Sen. Burris Not Ruling Out Senate Race
Sen. Roland Burris reconsiders his decision not to run on ABC's "Subway Series."
Aug. 10, 2009— -- Illinois Sen. Roland Burris announced last month that he would not run to retain his Senate seat next year, but in his first television interview since making that decision, Burris told ABC News he could change his mind.
"You never say never," Burris told ABC News in a "Subway Series" interview for the ABC News program "Top Line." The "Subway Series," which debuts on Monday, features interviews with senators and other political leaders on board the Capitol Hill subway.
"What I'm still hearing," Burris said, is "people from all over the country and they are saying, 'Don't give up that seat.'"
Nobody took a more unusual route to the Senate than Burris, who is only the sixth African American in U.S. history to serve in the Senate.
After he was appointed by disgraced Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich to the seat vacated by Barack Obama, Democratic Senate leaders did everything they could to try to block his appointment, turning him away on a cold, rainy day in January as a large group of news cameras and reporters swarmed around him.
"What was going through my head was, 'Gee whiz this must be pretty important,'" Burris said when asked about the day he was first turned away and denied his seat by the Senate leadership. "The fact that I did not get seated was certainly disappointing and it was challenging."
Burris said he feels no bitterness towards his Democratic colleagues who tried to keep him out of the Senate.
Asked about his party-line voting record, Burris said: "Well, it just so happens on every issue that has come up the party has agreed with me."