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Fiegen hopes bare-bones run will oust Grassley

Aug. 17, 2009 12:05 am
CEDAR RAPIDS - Tom Fiegen is hoping lightning strikes - a second time.
The Cedar County Democrat who hopes to stop Sen. Chuck Grassley's re-election next year will model his campaign on the game plan used by Mount Vernon College professor Dave Loebsack to defeat 30-year Republican incumbent Rep. Jim Leach back in 2006.
“We'll do some things differently, but we'll use his campaign as a model, the way he built it from the grass roots,” said Fiegen, who practices bankruptcy law in Cedar Rapids.
If it worked once, it can work again, said Dave Bradley of West Liberty, who was on hand for Fiegen's announcement Friday in Tipton.
“Absolutely, lightning can strike twice,” he said.
Fiegen knows he can't raise as much money as Grassley, but he's set a goal of $3 million - less than what Grassley has in the bank now, according to Federal Election Commission reports. With elbow grease, shoe leather and social media networks, Fiegen believes he can compete with Grassley's money.
Shaded from the midday August sun by a locust tree in Greene Square Park in downtown Cedar Rapids on Friday, his supporters outnumbered by media, Fiegen promised a bare-bones campaign that would rely heavily on social media.
“I think they were helpful to Dave Loebsack,” he said, “So we're going to take what he did, what Howard Dean did, what President Obama did, and we're going to try to use that on an Iowa level.”
Fiegen, who joins Bob Krause of Fairfield in seeking the Democratic nomination, said his first priority will be to raise campaign cash. He'll go back to the people who supported his Iowa Senate campaigns as well as some of those who believed in Loebsack when he was an underdog.
“Hopefully, it's a snowball process where the money we raise from the people I know will let everyone else know this is a viable campaign,” Fiegen said.
He conceded that upsetting Grassley, who has scored four lopsided re-election victories since defeating Sen. John Culver in 1980, is a long shot. However, Fiegen said, he defeated a five-term Iowa senator to win a seat in the Legislature. He served one term before redistricting put him in the same district as Sen. Richard Drake, R-Muscatine. He lost that election and lost again to Rep. Jim Hahn, R-Muscatine, in a bid to succeed Drake.
People who handicap Senate races like the odds of Grassley winning a sixth term. He's a “fixture in Iowa politics,” according to CQPolitics.com. “He appears very secure.”
The Rothenberg Political Report calls Grassley “currently safe.” Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com also called Grassley an institution and told an Ames audience in April: “If he runs, he'll win.”
Those predictions were made before Fiegen announced.
Tom Fiegen, a Clarence Democrat, announced his candidacy to the U.S. Senate Friday, Aug. 14, 2009, on a street corner in front of the Cedar County Courthouse in Tipton. He is challenging Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley. (James Q. Lynch/The Gazette)