Governor-elect Peter Shumlin, foreground, Elizabeth Bankowski, right
Governor Peter Shumlin, foreground, Elizabeth Bankowski, right.

Elizabeth Bankowski wasnโ€™t surprised Monday when Gov. Peter Shumlin announced he wonโ€™t seek re-election in 2016.

The longtime political operative, who headed Shumlinโ€™s transition team upon his winning office in 2010, witnessed the same scenario 25 years ago.

Open to the first page of former Gov. Madeleine Kuninโ€™s memoir โ€œLiving A Political Life,โ€ and you can read how Bankowski, former chief of staff and campaign manager to the stateโ€™s first female governor, was there in 1990 when her boss revealed her own intentions to step down.

โ€œI knew what I had to say,โ€ Kunin recalls in her book, โ€œbut I simply did not know if I could say it.โ€

Kunin and Shumlin entered their respective news conferences as three-term leaders with big, innovative agendas.

โ€œThey faced a similar dilemma โ€” could they move complex issues through a short two-year election cycle while holding on to public support?โ€ Bankowski posited Monday. โ€œWhen you try to be bold, you pay a price. Itโ€™s a steady erosion of support day, by day, by day.โ€

Kunin and Shumlin confided their decisions to only a few confidants before telling their staffs and summoning reporters to the Statehouse. The major difference between then and now: Kunin went public April 3, 1990 โ€” seven months before the general election. Shumlin, by comparison, extended a full 18 months notice.

โ€œEveryone tries to give people the time theyโ€™re going to need to put together a campaign,โ€ Bankowski said. โ€œAnd today, it seems the political season never really ends.โ€

Shumlin also may have learned a lesson from the late Gov. Richard Snelling, who reported the fact he wouldnโ€™t seek re-election as a footnote to his January 1984 State of the State address.

โ€œI remember vividly,โ€ then Secretary of State James Douglas went on to tell Associated Press reporter Christopher Graff. โ€œHe said, โ€˜This is the last time I will address you under these circumstances,โ€™ and we all thought he was talking about the economic downturn, but he had just told us he wasnโ€™t running again.โ€

Douglas himself won election as governor in 2002 and served four terms before announcing the end of his political career Aug. 27, 2009.

โ€œMy staff and I discussed the potential effects of my decision on the upcoming legislative session,โ€ Douglas recalls in his memoir, โ€œThe Vermont Way.โ€ โ€œMight I become a โ€˜lame duck,โ€™ whereby the legislative majority would pay even less attention to me than before? Or, having erased the prospect of another campaign, might it be forced to assume a more cordial demeanor and cooperative attitude, since their favorite target will have disappeared?โ€

Shumlin may relate, said Bankowski, who received a call from him Monday.

โ€œI sensed in his voice he sounded happy and light. The political season already is so much upon us โ€” itโ€™s the age we live in. This allows him to focus on the things he wants to get done and not have everything overlaid with, โ€˜What does this or that signal?โ€™โ€

Kevin Oโ€™Connor, a former staffer of the Rutland Herald and Barre-Montpelier Times Argus, is a Brattleboro-based writer. Email: kevinoconnorvt@gmail.comย 

VTDigger's southern Vermont and features reporter.

One reply on “Shumlin’s decision draws from Kunin, Douglas playbooks”