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Father
worried for his daughter's future in politics,
but now she's in Congress
June 16, 2008 | Kevin Woster, Rapid
City Journal
Lars Herseth had some reservations when his daughter,
Stephanie, decided to follow the family tradition
into politics for the 2002 U.S. House race in
South Dakota.
He
didn't even know at the time that she would be
facing an especially formidable foe in former
four-term South Dakota Gov. Bill Janklow.
But
as a near-miss Democratic candidate for governor
in 1986, Herseth understood the personal and financial
pain that a statewide political campaign could
inflict. And he worried that it was too soon for
that in her career.
"When
you put your name on that ballot, it's kind of
a different test out there. And you have to be
ready for people to reject you, and sometimes
you don't always know why," Lars Herseth
said. "It takes a kind of emotional toll.
It also takes a financial toll in many cases."
Herseth
suffered both in losing to Republican George Mickelson.
And he thought about that more than his many successful
campaigns for the state Legislature, when he measured
the odds for his daughter and worried.
"Stephanie
was young, and she had so many kinds of doors
open to her that would compensate her much better
than politics," Herseth said. "You second
guess, and figure maybe it would be better financially
to postpone that move for 10 years then get involved."
But
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin couldn't wait. And despite
the looming presence of Janklow on the Republican
side of the ticket, the young Democratic candidate
was leading the race in some polls during the
summer of 2002.
With
the nation sliding toward a war in Iraq, however,
voters turned to the more experienced hand in
Janklow in November. And Herseth Sandlin learned
the hard lesson of loss in her first big campaign.
It
was less of a setback than you might think, for
the daughter of an accomplished state legislator
and the granddaughter of a governor and secretary
of state.
Herseth
Sandlin put her loss in the context of a political
life and remembered her dad's defeat in 1986,
a campaign she worked in vigorously in as a teenager.
"I
certainly learned a lot from that race,"
she said. "You can watch your parents put
in everything they had, their whole heart and
soul and their financial resources, and come up
a little bit short," she said. "But
my dad did it for the right reasons, had a lot
of good ideas for the state, many of which would
later be implemented."
Like
her father, who after his 1986 defeat returned
to the farm near Houghton and also continued a
successful career in the state Legislature, Herseth
didn't quit after a big loss. She ran again for
the House seat Janklow vacated after a vehicular
manslaughter conviction, winning the special election
in June of 2004 and full terms that fall and again
in 2006.
And
she has since tried to fashion a lawmaking style
similar to her father's, seeking congressional
compromise and respectful dialogue as much as
possible.
"Since
I've been in Congress, certainly I've tried to
emulate much of what I saw in terms of my dad's
legislative successes and the manner in which
he was respected on both sides of the aisle,"
Herseth Sandlin said. "It wasn't just at
work, but in the friendships he developed on both
sides of the aisle, and the respect."
Herseth
Sandlin continues to consult with her father on
issue of policy, particularly those involving
agriculture and alternative energy development,
calling him an important adviser.
Herseth
acknowledges that role but also say he never consciously
tried to shape the politician she would become.
"I
think that's just part of what she acquired in
being around, at the dinner table and talking
with individuals," Herseth said. "I
don't remember ever saying things specifically.
I think it was just more osmosis."
Contact
Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com.
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