Well, the Republicans have a candidate for the Seventh Congressional District. They may have four, in fact, for Friday’s caucus of district precinct chairs to pick a replacement for Jon Elrod. But after this morning’s performance by the favored candidate of party leaders, I’m still not sure what they have.
Social Worker Gabrielle Campo, who I’m told made a good impression when running against Elrod earlier this year, announced her candidacy at an 11 a.m. news conference at City Market. But after telling us who she is and what her priorities are (energy, jobs, and education—who’d have guessed), she bounded away without answering questions on any of them, saying she had to go file her papers. When I asked her if she intended to leave without talking to the media, she hesitated, then said she could maybe stay for one question. So I asked her how she would “rein in” (her words) energy prices. She said she’d talk about that after the precinct caucus, then swept away again, this time not to be stopped.
Seventh District Chairman John Hammond, who’s been pushing Campo, told me he was sure I could track her down and ask her questions. But why would I do that? She was right there, a candidate nobody knows without any money facing an incumbent Congressman in Andre Carson, and she wouldn’t answer reporters’ questions that might get her more valuable air time on the news tonight?
Later Ms. Campo called me on the phone and said she’d been advised not to answer any questions until after the caucus. When I asked her why someone would advise her to do that, she said she didn’t know. Wouldn’t you think that if you were a precinct chair voting on your party’s candidate for something as important as Congress, you’d want to know where she stands?
I’m told Campo is an unusual Republican candidate, one who’s ideal to run against Carson. Is that code for “more liberal than the average Marion County Republican”? If so, maybe that’s why she isn’t supposed to talk until after the very conservative precinct chairs vote. But if that’s the case, maybe she shouldn’t have had a big splashy announcement and invited the media.