In efforts to defend President Obama from the controversies involving Rep. Joe Sestak, D-Penn., and former Colorado speaker of the House Andrew Romanoff -- Democratic Senate candidates whom the White House made efforts to coax out of their challenges to incumbent Democratic Senators -- the White House and its allies have argued that a similar offer was made by President Ronald Reagan's White House when trying to coax a weak incumbent out of his re-election race.
But the Reagan White House official involved tells ABC News that that's not true, and he’s supported by press accounts at the time.
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Onto this scene in November 1981, enter Ed Rollins, Reagan's incoming political director.
Asked by an Associated Press reporter if President Reagan would offer Hayakawa a job if he decided not to run for reelection, Rollins, underlined that the White House was not negotiating with Hayakwa but said: "If the senator chooses, on his own initiative, not to run for re-election, I'm sure the president would be willing to offer him a substantial administration post."
Rollins told the AP reporter "it has never been discussed" so it would be "purely speculative to say" what job Hayakawa might be offered. "We are clearly not encouraging it," he said.
Asked to respond, Hayakawa said, "I'm not interested... I do not want to be an ambassador, and I do not want an administration post." In a statement, Hayakawa said, "I have not contacted the White House in regard to any administration or ambassadorial post, and they have not been in contact with me."
Hayakawa dropped out of the race in January 1982. Wilson went on to win the GOP nomination and defeat Brown. Hayakawa was never appointed to a position in the Reagan administration. He died in 1992.
Reached for comment today, Rollins told ABC News that the AP interview took place "when I was very inexperienced and didn't understand you don't answer hypothetical questions."
Hayakawa was facing a grueling primary, he noted, and "I was asked 'Would there be any place for Hayakawa if he left the Senate?'" And he gave his answer.
"The senator had many friends in the administration including the president," Rollins recalled. "We never made an overture to him, there was never an overture to anybody by Hayakawa personally, it was purely a top-of-the head answer. We did not get involved in primaries."