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High-energy Hagan was dynamo in community

- The Charlotte Observer

Published: Sun, Oct. 05, 2008 12:30AM

Modified Sun, Oct. 05, 2008 01:42PM

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First of two parts

Kay Hagan already knows the ups and downs of the U.S. Senate.

During a Capitol internship in the mid-'70s, she operated the bronze elevator that ferried senators to and from the chamber. Squeezing inside were members such as Ted Kennedy, Joe Biden and her uncle, Lawton Chiles of Florida.

KAY HAGAN

BORN: May 26, 1953, in Shelby

EDUCATION: B.A., American Studies, Florida State University, 1975; J.D., Wake Forest University School of Law, 1978

FAMILY: Husband, Chip Hagan, a Greensboro attorney; three children

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Attorney; worked as attorney for NationsBank (now Bank of America), 1978-88.

ELECTIVE OFFICE: N.C. Senate, 1999 to present

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At the controls, the senator's niece daydreamed about a political career of her own.

"You aspire to it," she says. "It's infectious."

Now the Greensboro Democrat wants to return to Washington.

Hagan, 55, is challenging Republican Sen. Elizabeth Dole in one of the country's highest-profile contests.

Polls show a tight race in what to some extent has become a referendum on Dole and Congress. Outside groups including the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee have by some estimates spent nearly $6 million on ads attacking the first-term incumbent.

Hagan, once little-known outside Greensboro and Raleigh, is running hard.

Genetically energetic, she's an exercise junkie who loves yoga and Pilates and early-morning runs.

She was a middle-school cheerleader, president of a high school service club, a lifeguard, piano student and ballet dancer who once led 300 costumed dancers through the streets of Disney World. As a civic activist in Greensboro and later a state senator, she juggled committee meetings with soccer games and Girl Scouts.

On Thursday, she bounced around a luncheon of Charlotte Democrats, working tables and making a speech before hurrying to another appointment.

"The campaign in that sense is a projection of who she is and her style," says Sen. Dan Clodfelter, a Charlotte Democrat. "It's a very high-energy campaign."

Critics question Hagan's independence and accuse her of dancing around issues. She refused to take a position on the House's original Wall Street bailout bill, for example, and came out against the Senate version only after it passed.

"She's a totally typical 'go-along' - hasn't had an independent thought in her life," says former GOP state Sen. Mark McDaniel, who lost to Hagan in 2002.

"She'll be Harry Reid in a skirt," he adds, referring to the U.S. Senate Democratic leader.

Admirers disagree.

"She didn't take any crap," says Senate Democratic Leader Marc Basnight of Manteo. "She didn't take it off me. She didn't take it off anyone."

The girl in the middle

Kay Ruthven was born in Shelby, the second of three children. Her father worked in the tire business, her mother stayed at home.

The family moved to Charleston when she was 2 and later to Lakeland, Fla., where her father would serve as mayor. Hagan went to public schools and learned survival skills from her brothers.

"Being the girl in the middle," she says, "I had to fight for everything I got."

Hagan went to Florida State and law school at Wake Forest. There she met a fellow student named Chip Hagan. After their first date, she called her mother.

"I told her I met the man I'm going to marry," she recalls.

They moved to Greensboro, where the Hagan family was well-established.

Chip Hagan's father, a former Marine Corps general, was a prominent lawyer and one-time prosecutor who helped oversee the opening of the city's War Memorial Coliseum in 1959. Thirty-five years later, Chip and Kay Hagan co-chaired its gala re-opening after a major expansion. It was one of many community roles for each.

Chip Hagan led the Greensboro Area Chamber of Commerce and the Guilford County Democrats. Kay Hagan served with such groups as the YWCA, the arts council and the Triad Leadership Network. She's also an elder at her Presbyterian church.

jmorrill@charlotteobserver.com

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