
Elizabeth Bankowski wasnโt surprised Monday when Gov. Peter Shumlin announced he wonโt seek re-election in 2016.
The longtime political operative, who headed Shumlinโs transition team upon his winning office in 2010, witnessed the same scenario 25 years ago.
Open to the first page of former Gov. Madeleine Kuninโs memoir โLiving A Political Life,โ and you can read how Bankowski, former chief of staff and campaign manager to the stateโs first female governor, was there in 1990 when her boss revealed her own intentions to step down.
โI knew what I had to say,โ Kunin recalls in her book, โbut 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.
โThey 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. โWhen you try to be bold, you pay a price. Itโs 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.
โEveryone tries to give people the time theyโre going to need to put together a campaign,โ Bankowski said. โAnd 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 wouldnโt seek re-election as a footnote to his January 1984 State of the State address.
โI remember vividly,โ then Secretary of State James Douglas went on to tell Associated Press reporter Christopher Graff. โHe said, โThis 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 wasnโt 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.
โMy staff and I discussed the potential effects of my decision on the upcoming legislative session,โ Douglas recalls in his memoir, โThe Vermont Way.โ โMight I become a โlame 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.
โI sensed in his voice he sounded happy and light. The political season already is so much upon us โ itโs the age we live in. This allows him to focus on the things he wants to get done and not have everything overlaid with, โWhat does this or that signal?โโ
Kevin OโConnor, a former staffer of the Rutland Herald and Barre-Montpelier Times Argus, is a Brattleboro-based writer. Email: kevinoconnorvt@gmail.comย
