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


To: American Spirit who wrote (493386)11/15/2003 11:54:42 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 769670
 
Why wait? The GOP is cheating today, tomorrow, next week, next month, next quarter as well as next year.

They are a 24/7/365 automated cheating machine.



To: American Spirit who wrote (493386)11/16/2003 12:47:54 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Donna Brazile, Al Gore's campaign manager in 2000, said the "magic" about Clark seems to be gone. "When he announced, my computer was overwhelmed with e-mails from people trying to sign on, and that's trickled down to just a few," she said. "The challenge for the campaign is to figure out how to get that moment back."

Stephen Hess, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, said, "He had a tremendous opportunity when he announced, and he didn't take advantage of it.

"After talking about running for months, everyone expected him to be ready to go, and he wasn't. He kept slipping on banana peels. There is still room for him. People haven't focused -- but the window of opportunity is closing fast."

In the initial excitement over Clark's candidacy, some of the party's most experienced operatives, many of them veterans of the Clinton and Gore campaigns, offered their services. But those who showed up in Little Rock the day before Clark announced were shocked to find Clark had not a thing in place -- no money, no offices, no phones, no position papers and no staff. Donnie Fowler, a veteran of four presidential campaigns, became the campaign manager by default because he happened to be there as an adviser.

No one knew what to do with the politically inexperienced but Internet-savvy leaders of the "Draft Clark" movement, who brought with them 50,000 potential online supporters. There were no clear lines of authority and multiple power centers. Aides were fighting to get on the small campaign plane and travel with Clark, but no one was sure who was in charge of the manifest.

Fowler quit when told he would not be running the campaign. And resentment festered with the apparent power of advisers such as Ron Klain and Mark Fabiani, veterans of the Gore campaign, who did not move to Little Rock. Media representatives were frustrated because there seemed to be no one and everyone speaking for the campaign.

Today, campaign officials insist there are clear lines of authority, department heads who know their jobs and an effective structure in place. But the mishaps continue -- Clark had to back out of a New Hampshire debate next month, for example, because the campaign scheduled a fundraiser in New York the same day.

Sklar, a longtime Democratic activist, helped set up the organizational structure in Little Rock, but his gruff demeanor alienated some. He said he plans to return home to California after Thanksgiving but will still be an adviser to the campaign. Eli Segal, a Boston businessman and Clinton veteran, is now running the day-to-day campaign. Klain and Fabiani are in key advisory roles but are not involved in the daily operations.

In the past month, the press office has been restructured, with Bennett and Jamal Simmons -- the traveling press secretary -- emerging as the two main spokesmen for the campaign. Kym Spell, the former national press secretary, is returning to New York where she will be a consultant to the campaign for the entertainment industry. Chris Lehane, who worked for Gore and briefly for Kerry, has become a media strategist in Little Rock.

There is also an intense push to ramp up Clark's 125,000-strong Internet constituency, with about a dozen staffers developing ways to direct volunteers nationally, generate crowds at events and raise money online. The campaign recently hired Jon Rubin, an expert in direct response fundraising, as a consultant. Finance chairman Diana Rogalle said the campaign is now raising about 40 percent of its money through Internet communication.

But some disgruntled "Draft Clark" activists believe considerable momentum was lost in those first critical weeks, especially inasmuch as Clark's candidacy was really born on the Internet. Between October and November, for example, Clark's monthly meetings set up by a free Web site called Meetup.com -- which have been a key asset of the Dean campaign -- dropped from 343 to 205 nationwide, a sign the campaign was not helping to organize the gatherings. Dean's meetings, meanwhile, reached 818 last month.

Campaign aides maintain, however, that organizational issues are largely behind them, enabling them to concentrate on defining Clark to the voting public. "We're moving to the stage of discovering the reality of the person, and our research shows his leadership experience is quite appealing," said Clark pollster Geoffrey Garin.

"There have been awkward moments but nothing disqualifying," Garin said last week. "The voters are willing to give him a chance to get firmly planted."
Clark to Launch Media Blitz in New Hampshire
Ads Aim to Show He Can Take on Dean

By Lois Romano
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 16, 2003; Page A01



To: American Spirit who wrote (493386)11/16/2003 1:01:18 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
The Iowa Poll showed Gephardt reclaiming a lead after losing it to Dean last summer, putting Gephardt's support at 27 percent and Dean's at 20 percent. Kerry was third at 15 percent, and no other Democrat was in double digits in the poll.
Kerry advisers said the Massachusetts senator hoped to use Saturday's dinner to sent a jolt through a campaign that has suffered a difficult week. Last weekend, Kerry fired campaign manager Jim Jordan, whose departure was quickly followed by that of two other staffers.

Kerry unveiled a new slogan for his candidacy -- "the real deal" -- designed to draw an implicit contrast with Dean, and Kerry said he will demonstrate that he is more electable than Dean or any of his other rivals.

"It's time for us to get serious in this party and pick somebody who can win and take back the White House, and I'm that person," Kerry told reporters at a local ice rink after a game of hockey with local firefighters.

Dean, speaking to reporters, said rivals who say he is not electable underestimate what he has tapped into. He said those in the "upper echelons of the Democratic Party" in Washington "fundamentally misunderstand what's happening in this country."

Dean's Rivals Question Campaign's Tone in Iowa
Kerry, Edwards Say Anger Won't Win White House
By Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 16, 2003; Page A06