SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KLP who wrote (5438)8/20/2003 1:48:48 AM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793624
 
Google is such a great tool...<g> Cramer might want to review his article of today, versus his 'work' of the past... Here's another hoot from Cramer in Dec 1999......


No, no, you're missing the all time great, I have a copy of it somewhere. It was Cramer in February 2000, listing Ten Stocks You Can't Live Without, and every one was an internet or high tech tulip. Right at the top of the bubble. When I read it, I said to myself, I must remember this, lest I ever be tempted to take Jim Cramer seriously again.



To: KLP who wrote (5438)8/20/2003 4:46:08 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793624
 
Schwarzenegger Is Slow to Reach Out
The candidate's absence from Republican bastions is frustrating potential supporters.
By Joe Matthews
Times Staff Writer

August 20, 2003

After Arnold Schwarzenegger announced he was running for governor, Tony Gilchrease, Republican chairman in rural Nevada County, noticed a surge of interest in politics among his younger neighbors.

So he called the actor's campaign office and asked aides to send Schwarzenegger buttons and bumper stickers. He planned to hand them out to newly registered voters at last weekend's county fair.

At the fair, the young voters came ? Republicans registered 350 new voters, a local record ? but the Schwarzenegger material never did.

"I never heard back. I didn't get a phone call," Gilchrease said. "I don't know why."

Two weeks into the campaign, curiosity about Schwarzenegger in core GOP circles is slowly yielding to frustration ? even among potential supporters ? with a movie star who has thus far been unwilling to stray far from Hollywood.

Around the state, county Republican chairpersons and other party activists say Schwarzenegger has been slow to reach out to potential supporters.

"I think politics is about relationships, and in this state there are a lot of relationships that need to be built," said Ron Zehring, Republican chairman in San Diego County.

"He hasn't yet had the opportunity to build those relationships," he said, "and I think that explains part of what you're hearing from the grass roots."

Kevin Jeffries, chairman of Riverside County's Republican Central Committee, pointed out that both of Schwarzenegger's main Republican rivals, state Sen. Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks) and businessman Bill Simon Jr., have made appearances in that county and pledged to return.

"What I understand is that Schwarzenegger's people recognize the importance of the Inland Empire and will come," Jeffries said. "But I get the feeling right now that they are still figuring things out."

In Kings County, Republican Chairwoman Prudence Eiland said that her e-mail is full of missives from McClintock and Simon but that she has yet to hear a word from the Schwarzenegger camp.

"He has not had a presence," she said, "and I wish he would, because he's the one who is polling well."

To date, Schwarzenegger's four public appearances in California have all been safely within the confines of Los Angeles County, where he lives and works. Two of those involved filing papers for governor.

He is holding another event today, a meeting of his economic council ? at a hotel near Los Angeles International Airport.

Schwarzenegger has yet to speak to Republican groups or campaign outside coastal Southern California ? a strange omission in a state where Republicans often find warmer receptions in the interior. Instead, the actor has clung mostly to familiar turf, spending most nights at home on the Westside.

That decision may prove to be a safe, smart strategy for a campaign that has so far been built largely on celebrity and media images. It may also reflect the early awkwardness of a fledgling campaign headed by a novice politician, who gave little warning even to his own staff that he would run.

But the candidate's tactics have been carefully noted in the state's Republican strongholds. Last weekend, eyebrows were raised when Schwarzenegger skipped the annual Republican barbecue and picnic in Placer County ? even though McClintock and Simon attended.

Jane Parsons, chairwoman of the Fresno County Republican Central Committee, said: "It's not like we're planning for an election in November of 2004. He shouldn't keep us waiting too long."

Sean Walsh, a Schwarzenegger spokesman, said the candidate has been focused on putting together a team of economic advisors. The campaign has yet to hire enough people to deal with the deluge of requests for the candidate.

In time, however, "our campaign is going to be a tsunami" felt across California, Walsh said. "Anybody who thinks they are not going to see Arnold Schwarzenegger out campaigning is living in a state of delusion."

But activists warn that Simon and McClintock may be gaining critical support by responding faster to requests for appearances.

Republicans say the danger of waiting to travel in a short, intense campaign is that even activists are forced to depend on the media for an impression of the candidate. Republican activists said they have noted coverage of Schwarzenegger's addition of Rob Lowe ? a former star of the TV series "The West Wing," which is about a Democratic administration ? and billionaire investor Warren Buffett's implicit criticism of Proposition 13.

"I think [Schwarzenegger is] a little liberal, just judging from the people he's surrounding himself with," said John Olmstead, chairman of the Madera County Republican Central Committee.

The actor's close-to-the-vest strategy extends to his relations with local and state media, whose questions he has yet to address. He has even played a cat-and-mouse game with his schedule. His last two public appearances ? in New York on Aug. 11 and in the San Fernando Valley last Thursday ? did not appear on his campaign's public schedule.

Marty Kaplan, associate dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at USC, said Schwarzenegger's campaign is walking a fine line. "It's in their interest to seem to be working on their own internal time clock," he said. "But it's not in their interest to seem to be contemptuous of voters. And that's the knife's edge they're walking."

But many Republicans say they understand, for now, the campaign's slow pace.

"They are still trying to organize their campaign on short notice ? it's a good idea they're not throwing themselves into places and then having to backtrack from mistakes," said Leslie Cornejo, Republican chairwoman in Ventura County. "I do think that once they hit the ground running, things will look different."

latimes.com



To: KLP who wrote (5438)8/20/2003 6:25:36 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793624
 
What was Cramer's involvement with GNET? I missed that one...



To: KLP who wrote (5438)8/20/2003 10:34:48 AM
From: JohnM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793624
 
Oh, you can't hurt Cramer by noting ways he changes his mind. Read his book on his activities during this period. He has been all over the lot. But two things seem to persevere. He is absolutely addicted to the stock market and is a DLC type Democrat. And even though he has been off and on with Marty Perez, he's now on, at least as of the writing of his most recent book.