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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2819)6/30/2003 10:25:33 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 10965
 
Seven Democratic fund-raising clues

Presidential contenders’ second-quarter receipts hint at future of the Democratic race


By Tom Curry
MSNBC

msnbc.com

WASHINGTON, June 30 — As Democratic presidential contenders report their second-quarter fund-raising totals over the next few days, political professionals will scrutinize them for signs of strength or weakness. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean’s campaign said Sunday it collected $6 million in the past three months, which could put him ahead of all other Democratic contenders for the quarter.

EVEN BEFORE DEAN REPORTED his total some Democratic strategists in Washington had begun to regard him as the front-runner in the battle for the nomination. His strong fund-raising performance will lend credence to the notion that Dean may be the man to beat at this point.

Money matters not only because it pays for TV advertising and hiring organizers in early caucus and primary states such as Iowa, but because it impresses potential donors and creates a sense of momentum.

DONORS WATCHING

“The big donors are watching very carefully to see who has got the money coming in and who is stumbling,” said Larry Makinson, a campaign finance analyst at the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-partisan research group in Washington.

While $6 million for one quarter might seem like a large number, to put it in perspective, consider that President Bush raised $5 million in just one 10-hour tour of California last Friday. For the entire quarter the Bush campaign will likely report a total of $30 million.

Second-quarter fund-raising ends Monday. Here are seven things to look for in the reports which will be released by each campaign over the next several days:

Dean stokes his bonfire. Dean has gotten an enthusiastic reception from audiences in Iowa, New Hampshire, California and other states, stirring the kind of passion that John McCain kindled in his 2000 race for the GOP nomination. Right now, Dean gives the most energetic and cogent stump speech of any of the contenders.

That passion seems to have generated big dollars. Last week, in an apparent case of “low-balling” expectations, the Dean camp said it might raise about $4 million for the second quarter. He has beaten that number by 50 percent.

Best of all for Dean would be if it turned out that he raised more in the quarter than his chief rival in New Hampshire, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts.

Dean’s Internet and e-mail appeals for money. “His headline is the kind of fund-raising he’s doing online,” said Democratic campaign consultant Cathy Allen, who is not working for any of the presidential hopefuls. Will Dean’s campaign staff prove that they have opened a new frontier in reaching younger, affluent, web-connected voters?

Cash on hand and “cash burn.” What matters is not only how much money a candidate has raised, but how quickly he spends it by hiring staff, pollsters, and advertising consultants. Kerry topped the cash-on-hand list for the first quarter with $8 million. Will he remain king of the hill in ready cash?

Can Sen. Joe Lieberman’s second-quarter receipts make people forget his weak first quarter? Some party strategists were taken aback when Lieberman reported collecting only $3 million in the first quarter. Another middling-to-poor quarter would raise questions about the viability of Lieberman’s candidacy.

“A key indicator is whether those who did poorly in the first quarter, like Lieberman, pick up, or whether those first-quarter numbers become a self-fulfilling prophecy,” said Randy Pepple, a former Republican congressional aide and campaign consultant.

Is Edwards soaring or sputtering? Edwards made headlines back in April when he reported a take of $7.4 million for the first quarter, edging Kerry. One strategist called the Edwards first-quarter feat “eye-popping.”

But was that as good as it gets for the North Carolina senator? “We’re looking at staying power for him” in the second-quarter data, said Allen.

“Edwards got the buzz when he raised $7.4 million. To the extent that he does not raise $7.4 million this time, does he lose the buzz?” asked a Democratic strategist with one of the presidential campaigns.

Edwards is in the odd position of being a first-tier candidate as measured by the amount of money he has raised, but decidedly a second-tier candidate as measured by polling data. He wins only three or four percent in the most recent Iowa and New Hampshire polls, far behind Kerry, Dean, Lieberman and Rep. Dick Gephardt.

Did Sen. Bob Graham of Florida raise enough to convince donors that he can be a genuine contender? Graham has impressive credentials, as a Southerner, former governor, and former Intelligence Committee chairman. His performance as a stump speaker, however, has been lackluster.

Even if his own fund-raising numbers are not smashing, is Graham having an important effect on the race by soaking up Florida donor dollars that otherwise would have gone to Lieberman?

Are senators finding their day jobs too time-consuming? The four senators in the race, Graham, Edwards, Kerry and Lieberman, have been missing votes on the Senate floor because they’ve been out lunching and dining with donors. Last week, the four were absent for a series of votes on amendments to the prescription drug entitlement for senior citizens which the Senate approved late Thursday.

True, the margin in these votes was not close enough that they would have been affected by the presence of the senators, but at some point will these missed votes open the senators to renewed criticism from Dean? Already the Republican National Committee is issuing periodic tallies of how many roll call votes the Democratic contenders are missing.

Back in March, Dean lambasted Edwards and Kerry for being absent during a Senate vote to outlaw the procedure known as partial-birth abortion. Dean did not mention that the bill passed by a vote of 64 to 33, so Edwards and Kerry would have made no difference to the outcome.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2819)6/30/2003 2:17:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
The Weird Men Behind George W Bush's War

newamerica.net



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (2819)6/30/2003 2:37:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
Bush Fundraising: Post-Tax Cut Payback From The Rich?
_____________________

by Helen Thomas
Syndicated Columnist
Published on Friday, June 27, 2003 by the Hearst Newspapers

President George W. Bush is trying to scoop up an historic $200 million at political fundraising events to kick off his reelection campaign -- even though he has no challengers in the Republican primaries.

But it's not all self-serving. His Republican strategists indicate the president has larger ambitions this time around. He wants to transform the GOP into the majority party by capturing traditional Democrats and swing voters.

Bush will be aiming for Latinos, white union workers, and "soccer moms" who have been re-dubbed "security moms" since 9-11. He has the conservatives and Christian right solidly in his corner.

Marc Racicot -- moving from chairman of the Republican National Committee, to head the Bush reelection committee -- hopes to recruit candidates who share the president's conservative agenda.

He also has set an ambitious goal of registering three million new Republicans by the end of the year and is willing to spend $1 million to achieve that goal.

But I wonder if Bush's popularity can offset the unpredictable economy and loss of nearly three million jobs since he took office. There is also the unfinished business of two wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Bush's fundraising goal is twice the amount for his first presidential race. All he has to do is show up at about 10 lunches, dinners and receptions over the next five weeks and the money will flow.

Deep-pocket Republican guests will pay $2,000 to attend most of the events.

It looks like payback time for those big-wad corporate chieftains who hit the jackpot with his new tax-cut-for-the-rich law.

Nor has he given up on another carrot for the wealthy contributors -- repeal of the federal estate tax. Why does he need all that money?

Well, his spokesman, Ari Fleischer explains that Bush has nine Democratic opponents at the moment taking political swipes at him. Answering them will take some time and money. Besides, he said, "the president wants to get his message out."

The Bush war chest is expected to finance television commercials that will play up the president's image as the military's commander-in-chief conducting the war on terrorism.

He also may tout congressional passage of his confusing prescription drug plan for Medicare patients. This will amount to the president's theft of a key Democratic issue.

Aides said the president also would use his TV ads to attack his Democratic opponents as being captive of liberal interest groups, presumably a reference to the union support they receive.

Last week, Bush raised $3.5 million at a casual get-together over hot dogs, cheeseburgers and nachos.

There, the president told the gathering that "your support is laying the groundwork for a strong nationwide effort next year."

He added -- probably with tongue in cheek: "The political season will come in its own time. Right now, this administration is focused on the people's business."

Last Friday, Bush he flew to Greensboro, Ga., for another get-together with the GOP faithful who chipped in a cool $2.2 million. On Monday he attended another fundraiser in New York City and raked in $4 million.

More presidential stops are slated for San Francisco, Los Angeles, Miami and Tampa before the end of July.

Under federal law, Bush has to use the millions collected before the GOP nomination convention wraps up work in early September 2004.

Although Bush didn't check off the $3 public funding fee on his income tax return, he will accept public funding in the general election, but not in the primaries.

When reporters asked Fleischer whether there was "a dash of hypocrisy" or a "disconnect" between accepting federal matching funds but not contributing to the fund, he danced around the issue.

He replied that Bush is in "pretty good company" because only 12 percent or down to 8 percent of the American people check the box.

"That's the way our system works," he said.

All of the Democratic presidential aspirants have indicated that they will accept federal matching funds -- up to $44 million -- in the primaries. They lack the clout to tap into the big donors as Bush is doing.

Bush has two crowd-drawing pinch hitters already fanning out to back him up. His wife Laura has a couple of dozen fundraising appearances on tap before the end of the summer. Vice President Cheney is also making appearances on the high-stakes fundraising circuit.

Bush has told his affluent supporters that he has the "wind" at his back, an Irish expression of good luck.

In Bush's case, the wind takes the form of Republican friends who are rolling in dough and willing to shell out to help his reelection campaign.

© 2003 Hearst Newspapers

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