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MARK WARNER


'Mark Robert Warner' (born December 15, 1954) is an American politician from the U.S. state of Virginia and a member of the Democratic Party. Warner is the immediate former Governor of Virginia and the Honorary Chairman of the Forward Together PAC.
While he was widely expected to be a candidate for the Democratic nomination in the 2008 U.S. Presidential elections and took initial steps towards a candidacy, he announced in October 2006 that he would not run citing a desire not to disrupt his family life. However, Warner is considered to be a potential Vice Presidential pick due to his image as a centrist and the emergence of Virginia as a battleground state; Warner is also extremely popular in Virginia, bringing the 13 electoral votes of the Old Dominion into play. Warner is also frequently mentioned as a candidate for U.S. Senate[1] in 2008 to replace retiring Sen. John Warner (R-VA) or for Virginia Governor in 2009 to replace term-limited Gov. Tim Kaine.
He currently serves on the boards of National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and the CNA Corporation. In 2007, he will serve on the national security taskforce and co-chair the transportation taskforce of the Bipartisan Policy Council. He will also co-chair a taskforce on climate change for the Council on Foreign Relations, with former New York Governor George Pataki.

Contents
Early life and career
Governor of Virginia
Future political career
Electoral History
References
Numbered
General
External links

Early life and career


Warner was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, and is the son of Robert and Marge Warner, and the older brother of Lisa Warner. He grew up in Illinois, and later in Vernon, Connecticut where he graduated from Rockville High School. He attended The George Washington University and in 1977 became the first person in his family to graduate from college. Warner went on to graduate from Harvard Law School in 1980.
In the early 1980s, Warner served as a Senate staff member to Senator Christopher Dodd. He used his knowledge of federal telecommunications policies as a broker of cellular phone franchise licenses, making a large fortune. As managing director of Columbia Capital Corporation he helped found or was an early investor in a number of technology companies. He was one of the early investors in Nextel, co-founded Capital Cellular Corporation, and built up an estimated fortune of over $200 million. He married Lisa Collis in 1989, and has three daughters, Madison, Gillian, and Eliza. During her husband's tenure as Governor, Ms. Collis was the first Virginia First Lady to use her maiden name.
Warner involved himself in public efforts related to health care, telecommunications, information technology, and education. He managed Virginia Governor Douglas Wilder's successful 1989 gubernatorial campaign, served as state chairman of the state Democratic Party and ultimately made his own bid for public office, unsuccessfully running for the United States Senate in 1996 against Republican Senator John Warner (no relation) in a "Warner vs. Warner" election. John Warner was unpopular with many conservative Republicans for refusing to support Mike Farris, the 1993 state GOP nominee for lieutenant governor, and for opposing the 1994 Senate candidacy of controversial Republican Oliver North. Mark Warner seized on this discontent within the state Republican ranks (actually garnering some Republican protest votes) to perform strongly in the state's rural areas, making the contest much closer than many pundits expected.

Governor of Virginia


Then-Gov. Mark Warner as the state commander-in-chief

In 2001, Warner campaigned for Governor as a moderate Democrat after years of slowly building up a power base in rural Virginia, particularly Southwest Virginia. He defeated the Republican candidate, then-State Attorney General Mark Earley with 52.16% of the vote which was a margin of 96,943 votes. Warner benefited from dissension in Republican ranks after a heated battle for the nomination between Earley, backed by religious conservatives, and then Lieutenant Governor John H. Hager, some of whose supporters later openly backed Warner. In the same election, Republican Jerry Kilgore was elected Attorney General, and Democrat Tim Kaine was elected Lieutenant Governor of Virginia.
After he was elected, in 2002, Warner drew upon a $1 billion "rainy day fund" left by his predecessor, James S. Gilmore, III. In 2002, Warner campaigned in favor of two regional sales tax increases (Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads) to fund transportation. Virginians rejected both regional referendums to raise the sales tax in 2002. In 2004, Warner worked with Democratic and liberal Republican legislators and the business community to reform the tax code, lowering food and some income taxes, and increasing the sales and cigarette taxes in 2004. Warner's tax package effected a net tax increase of approximately $1.5 billion annually. Warner credited the additional revenues with saving the state's AAA bond rating, held at the time by only 5 other states, and allowing the single largest investment in K-12 education in Virginia history. Warner also entered into an agreement with Democrats and liberal Republicans in the Virginia Senate to cap state car tax reimbursements to local governments, which had the effect of increasing car taxes in many localities.
Warner chaired the National Governors Association in 2004-2005 and led a national high school reform movement. He also chaired the Southern Governors' Association and was a member of the Democratic Governors Association.
Warner's popularity may have helped Democrats gain seats in the Virginia House of Delegates in 2003 and again in 2005, reducing the majorities built up by Republicans in the 1990s.
In January 2005, after a two-year study,[2] the Government Performance Project, in conjunction with ''Governing'' magazine and the Pew Charitable Trust, graded each state in four management categories: money, people, infrastructure, and information. Virginia and Utah received the highest ratings average with both states receiving an A- rating overall, prompting Warner to dub Virginia "the best managed state in the nation."
Kaine and Kilgore both sought to succeed Warner as Governor of Virginia. (The Virginia Constitution forbids any Governor from serving consecutive terms, so Warner could not have run for a second term in 2005.) On November 8, 2005, Kaine, the former Mayor of Richmond, won with 52% of the vote. Kilgore, who had resigned as Attorney General in February 2005 to campaign full-time, and who had previously served as Virginia Secretary of Public Safety, received 46% of the vote. Russ Potts, a Republican state senator, also ran for Governor as an independent, receiving 2% of the vote. Warner had supported and campaigned for Kaine, and many national pundits considered Kaine's victory to be further evidence of Warner's political clout in Virginia, as well as a signal of his viability as a presidential candidate.
On November 29, 2005, as was his prerogative as governor, Warner commuted the death sentence of Robin Lovitt to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Lovitt was convicted of murdering Clayton Dicks at an Arlington pool hall in 1999. After his trial in 2001, a court clerk illegally destroyed evidence that was used against Lovitt during his trial, but that could theoretically have exonerated him upon further DNA testing. Lovitt's death sentence would have been the 1,000th carried out in the United States since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment as permissible under the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution in 1976. In a statement, Warner said, "The actions of an agent of the commonwealth, in a manner contrary to the express direction of the law, comes at the expense of a defendant facing society's most severe and final sanction." Warner denied clemency in 11 other death penalty cases that came before him as governor.
Warner also arranged for DNA tests of evidence left from the case of Roger Keith Coleman, who was put to death by the state in 1992. Coleman was convicted in the 1981 rape and stabbing death of his 19-year-old sister-in-law, Wanda McCoy. Coleman drew national attention, even making the cover of ''TIME'', by repeatedly claiming innocence and protesting the unfairness of the death penalty. However, DNA results announced on January 12, 2006, seemed to confirm Coleman's guilt.[3]

Future political career


While on October 12, 2006, Warner ruled out a 2008 presidential bid,[4] speculation that Warner is again considering a presidential run was confirmed[5] by former Warner colleague Dan Conley on December 17. With Warner's fund-raising capabilities, his Forward Together PAC, and his potential as at least a Vice-Presidential nominee,[6] indications suggest Warner may play a significant role in the 2008 election.
Some Virginia Democrats consider him a strong candidate for Governor in the 2009 gubernatorial election, something he has hinted at himself. While Governor, Warner worked on an initiative co-sponsored with his predecessor George Allen to end term limits on the office of Governor. He could, however, legally run again after the four year hiatus. He is the only Democrat who has won a statewide election who is vying for that run. There are several prominent Republicans who have hinted at interest in seeking the Governorship in 2009, among them former U.S. Senator George Allen, Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling and state Attorney General Bob McDonnell. Former Governor Jim Gilmore has also hinted at possible interest in the governorship in 2009. Although Warner's Lieutenant Governor, Tim Kaine, was elected Governor in 2005, that election resulted in the election of a Republican Lieutenant Governor and Attorney General, leaving no obvious Democratic candidate for 2009.[7]
Warner may also run for Senate in 2008. Republican John Warner recently announced that he would not run for re-election, and Mark Warner had hinted that he would consider running if John Warner retired, although Mark Warner has not since commented on a potential Senate run. Both Warners (no relation) have become friends since their race against each other 1996, and Mark Warner had said he would not run against the elder senator.

Electoral History


References


Numbered

1. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/27/AR2007022701861.html
2. Virginia
3. DNA Tests Confirm Guilt of Executed Man Maria Glod
4. Statement of Governor Mark Warner
5. More on Warner Dan Conley
6. 'Family' Reasons? Theories Abound on Warner's Exit Michael D Shear
7. Warner downplays national attention Michael Sluss

General



★ Darman, Jonathan (May 8, 2006). "Mark Warner test-drives a new strategy for the Dems in '06". ''Newsweek''.

★ Clift, Elenor (December 9, 2005). "Hillary vs Warner". ''Newsweek''.

★ Gelineau, Kristen (Nov. 29, 2005). "Va. Gov. Grants Clemency for Condemned Man". ''The Washington Post''. [Dead link]

★ Przybyla, Heidi (Nov. 10, 2005). "Warner's Star in Presidential Politics Rises on Virginia Vote". ''Bloomberg.com''.

★ Polman, Dick (Nov. 10, 2005). "A new face for 2008? Yes, Virginia". ''The Philadelphia Inquirer''.


★ Barnes, Lindsay (Oct. 9, 2006). "Mark him absent". ''The Hook weekly''.

External links



Forward Together PAC

Follow the Money - Mark R Warner 2001 campaign contributions

New York Times - Times Topics: Mark R. Warner collected news and commentary

On the Issues - Mark Warner issue positions and quotes

About.com - Mark Warner profile

Busy funnyman: Why Mark Warner loves orange cones Lisa Provence, ''The Hook'', June 5, 2003

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