米奇·兰德里乌参选总统?这位新奥尔良前市长试水2028年大选


2026-04-19 美国东部时间上午8:00 / CNN
作者:爱德华-艾萨克·多夫雷
3小时前
发布于2026年4月19日,美国东部时间上午8:00

乔·拜登

2024年8月20日,伊利诺伊州芝加哥联合中心,米奇·兰德里乌在民主党全国代表大会的第二日出席活动。
查利·特里巴洛/法新社/盖蒂图片社

新奥尔良——

一名此前无人认为会角逐2028年大选的人士悄悄来到这里的民主党活动人士会议,开始为自己启动总统竞选造势。

这场会议举办地本身就帮了忙——正是这座城市赋予了米奇·兰德里乌独特的口音,让他能把“新奥尔良”的第二个音节拖出三个轻柔的音节。

“你们可以开始畅想本该成为的美国。因为我们绝不会回到过去的样子。这就像新奥尔良被卡特里娜飓风摧毁时一样,”他在本月民主党全国委员会一场平淡无奇的季度会议期间,对美国青年民主党集会的参会者说道。

“我们拾起了自己的过往——这很重要,它让我们认清了自己是谁,”兰德里乌补充道,“我们摒弃了过往的错误,我们展望新的一天,届时我们能让新奥尔良成为本该在一开始就做到最好的城市。”

他全程脱稿即兴发言。

“只要获胜,你们就能打造全新的一天,”他说,“而2028年及以后的意义就在于此。”

当晚,在法国街区著名的加拉图瓦餐厅楼上,更多民主党人到场聆听了他的演讲——其中包括民选官员、幕僚,以及拥有1400万TikTok粉丝的网红卡洛斯·埃斯皮纳,他当天下午刚在民主党全国委员会主会议上发表了主旨演讲。

事后多名在场听众告诉CNN,他们惊讶地发现,这场祝酒词听起来简直像是一场低调的竞选启动仪式。

白宫高级顾问米奇·兰德里乌与格蕾丝·兰德里乌于2023年4月26日抵达华盛顿特区白宫,出席白宫国宴。
安娜·莫尼梅克/盖蒂图片社

目前已有二十多名民主党人开始写书、前往潜在的早期初选州造势,或以其他方式为总统竞选做准备。他们中的大多数人都比兰德里乌更有名气。但在早期民调中多数人都只是昙花一现,因此不少知名度较低的人士都看到了机会,希望能展示自己的主张,看看能否获得支持。

次日下午,在又一场演讲结束后,兰德里乌沿着密西西比河散步。这次他向民主党全国委员会执行董事会发表了演讲,激励他们为赢得今年秋季的中期选举全力以赴。在谈及自己暗自考虑的黑马总统竞选时,他比多数人都更为坦诚。

“无论我是否当选总统,或者我的百位好友中有一人当选,我人生的这个阶段都让我真切感受到国家的未来岌岌可危,”兰德里乌告诉CNN,“所以有人会问:‘什么?你要参选总统吗?’也许吧。”

本土之子

1976年大选前夕,美国仍在水门事件的余波中挣扎,新奥尔良市长穆恩·兰德里乌曾考虑参选总统,认为自己作为局外调解人有机会胜出,最终另一位南方人、佐治亚州州长吉米·卡特入主白宫。(据米奇·兰德里乌讲述,当时最失望的是他的祖母,她说穆恩·兰德里乌放弃参选后,“其他所有母亲的儿子都在竞选总统,就我的儿子没有”。)

米奇·兰德里乌是九个孩子中的一个,曾任州副州长,在卡特里娜飓风重创家乡后参选市长,最初失利,四年后成功当选。

上周,当他带领一行人参观自己致力于复兴的滨水区时,兰德里乌可以指着通往城西的渡轮系统及其新航站楼,指认他与铁路公司交换土地后建成的三英里长的公园、喷泉和步道,还能指出曾经被17英尺深洪水淹没的区域,如今新建了污水和供水系统、翻新的学校和图书馆。

为法国区节日布置场地的工人上前拥抱他,许多人喊着“米奇!”或“我们需要你回来”,举着糖渍山核桃试吃盘的男子坚持要和他自拍——每一个瞬间都可能成为未来竞选广告的镜头。当兰德里乌给一位用硬纸板和锡纸做鞋子的街头艺人的盒子里放进20美元后,即兴跳了几步踢踏舞,这一幕也同样如此。

在这座城市成长并治理这里,让他拥有了熟知他的人所说的尤为重要的政治优势——他曾在杰克逊广场大教堂的唱诗班席演唱《圣母颂》,还在街对面的剧院出演《艾薇塔》中的切·格瓦拉时结识了妻子。

堪萨斯城市长昆顿·卢卡斯早在加拉图瓦餐厅听到祝酒词,还跟着他去波旁街跳舞之前,就已是兰德里乌的仰慕者。他称兰德里乌是“当今美国政坛最具魅力的人物之一”。卢卡斯将兰德里乌与前副总统卡玛拉·哈里斯和马里兰州州长韦斯·摩尔相提并论。

从左至右:米奇·兰德里乌、马里兰州州长韦斯·摩尔和前美国劳工部长朱莉·苏于2023年11月13日在马里兰州巴尔的摩的卡佛职业学校出席拜登政府的就业倡议计划活动。
凯文·迪耶特/盖蒂图片社

“在这场仍需线下拉票的游戏中,在很大程度上取决于南卡罗来纳州的情况,取决于谁能真正与当地民众沟通并建立联系的地方,比如黑人政客,他拥有的独特优势,我认为目前只有哈里斯副总统和摩尔州长具备,”卢卡斯说道。

当被要求总结他的评价时,身为黑人的卢卡斯解释道:“他是一个能融入任何圈子的白人。”

沿途随处可见游客和音乐人之间的无家可归者,这清楚地表明新奥尔良仍有大量民众生活困苦。兰德里乌表示,在这里和全美各地,他都能感受到民众的伤痛,这种伤痛演变为怨恨,再变成愤怒——太多美国人觉得社会契约已经破裂。

他经常讲述自己在西弗吉尼亚州与一群老煤矿工人座谈的故事,转述他们的心声:“你们当初需要我们去制造燃料,帮助拯救世界,让我们的军舰能够去捍卫民主。所以我们下到矿井里,在那片黑暗中待了三四十年。我吸入了满肺的粉尘,累弯了腰。”

“而现在,第一,你们说我愚蠢;第二,你们说我差劲;第三,你们不打算给我退休金。然后你们还说,‘没关系,我们教你怎么写代码’。”

他是否已经错过了时机?

兰德里乌此前也曾有过类似的打算。就连他最坚定的支持者也承认,他上一次高调试水最终不了了之:2020年民主党初选原本计划依托他2018年的著作《雕像的阴影:一位南方白人直面历史》进行全国巡回宣传,该书源自他2017年拆除四座邦联纪念碑的震撼演讲。

当时他对盟友表示,如果乔·拜登参选,他就不参选。最终拜登参选,兰德里乌放弃了。

如今,兰德里乌认为,他的卡特里娜飓风应对经历或许能契合当下的时代背景——这与唐纳德·特朗普总统第一任期时不同,当时许多民主党人认为这位共和党人只是昙花一现。他也不确定其他民主党人是否同样有兴趣建立一个由特朗普支持者和其他脱党选民组成的联盟。

拜登胜选后,邀请兰德里乌加入政府,负责两党基础设施法案的实施工作,随后又任命他为连任竞选联合主席。

2024年大选后,有人劝他参选民主党全国委员会主席,认为他是民主党重建的最佳代言人,但兰德里乌再次选择了放弃。

民主党全国代表大会委员会联合主席米奇·兰德里乌于2024年8月20日在伊利诺伊州芝加哥联合中心举行的民主党全国代表大会第二日发表演讲。
凯文·迪耶特/盖蒂图片社

在青年民主党人的集会上,一名助手将iPhone架在三脚架上,记录兰德里乌的演讲。但他尚未采取任何真正的初步行动来组建竞选团队、建立筹款基础或搭建必要的框架,以将兴趣转化为实际竞选。

如今,支持者们在与他交谈时,语气中很快就带上了“亲眼所见才会相信”的怀疑,但也流露出一丝惆怅——他们不禁畅想,如果他参选,会发生什么。

兰德里乌现年65岁。他承认,身边几位知情人士告诉CNN他的真实想法:如果要参选总统,这可能是他最后的机会。

他满怀敬意地提到纽约市市长佐赫兰·曼达尼,后者并非凭借知名度或银行存款,而是通过廉价且病毒式传播的在线视频分享令人信服的愿景,成为了政坛红人。

至于那些早已开始造势、占据先机的人,兰德里乌指出:“他们都很优秀。我只想说,三年时间里一直保持领跑者地位真的很难。”

“除此之外,”他补充道,语气中多少有些淡化外界对特朗普和拜登最初参选前景的看法,“我们过去两任总统,在竞选初期都没人想到他们能当选。”

2023年12月13日,美国总统乔·拜登在华盛顿特区艾森豪威尔行政办公楼与国家基础设施咨询委员会成员会面,其中包括高级顾问米奇·兰德里乌。
奇普·萨莫塞特/盖蒂图片社北美分社/盖蒂图片社

Mitch Landrieu for president? The former New Orleans mayor wants to test the 2028 waters

2026-04-19 8:00 AM ET / CNN

By Edward-Isaac Dovere

3 hr ago

PUBLISHED Apr 19, 2026, 8:00 AM ET

Joe Biden

Mitch Landrieu on the second day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, on August 20, 2024.

Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images

New Orleans—

Quietly, someone no one had been thinking about as a 2028 contender showed up to a meeting of Democratic activists here and started to incept a presidential campaign – including for himself.

It helped that the meeting was in the city that gave Mitch Landrieu the accent with which he squeezes three soft syllables out of the second word in “New Orleans.”

“You can begin to dream about the America that should be. Because we are not going back to where we were. It’s like when New Orleans got destroyed by Katrina,” he told a gathering of the Young Democrats of America attached to an otherwise ho-hum seasonal meeting of the Democratic National Committee this month.

“We grabbed our past – that was important, that told us who we are,” Landrieu added. “We got rid of the mistakes we made. And we looked forward to a new day where we can make New Orleans the city it should have been if we had gotten it right the first time.”

He was riffing without notes.

“You get to construct a new day, if you win,” he said. “And that is what 2028 and beyond is going to be about.”

More Democrats were with Landrieu that night upstairs at the famous Galatoire’s restaurant in the French Quarter – elected officials, operatives and influencer Carlos Espina, who has 14 million TikTok followers and had keynoted the main DNC meeting earlier that afternoon.

Multiple people in the room who listened to his toast told CNN later they’d been surprised how much it felt like a soft launch.

Senior White House adviser Mitch Landrieu and Grace Landrieu arrive for a White House state dinner at the White House in Washington, DC, on April 26, 2023.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Upward of two dozen Democrats are already writing books, touring potential early primary states or otherwise setting up presidential campaigns-in-waiting. Most are better known than Landrieu. But with few registering as more than a blip in early polls, plenty of less familiar names see an opening to make their case and see if they can catch on.

Walking along the Mississippi River the next afternoon after yet another speech, this time to the DNC executive board, rousing them to be as hard-nosed as necessary to win big in this fall’s midterms, Landrieu bit harder than most when acknowledging that what would be a dark horse presidential run is very much on his mind.

“Whether I’m the president or one of a hundred of my best friends are president, I am at a point in my life where I really feel like the future of the country is at stake,” Landrieu told CNN. “And so, people say, ‘What, are you going to run for president?’ Maybe.”

A native son

In the run-up to the 1976 election, with America was still reeling from Watergate, New Orleans Mayor Moon Landrieu thought about running for president, seeing a path for an outsider conciliator in a race that ultimately put another southerner, Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, in the White House. (The way Mitch Landrieu tells the story, it was his grandmother who was most disappointed, saying when Moon Landrieu passed on a campaign, “All the other mother’s sons are running for president, and mine’s not.”)

Mitch Landrieu is one of nine children, a former state lieutenant governor who ran for mayor after Katrina ravaged his hometown and lost before winning four years later.

Last week, as he led a mini-tour of the waterfront he worked to revitalize, Landrieu could point to the ferry system to the city’s west bank with its new terminal, the land he’d swapped with the railroad to build three miles of parks, fountains and walkways, where he could point out how new sewage and water systems, revamped schools and libraries stood in spots that were once under 17 feet of water.

The workers setting up for the French Quarter festival who greeted him with hugs, the many people who called out “Hey Mitch!” or “We need you back,” the man with the candied pecan sampler tray who insisted on a selfie – each moment could have been a scene in a future campaign commercial. So was the way Landrieu did a few seconds of an impromptu soft-shoe after putting a $20 bill into the box of a street performer working with a strip of cardboard and foil on his shoes.

Coming up in and governing this city, where he sang “Ave Maria” in the choir loft in the cathedral on Jackson Square and met his wife while he was playing Che in “Evita” in the theater across the street, has also given what those who know Landrieu say could be a particularly important political advantage.

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, who was a Landrieu admirer long before hearing the toast at Galatoire’s and then following him to dance out on Bourbon Street, calls Landrieu “one of the most charismatic people in American politics today.” Lucas compared Landrieu to former Vice President Kamala Harris and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore.

From left, Mitch Landrieu, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and former US Secretary of Labor Julie Su attend an event on the Biden Administration’s workforce initiative plan at Carver Vocational School on November 13, 2023 in Baltimore, Maryland.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

“In a game where it’s still retail, in a game where it’s a whole lot of South Carolina and who’s actually speaking to and relating to the people there in a lot of places, Black politicians for example, he’s got unique strengths that really only Vice President Harris, I assume Gov. Moore, have right now,” Lucas said.

Asked to boil down what he was trying to say, Lucas, who is Black, explained, “He’s a White dude who fits in everywhere.”

New Orleans is still home to a lot of suffering, as the many homeless people dotted between the tourists and musicians along the walk made clear. Here and across the country, Landrieu said, he can feel what he says is hurt that becomes resentment that becomes anger, from too many Americans feeling like the social contract has been broken.

He often tells a story of sitting with a group of older coal miners in West Virginia, summarizing their thoughts: “Y’all needed us to help save the world by creating fuel so that our warships could go save democracy. So we went down to that hole. And we stayed at that hole for 30 years or 40 years. And I sucked all that shit in my lungs. I broke my back,” he said.

“And now, one, you’re going to tell me I’m stupid. Two, you’re going to tell me I’m bad. And three, you’re not going to pay my retirement. And then you’re going to tell me, ‘Listen, no problem. We’re going to teach you how to code.’”

Did he miss his chance already?

Landrieu has been down this road before. Even his biggest boosters acknowledge his last big flirt fizzled, when a 2020 Democratic primary run was planned to segue from the national tour for his 2018 book, “In the Shadow of Statues: A White Southerner Confronts History,” based off his searing 2017 speech explaining his decision to take down four Confederate monuments.

He told allies around that time that he wouldn’t run if Joe Biden entered the field. Ultimately, Biden ran and Landrieu didn’t.

Now, Landrieu thinks, his Katrina experience could fit into a moment different from the same time in than President Donald Trump’s first term, when many Democrats were thinking that the Republican would be a blip. He also isn’t sure that other Democrats have the same interest in building a coalition of Trump supporters and other voters that may have left their party.

After Biden won, he brought Landrieu into the administration to manage the implementation of the bipartisan infrastructure bill and then to be a co-chair of the re-election campaign.

Then Landrieu passed when some urged him to run for DNC chair himself after the 2024 election, thinking he’d be the right person to speak for the Democrats as they tried to rebuild.

Mitch Landrieu, Democratic National Convention Committee Co-Chair, speaks on stage during the second day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 20, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

At the Young Democrats gathering, an aide set up an iPhone on a tripod to record Landrieu’s speech. But he hasn’t taken any of the real preliminary steps toward putting together a prospective operation, staff, fundraising base or framework that would be necessary to turn an interest into a campaign.

These days, a believe-it-when-they-see-it tone quickly creeps into his boosters’ voices as they talk through their conversations with him, but also a wistfulness as they can’t help but dream about what might happen if he went forward with a campaign.

Landrieu is now 65. He acknowledged what several people close to him told CNN about his thinking: If he’s going to run for president, this is probably the last chance.

He points admiringly to New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who became a phenomenon not because of name recognition or money in the bank, but a compelling vision told via cheap and viral online videos.

As for those who’ve been making moves that could give them head starts, Landrieu noted, “they’re all good. I would just say that it’s really hard to be the front-runner over three years.”

“And on top of that,” he adds, somewhat downplaying what people thought of Trump and Biden’s initial prospects, “the last two presidents we’ve had have been people that nobody ever thought was going to be president when it all started.”

US President Joe Biden joins members of his National Infrastructure Advisory Council, including Senior Advisor Mitch Landrieu in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on December 13, 2023 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images North America/Getty Images

评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注