in Boston.
"Today I’m announcing that I am an official candidate for U.S. Senate in Massachusetts in 2012," he wrote. "We have to grow our economy, create new jobs, and expand opportunity for the middle class. Together, we can do it."
Khazei, you may recall, also sought the Democratic nomination in 2009 in the special election to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy. He finished with an unimpressive 13%, refusing to accept PAC and lobbyist money. I guess he hasn't been actively fundraising yet this cycle, because his first quarter report showed him taking in only $2,800. In any event, he joins activist Bob Massie and attorney Marisa DeFranco in a race which still (very noticeably) lacks a high-profile candidate. Khazei is the biggest name to enter so far, but Democratic power-brokers are undoubtedly still holding out for someone more prominent (and with more experience) to take on Brown, the most vulnerable Republican incumbent up for re-election next year.
It's still only April, but given how blue Massachusetts is, and the fact that Barack Obama will be at the top of the ticket, the lack of a top-tier candidate at this stage has a lot of people feeling like it's getting late early around here. You'd think someone big would want to jump in the race already, so why hasn't anyone? Hard to say, but we'll see if this state of affairs changes any time soon.
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