By AP/KWMU
Washington, DC – Missouri Congressman Kenny Hulshof is not commenting on reports that he's a candidate to be the next president of the University of Missouri.
But speculation increased this week with news that his long-time chief of staff, Manning Feraci, resigned for another job. Feraci has accepted a position with the National Biodiesel Board as vice president of federal affairs and will direct the organization's Washington office starting May 29, a board spokeswoman said Wednesday.
Hulshof's office did not return repeated phone calls and e-mail requests for comment on Wednesday. The Associated Press also left several messages at Hulshof's Columbia home and repeatedly sought out his press secretary at the Columbia district office.
"I've heard the same rumors that everybody else has, but I don't have any personal knowledge about the process," said Missouri Republican Party spokesman John Hancock. "I would have to believe that that's a very appealing position for someone who resides in Columbia."
University of Missouri curators have repeatedly said they would not publicly discuss the search process or the list of finalists to replace Elson Floyd, who left to head Washington State University.
Curators, who are serving as the search committee, began interviewing candidates in St. Louis last week and held another round of interviews in Kansas City on Monday. While there is no firm timetable, university officials hope to name a new president over the summer.
The outlined search process calls for a 19-member advisory panel of faculty, students and alumni to interview a group of finalists after the initial round of curator interviews.
A former special prosecutor for the state attorney general's office, Hulshof received a bachelor's degree in agriculture economics from the University of Missouri in 1980. He has represented his northeast Missouri district since 1996.
He has long been considered a rising star in the GOP and briefly considered a bid for governor in 2004 but decided against challenging Matt Blunt in the GOP primary. A solid conservative, Hulshof has stressed fighting crime and expanding ethanol use issues important to his mostly rural constituents. He was re-elected in 2006 with 61% of the vote.
Hulshof raised about $50,000 for re-election during the first three months of this year and has $227,000 in the bank, according to his latest campaign finance report. That's about the same amount of cash on hand that Hulshof had a year and a half before his 2006 re-election campaign.
Hulshof delivered the commencement address to graduates of the University of Missouri-Columbia's School of Health Professions on Saturday. Seated nearby on the dais was curator Doug Russell, who also heads the state Republican Party.
Asked about Hulshof's interest in the presidency as well as the university's interest in Hulshof, Russell declined comment.
While university chancellors and presidents typically make their mark in academia, tapping political and business leaders isn't unprecedented.
The University of Massachusetts at Lowell, for example, recently named Rep. Martin Meehan (D-Mass.) to be its next chancellor.
The job requirements for the four-campus Missouri system include wooing private donors and lobbying state lawmakers in the Republican-controlled Legislature, for which Hulshof is well-suited.
The president also must work closely with curators, who are appointed by the governor.
Before his departure for Washington State, Floyd sometimes clashed with curators, in particular Gov. Matt Blunt's initial three appointees to the board.