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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (434217)7/27/2003 12:22:28 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 769670
 
'Third Way' Democrats Label Themselves the Only Way




URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,92978,00.html

Saturday, July 26, 2003
By Kelley Beaucar Vlahos


WASHINGTON — Scornfully branded "George Bush Lite," by political foes, leaders of the Democratic Leadership Council (search) and the "New Democrat" movement say their centrist agenda will ultimately buy them the last laugh on Capitol Hill and in the 2004 election.





"We all know that at the end of the day, that whoever the [Democratic] nominee is, he will sound an awful lot like a New Democrat," said Simon Rosenberg, founder and president of the New Democrat Network (search), which is a political action arm of the DLC.

"We're not trying to pull the party to the right, we're trying to pull it forward — updating progressive politics for a more modern era," he added.

Founded in 1985 as a think tank for moderate Democratic ideals — fiscal conservatism, with a more liberal approach to social issues — the DLC says it has already produced one president, Bill Clinton, chairman of the DLC from 1990-1991.

Clinton embodied the New Democrat ideals, otherwise known as the "third way," say observers, and spawned a generation of like candidates in his wake.

NDN has helped elect 50 candidates to the House and Senate since 1996, said Rosenberg. Seventy-four members now belong to the House New Democrat Coalition and 20 members participate on the Senate side.

The New Democrats raised $4.4 million for candidates across the country in 2002 and count some of the most powerful leaders on the Hill as allies.

They include a number of prominent senators, including Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., John Breaux, D-La., and Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., the DLC chairman. House New Democrats include Reps. Adam Smith, D-Wash., Jim Davis, D-Fla., and Ron Kind, D-Wis., who co-chair the House caucus.

Possibly the most familiar names on the New Democrat honor roll are Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., and Bob Graham, D-Fla. Both are running for president in 2004.

But the struggle for New Democrats to generate a moderate message among the din of anti-Bush rhetoric has been tough.

While Lieberman has topped the most recent national poll on the Democratic primary, he has been largely upstaged by former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who claims he represents "the democratic wing of the Democratic Party."

Dean appears averse to labels, but supporters say he espouses the bedrock liberal ideals of the party. They add that Lieberman and Graham, with their moderate appeals, just aren't resonating with Democrats.

"In terms of the heart and soul of the party, and in terms of the current issues that are being debated by the party, they are going nowhere," said Roger Hickey, head of the Campaign for America's Future (search), a network of liberal organizations, including labor unions, civil rights and environmental activists, most of which have coalesced around a anti-war, anti-Bush drumbeat.

"The DLC's approach is to write off the base of the party — the nuts and bolts," Hickey said, noting that the centrists have been largely silent on the war in Iraq. "When we had our conference last month, there was palpable dislike for George Bush and all he stands for."

New Democrats say Hickey's activists don't represent the rank and file, and that spouting angry epithets about Bush is not going to attract the necessary swing votes in 2004.

Even former President Clinton, in a recent television talk show appearance, warned that Democrats ought to tone down their angry rhetoric about the recent State of the Union speech flap and Bush's Iraq policy.

Ed Kilgore, the Democratic Leadership Council's policy director, said Hickey's activists are drawing the wrong kind of attention to themselves, underscoring the public's mistrust of Democrats on national defense issues.

"[Dean] has managed to capitalize on an angry minority resentment in the Democratic Party that almost seems to want to make noise rather than win," said Kilgore.

Rep. Joe Hoeffel, R-Pa., a member of the New Democrat caucus in the House who is running for Senate in 2004, said fiscal responsibility is a much stronger issue on which to criticize the president.

"Our fiscal house is in disorder now, and that is the message for 2004," he said.

Rosenberg said if the party wants to go anywhere in 2004, it will need to capture the so-called independent swing vote.

"This mild revival [of the liberal wing of the party] is a necessary, but not a sufficient enough, step to win in 2004," he noted.

Both sides agree that a coming together needs to occur in order to maximize votes in the general election. While the more liberal grassroots are key to getting voters out for the primary, experts say, the New Democrat agenda has more broad appeal for the general election.

Until then, the two sides will have to knock heads during the primary to see whose message for 2004 gains primacy.

"We believe there is a healthy debate and it's a sign of strength, not a sign of weakness, within the party," said Rosenberg.



To: calgal who wrote (434217)7/27/2003 12:25:08 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Calif. Replacement Race Could Be a Free-for-All





URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,92964,00.html

Saturday, July 26, 2003

LOS ANGELES — California's state Supreme Court has cleared the last obstacle to a recall vote of Democratic Gov. Gray Davis (search), and the race to replace him is sure to become a political scrum.





"You're talking about a total free-for-all, an election where anything can happen, not a lot of time for strategic planning," said Democratic political consultant Darry Sragow. "It's a situation in which it's very difficult to choose a strategy because you're not talking about two candidates going head-to-head and someone's got to get a majority."

The California court refused to hear Davis supporters' allegations that the signatures needed to force a recall election were gained fraudulently. A Los Angeles court has agreed to take the case on Aug. 8 and the Supreme Court could be forced to take the case.

But as of now, the Oct. 7 recall election is going on as scheduled. Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante (search) did not say whether he will hold a replacement election that would coincide with Davis' ouster, but prospective candidates must file their intent to run in the next two weeks.

That means a host of Republican wannabe governors must make a decision nearly as difficult as solving California's $38 billion budget crisis, which forced Davis to a recall in the first place.

"I haven't made my mind up. As I said, I would support Arnold Schwarzenegger (search) in a second if he ran. I think he is sensational and if he doesn't run then I will have to make up my mind," said former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan (search).

As for Bill Simon, the businessman who lost the general election to Davis just nine months ago, he has not made a decision publicly, but is stumping around the state gauging public support.

"Davis has a 20 percent approval rating, which means 80 percent think he's not doing a good job. We know one thing for sure, 80 percent of the state are not right wing," Simon said.

The latest name to tell Fox News that he is considering a run is former vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp (search), who is shopping for homes in southern California. Calls are reportedly being made to measure potential support for Kemp.

Political commentator Arianna Huffington has also been named a potential replacement. Huffington supporters have started a Web site encouraging her candidacy.

For now, the only declared candidate is Rep. Darrell Issa (search), R-Calif., who bankrolled the recall drive with $1.7 million of his own money. State Sen. Tim McClintock, R-Thousand Oaks, has said he is forming an exploratory committee to weigh his chances.

The Golden State is in a holding pattern with everyone waiting for Schwarzenegger to make a decision. He is supposed to make his intentions known next week, his publicist said.

California Democrats maintain that they are behind Davis 100 percent, and won't field a candidate, leaving Democrats to decide between choosing to keep Davis or voting for a "right wing" candidate.

But if Schwarzenegger enters the race, Democrats are preparing behind the scenes to have a big name take him on.

Fox News' Katie Cobb and the Associated Press contributed to this report.



To: calgal who wrote (434217)7/27/2003 9:16:36 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
Very good article. thanks.