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Politics : Those Damned Democrat's -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (1357)8/1/2003 11:17:12 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1604
 
Only Arnold Knows if He's a Candidate










By ERICA WERNER
The Associated Press
Wednesday, July 30, 2003; 7:48 AM

LOS ANGELES - Arnold Schwarzenegger has played the role of Hamlet more than Terminator in recent weeks, deliberating whether to be or not to be a candidate for governor of California.

Now the actor, who turned 56 on Wednesday, appears on the verge of opting out of the role of a lifetime. His advisers say an announcement that he is not running in the Oct. 7 recall election against Gov. Gray Davis could come within days.

"He is at this juncture leaning against a run and we expect an announcement as early as the end of this week," a senior adviser said Tuesday night, speaking on condition of anonymity.

As recently as last week, Schwarzenegger's political adviser, George Gorton, said he expected the actor to get in the race. But after the recall qualified for the ballot on July 23 and an election date was set, rumors surfaced that Schwarzenegger was waffling.

A decision not to run could open the door for Schwarzenegger's friend and fellow moderate Republican, Richard Riordan, the former mayor of Los Angeles.

"If Arnold runs, I'm not running. If he doesn't run I will seriously consider it," Riordan told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

Candidates must declare their intentions by Aug. 9.

Schwarzenegger's advisers say a key factor tilting the actor against a candidacy is opposition from his wife, Maria Shriver, the television journalist and niece of Democratic Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. She is said to be concerned about the demands of a campaign on the couple, who have four children ranging in age from 5 to 13.

"She has to give the green light and feel comfortable with it because she moved away from Washington to get away from all that kind of stuff," Schwarzenegger said in May.

Although the box-office star and former world bodybuilding champion is unseasoned in politics, he is considered a potentially formidable contender because of his wealth, name recognition and ability to draw international media attention.

"Obviously if Arnold were to run, having a superstar in the field changes the race in a number of ways," said Republican consultant Rob Stutzman.

"A lot of other dominoes fall based on his decision, including apparently Mayor Riordan's decision and maybe even the decision of Democrats to get in or get out. So I think a lot of eyes are on Arnold."

That's a position the Austrian-born actor is used to being in, and his actions over the past year only stoked the speculation.

He surrounded himself with political advisers who worked with former GOP Gov. Pete Wilson and appeared before taxpayer advocacy groups, newspaper editors and a U.S. Senate subcommittee.

He also drafted and championed Proposition 49, last year's successful state ballot initiative meant to dedicate as much as $550 million annually to before- and after-school programs.

"If Schwarzenegger doesn't run all eyes are on Riordan and the prayers of many are with him, because if Riordan and Schwarzenegger both don't run it'll be seen as a real blow to the recall," said Kevin Spillane, a GOP strategist who worked for Riordan during his failed run for the Republican nomination for governor last year.

Davis, meanwhile, insisted Tuesday he doesn't care who enters the race.

"I'm not getting involved in this carnival effort of who's in and who's out," he told The Associated Press.

The only declared Republican candidate is U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, who funded the recall. Businessman Bill Simon, who lost to Davis in November, and state Sen. Tom McClintock are also expected to run. All three are conservative Republicans.

A Schwarzenegger candidacy raises several potential problems for the actor, both political and personal.

If he runs, Schwarzenegger would likely be subjected to withering attacks from Davis allies, who gave him a taste of the harsh spotlight of the political arena last year when he was contemplating running for governor.

A Davis strategist bombarded newsroom fax machines with articles about Schwarzenegger's alleged groping and womanizing. He denied the claims, and some of his co-stars came to his defense.

Last year's rerelease of the film that made him a star in America, the acclaimed 1977 documentary "Pumping Iron," also brought scrutiny when it was noted that Schwarzenegger, then preparing to defend one of his bodybuilding titles, was seen smoking marijuana.

"I did smoke a joint and I did inhale," he told the AP when the film was rereleased in November. "The bottom line is that's what it was in the '70s, that's what I did. I have never touched it since."

If he runs, Schwarzenegger would also have to put on hold an acting career that saw him paid about $30 million for his latest film, "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines." With a string of box-office hits under his belt, he is routinely cited as one of the A-list actors who can command $20 million or more a film.

"I think I'm now in the middle of my career," he said in June.

© 2003 The Associated Press



To: calgal who wrote (1357)8/1/2003 11:17:29 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1604
 
Kerry, Dean at odds on Bush tax cuts

Candidates clash on costs, benefits

By Mike Glover, Associated Press, 7/31/2003

ES MOINES -- Presidential rivals Howard Dean and John F. Kerry, who have been at odds over national security, quarreled yesterday over what Democrats should do with President Bush's tax cuts. Poised to deliver remarks on the economy in Iowa and New Hampshire later in the day, the primary foes rushed to criticize each other, even if it meant upstaging their own speeches. Kerry fired the first salvo.



''Real Democrats don't walk away from the middle class,'' the Massachusetts senator said. ''They don't take away a tax credit for families struggling to raise their children or bring back a tax penalty for married couples who are starting out or penalize teachers and waitresses by raising taxes on the middle class.''

The Kerry campaign provided an advanced text of his remarks to The Associated Press, assailing Dean's call for a repeal of Bush's tax cuts.

Kerry's speech did not mention Dean by name, but aides made sure the speech was provided to the media before Dean addressed the Plumbers and Steamfitters Union in Iowa. Contacted for a response, Dean answered back in an interview.

''Real Democrats don't make promises they can't keep,'' the former Vermont governor said. ''Working Americans have a choice: They can have the president's tax cuts or they can have health care that can't be taken away. They can't have both.''

Later in the day, Dean used his union speech to fault Washington Democrats for being too timid to challenge Bush's economic policies, arguing that they are ''so afraid of losing that they have remained silent or only halfheartedly fought the very agenda that is destroying the democratic dream of America.''

''We lose by keeping silent,'' he said. ''We should never turn away from the core groups that make up the Democratic Party.''

Jumping into the fray, Kerry strategist Chris Lehane said the tax issue was a question of ''whose side are you on,'' and added that Dean ''needs to be straight and explain that he intends to increase the unfair tax burden on working families.''

Recent polls show Kerry and Dean in a close battle for the lead in New Hampshire, and Dean surging in recent surveys in Iowa. The two clashed during the first Democratic debate in South Carolina in May, and a personal animosity has been evident at times during the campaign.

While Kerry has said Bush's tax cuts help the wealthy, he has been careful to point out that some elements, such as the child tax credits, are beneficial.

''Democrats agree that the Bush administration's tax giveaways for the wealthy have left American workers hurting, but there are real differences within our party about how to restore economic growth and create jobs,'' Kerry said in his speech.

Dean has argued that Democrats need to stake out bold positions, but must avoid the tax-and-spend label that has dogged the party. While some of the presidential candidates have proposed sweeping health care plans, he said they have a responsibility to explain how they would pay for those efforts, and the tax cut is the