drop down

daily dos

fri 8/28/2009

 

Federal prosecutors have dropped a criminal case against New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. The investigation knocked Richardson out of consideration for Commerce Secretary in President Obama's cabinet.

 
 

12 figures

daily dos

tue 1/6/2009

 

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson held a press conference to announce he will step down as Barack Obama's nominee for Commerce Secretary: "While this decision was a difficult one, I think it was the right thing to do." Richardson is currently under investigation for awarding a lucrative contract to one of his largest campaign donors.

 
 

oopsie baby

daily dos

thu 12/4/2008

 

New Mexico governor Bill Richardson has been named as President-elect Obama's pick for commerce secretary.

 
 

low life

daily dos

fri 7/18/2008

 

Last week, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson declared July 12, 2008 "Vicente Fernandez Day." (via Hispanic Tips)

 
 

rice rice baby

daily dos

mon 4/28/2008

 

Former presidential candidate and current governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson traveled to Venezuela to meet with President Hugo Chávez over the fate of hostages in Colombia.

 
 

served

daily dos

fri 3/21/2008

 

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, who dropped out of the presidential race in January, has endorsed Barack Obama for president, calling him a "once-in-a-lifetime leader."

 
 

smoggy style

daily dos

wed 2/27/2008

 

Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are both aggressively pursuing an endorsement from former presidential candidate and undercover Mexican-American Bill Richardson. The governor of New Mexico says he's "genuinely torn" between the two.

 
 

¡aguas!

daily dos

thu 1/10/2008

 

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson has dropped out of the Democratic presidential race after coming in fourth in both the New Hampshire primary and the Iowa caucuses.

 
 

Bill Richardson

whodat

thu 5/24/2007

 
New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson.

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson has worked some high-level jobs throughout his career – U.S. Congressman, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and U.S. Secretary of Energy – but if you ask him, he'll tell you he's the most qualifed candidate for another position: President of the United States.

The 59-year-old Richardson was born in Pasadena, California to an American father who grew up in Nicaragua and a Mexican mother. Raised in Mexico City, where his father worked as a banker, Richardson moved back to the U.S. at age 13 when he enrolled at the Middlesex School where he was the only Hispanic student and a star baseball player.

In 1966, Richardson attended Tufts University in Boston – his father's alma mater – and majored in political science and French, eventually earning a Master's Degree in International Affairs. In 1980, after a few years of working for the U.S State Department and Senate in international affairs, Richardson moved to New Mexico and ran for Congress, narrowly losing the election. Only two years later, he mounted a second, this time successful campaign and spent the next 14 years serving "La Tierra del Encanto" as a congressman. During his tenure, the friendly legislator was called upon to negotiate the release of American prisoners with various foreign leaders, including Saddam Hussein and Fidel Castro.

In 1997, Richardson's diplomatic talents were rewarded when President Bill Clinton appointed him U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. The following year, he became the Secretary of the Department of Energy where he served for two years. Returning to New Mexico in 2002, Richardson defeated Republican John Sanchez in a tight race for the governorship, serving as the country's only Hispanic governor. Four years later, he was re-elected in a landslide, earning nearly 70 percent of the vote. In early 2007, he announced his intention to run for president, and earlier this week, he formally declared his candidacy.

The self-deprecating Richardson knows he's an underdog in the 2008 race for president, but he maintains that his jam-packed resume is what will separate him from the pack over time. Even if he does not earn his party's nomination, some have speculated that Richardson's qualifications make him a no-brainer for a job he may not be willing to accept: Vice President.

 
 

i got next

daily dos

tue 5/22/2007

 

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson formally declares his entry in the 2008 presidential race. The 59-year-old Democrat was born in Pasdena, California and spent part of his childhood in Mexico City.

 
 
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