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


To: John Carragher who wrote (4129)8/20/2003 7:51:36 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
We can expect the Kerry people, and Kerry himself, to start escalating their attacks on Dean. Apparently American Spirit is taking a sabbatical. If he were posting, he would be foaming at the mouth.

Poor Kerry. While this is certainly a silly story, his Philadelphia cheesesteak faux pas continues to attract attention. When he comes to Chicago, I hope that someone reminds him that you do not ask for ketchup on your hot dog.

In presidential politics, there is no free lunch

cnn.com

Monday, August 18, 2003 Posted: 12:30 PM EDT (1630 GMT)

WASHINGTON (Creators Syndicate) -- President Gerald R. Ford faced a stiff challenge from former California Gov. Ronald Reagan in the 1976 Texas Republican primary.

Because presidents command local media attention, TV cameras in San Antonio recorded the president's embarrassment when he tried to eat a tamale without first removing the husk. The line on the press bus was that Ford had sewed up the " klutz vote."

Four years earlier, South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, the Democratic presidential nominee, while campaigning in New York City, had committed his own gastronomical gaffe: In a kosher delicatessen to go with his corned beef sandwich, McGovern asked for a glass of milk.

Now it is Sen. John Kerry's, D-Massachusetts, turn for a food faux pas. Last Monday afternoon, at 9th and Wharton in South Philadelphia, Kerry showed up for a scheduled visit with supporters and customers at "Pat's King of Steaks." There, Kerry did what presidential candidates are supposed to do. He ordered the local favorite, a Philadelphia cheesesteak hoagie.

Apparently, unlike candidates John McCain and Al Gore, who knew when they stopped in South Philly that the cheese in a cheesesteak is Cheese Whiz, John Kerry made the mistake of asking for Swiss cheese.

Owner Frank Olivieri confided to reporters that he had persuaded the Democratic presidential candidate (who as a 10-year-old had actually gone to boarding school in Switzerland) that what he really wanted was Cheese Whiz. But the invited press had heard the exchange and the damage was done.


American candidates have long used their food preferences to define their politics. When England's King George VI, on the eve of World War II, visited President Franklin Roosevelt at Hyde Park, FDR offered the British monarch and his royal entourage a menu of very American hot dogs and decidedly non-premium Rupert's beer

To prove he was just folks, President George Herbert Walker Bush, like Kerry an alumnus of a prestigious boarding school and Yale, emphasized his incurable appetite for pork rinds. And who could forget Bush's 1990 declaration of dietary independence? "My mother made me eat broccoli. I hate broccoli. I am president of the United States. I will not eat any more broccoli."

New York is a tossed ethnic salad. The late Republican Nelson Rockefeller (who was born not with a silver spoon in his mouth but instead with complete silver place-settings for 12) demonstrated an unmatched common touch while campaigning for governor by feasting on knishes and kung pao chicken and tacos and hot dogs and cannolis. Because politics is probably the most imitative of all the American arts, candidates ever since have tried -- mostly unsuccessfully -- to match the delightfully ravenous Rocky.

In the knife and fork department (or, more accurately, in the carry-out line), Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton was undeniably a small 'd' democrat. Who couldn't identify with the Arkansas governor's weakness for Big Macs and fries? Nothing pretentious about that.

Ketchup has played its own important political role. The administration of Ronald Reagan stupidly and indefensibly classified -- for school lunch purposes -- America's favorite condiment as a vegetable. A favorite dish of President Richard M. Nixon, a man of undeniably different tastes, was cottage cheese with ketchup on it.

All of which brings us back to ketchup and John Kerry, whose own pockets became very deep indeed after he married an heiress to the Heinz fortune.

As a Massachusetts Democrat with a patrician pedigree and a fondness for $75 haircuts, Kerry -- who proved his courage in the dangerous waters of Vietnam's Mekong Delta, when he commanded swift boats through enemy attacks -- needs to spend some real quality time with the kind of people who were in his crew then.

People who know what it's like to fall behind on a 48-month car note and whose favorite cheese is not brie, but Velveeta. He can be grateful that his Philly cheesesteak stumble was in the week of Arnold-mania and in the month of August 2003, rather than September 2004. Otherwise, he would be eating only crow.



To: John Carragher who wrote (4129)8/20/2003 1:59:30 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
Wesley Clark: The best candidate not running

By Bob Ray Sanders

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Staff Writer

A calm, confident voice coming from the television set last Sunday morning so caught my attention that I put the newspaper down on the kitchen counter, grabbed my cup of coffee and quickly sat down in the den to listen to a man who was actually making sense on the issues.

It did not take me long to realize that he was the one -- not the messiah necessarily, but the one who would make an attractive, more-than-credible candidate to challenge President Bush in the 2000 election.

He was not one of the nine declared Democratic presidential candidates.

And although he acknowledged having been encouraged to seek the nation's highest office, he said he had not made that decision yet and he had not even chosen a political party.

Perhaps so, but the more he talked, the more it was clear that if he ran at all, he would have to run as a Democrat.

You see, during the interview he basically declared that third-party candidacies are ineffective, and his stand on the issues seemed diametrically opposed to the current administration's (and the Republican Party's) views.

Here was a nonpolitician speaking with a rare clarity that is certainly hard to find in most elected officials on any level.

Fielding pointed questions from moderator Tim Russert of NBC's Meet the Press, retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark spoke freely and forcefully, clearly yet untarnished by political handlers, strategists and speechwriters.

Remember the name: Wesley K. Clark.

How refreshing it was to hear more than the usual blah, blah, blah and hubba, hubba, hubba say-nothing rhetoric that has become the official language of Washington officialdom and political campaigns.

Make a mental note, as I did Sunday morning: Wesley K. Clark. A retired general.

I wish I had been taking notes with a pad and pen, but when I thought back, there was really no need. He was so articulate that I heard him, understood him and remembered what he said.

He did not engage in Bush-bashing or Congress-chiding. And, except for refusing to declare his candidacy or party affiliation, he did not skirt the issues.

Clark, who was forced out as the supreme allied commander in Europe, said that although he thought Iraq probably had some kind of weapons program, the Bush administration never proved the imminence of an Iraqi threat.

He also firmly opposed the huge Bush tax cuts, saying they would not stimulate the economy and basically favored the wealthiest of Americans.

The retired general also explained why he had filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting the University of Michigan's affirmative-action plan, noting that affirmative action in the military had served the nation well.

It is pretty obvious that there are those who fear Clark's possible entry into the presidential race. Just since the Sunday-morning program, when I began searching the Internet for information on him, there have been more than a few new Web sites trying to discredit him.

That's a very good sign.

Clark, who grew up in Little Rock, Ark., has ties to Texas, having served as commander of the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood.

Among his numerous military assignments and accomplishments, he commanded a company in Vietnam.

According to the NATO Web site, "General Clark is a 1966 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he graduated first in his class. He holds a master's degree in philosophy, politics and economics from Oxford University where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar (August 1966-August 1968). He is a graduate of the National War College, Command and General Staff College, Armor Officer Advanced and Basic Courses, and Ranger and Airborne schools."

In addition, he has been a White House Fellow and a special assistant to the director of the Office of Management and Budget and has served as assistant professor of social science at West Point.

He looks like a man of high credentials to me.

Certainly there are other candidates with the qualifications to be president, but of the nine announced Democratic contenders, only two -- and I won't name them -- have any hope of capturing the nomination, and neither of them has a chance of winning without Clark (or someone very much like him) on the ticket.

So the way I see it right now, whether he's at the top or the bottom of the ticket, the Democrats don't stand a chance without Clark as a candidate.

santabarbaraforclark.com