ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, September 17, 1996            TAG: 9609170081
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-3  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: RICHMOND
SOURCE: DAVID M. POOLE STAFF WRITER


PAYNE MAKES OFFICIAL BID FOR NOMINATION

Rep. L.F. Payne announced Monday that he will seek the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor after he retires from Congress next year.

Payne, 51, called himself a pragmatic problem-solver, willing to broaden his outlook beyond the rural concerns of Southside Virginia.

"I have represented the people of the 5th District the best I can," he said. "I am not an ideologue."

Many Democratic operatives consider Payne their best chance to hold onto the lieutenant governorship, a once-ceremonial post that has become a crucial tie-breaking vote in the partisan-deadlocked Virginia State Senate.

So far, the only other Democrat weighing a bid for the nomination is Northern Virginia lawyer Jim Dyke, who served as state Secretary of Education under former Gov. Douglas Wilder. Payne's bid for lieutenant governor had been widely speculated ever since he announced his retirement from Congress this year.

Republicans seeking their party's nomination include Coleman Andrews, an air freight executive from Northern Virginia; John Hager, a retired tobacco executive from Richmond; and Del. Jay Katzen of Warrenton.

Payne may have a difficult time selling his pro-guns, pro-tobacco voting record to more liberal Democrats in the state's urban centers.

Also, his opposition to the Lake Gaston pipeline probably won't resonate in Virginia Beach, which would benefit from drinking water withdrawn from the Roanoke River basin.

"I don't agree with him on every issue," said Senate Democratic Leader Richard Saslaw of Fairfax County. "But he has an enormous amount of leadership ability."

A native of Amherst County, Payne graduated from Virginia Military Institute and served as a U.S. Army company commander in Korea. He went into business, developing the Wintergreen Resort, a mountaintop ski and golf community in Nelson County.

He was elected to Congress in 1988, vowing to serve no more than 10 years.

Payne acknowledged the lieutenant governor's office often has been a steppingstone to the Executive Mansion. "Sure, maybe everyone here would like to be governor," he said at a Richmond news conference.

Democratic state Sen. Virgil Goode of Rocky Mount and Republican George Landrith of Albemarle County are seeking the congressional seat Payne is vacating.

LINING UP FOR 1997

The 1996 elections haven't even come yet, but Virginia Democrats and Republicans who want to run for statewide office next year already are putting their campaigns together. Here's who is exploring bids for each office:

DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS

FOR GOVERNOR

Lt. Gov. Don Beyer Attorney General Jim Gilmore

FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR

Rep. L.F. Payne Northern Virginia businessman Coleman Andrews

Former Secretary of Education

Jim Dyke Retired Richmond businessman John Hagar

Del. Jay Katzen of Fauquier County

FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL

Arlington lawyer Bill Dolan State Sen. Ken Stolle of Virginia Beach

Falls Church lawyer

Thurgood Marshall Jr. State Sen. Mark Earley of Chesapeake

Secretary of Public Safety

Jerry Kilgore

Northern Virginia lawyer Gil Davis


LENGTH: Medium:   78 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  (headshot) Payne.
KEYWORDS: POLITICS STATE 
















































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