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: MSI who wrote (22051)12/29/2003 5:52:03 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793625
 
Yep, it sure was, SP on the first day, adversion therapy on the second, for a week.



To: MSI who wrote (22051)12/29/2003 5:56:54 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793625
 
KERRY FINDS HIS VOICE
by Michael Crowley - The New Republic

Candidate: John Kerry
Category: General Likeability
Grade: B

I didn't catch Kerry's anti-Howard Dean speech this weekend, but the prepared text was unusually sharp for a Kerry address. (I especially liked the bit about how "two roads are diverging in the New Hampshire woods." How Windy John actually delivered this text is another question).

The central thrust of Kerry's speech is that, in Howard Dean, Democrats risk choosing a nominee who will be crushed by George W. Bush. Kerry calls Dean "a candidate who, for all his anger, is on the wrong track economically and has no experience on the major security issues of the day." And he lambastes Dean's foot-in-mouth proclivities. "What kind of muddled thinking is it if you can't instantly say that in your heart you know bin Laden is guilty? People are left wondering: What will he say next? You don't have to listen too carefully to hear the sound of champagne corks popping in Karl Rove's office."

Kerry's logic is hardly rock-solid. For instance, his attack on Dean's "muddled thinking" is a bit suspect, given Kerry's own oblique position on Iraq. And it's a reach to say that Dean is "on the wrong track economically," when Dean appears likely to more or less restore Clintonomics (although Kerry is right to warn that Dean's insistence on repealing the middle-class portions of the Bush tax cut, while fiscally sensible, is politically daft).

But here's the real strength of Kerry's speech. The core problem with Kerry's candidacy so far, it seems to me, is that the man has never had a clear rationale for running. He has no Big Idea, no passionate constituency, no unique ideological niche. Kerry's campaign has always seemed mainly to be the logical culmination of the man's resumé.

But the rise of Howard Dean has finally given Kerry an urgent purpose. Kerry speaks about Dean with a passion often lacking when he's blabbing about the Senate Foreign Relations committee. Devout Kerry-haters will say it took another man's oversized ambition to finally put life into Kerry's campaign. Maybe so. But at least Kerry finally seems to be doing something more than reciting his CV.



To: MSI who wrote (22051)12/29/2003 10:07:13 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793625
 
Clark Is First to Use Bill Clinton in Ad
Mon Dec 29, 6:20 PM ET Add Politics - AP to My Yahoo!


By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Democratic presidential candidate Wesley Clark (news - web sites) includes a clip of Bill Clinton (news - web sites) in a new television commercial, attempting to align himself with a popular former president and fellow Arkansan.

Clinton and his wife, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (news - web sites) of New York, have said they have no plans to endorse a candidate during the contest for the Democratic nomination. Still, Clark's campaign has embraced his parallels with Clinton throughout the race, and he is the first of the nine candidates to feature Clinton in an ad.

"It's a brilliant stroke," said Donna Brazile, a Democratic consultant who ran the 2000 campaign of Al Gore (news - web sites), Clinton's vice president. "It shows General Clark as someone who is close to Bill Clinton. This will help him galvanize Democratic primary voters. They love Bill Clinton."

The clip, one of several scenes in the 30-second ad, shows Clinton at the White House placing the Presidential Medal of Freedom around Clark's neck in honor of Clark's work in Kosovo as NATO (news - web sites)'s supreme allied commander. The scene also is in a 17-minute film about Clark's life that the campaign gives to supporters.

As Clinton appears, an announcer says Clark is a leader who has been "decorated for valor and for service in our country."

Clark is spending $125,000, a moderate amount, to run the ad for a week starting Monday on stations that broadcast into New Hampshire, where he trails front-runner Howard Dean (news - web sites) and John Kerry (news - web sites) in polling for the Jan. 27 primary. The spot soon will run in states with primary contests on Feb. 3.

The ad, which also shows Clark with soldiers, a short-order cook and schoolchildren, describes the retired Army general as the kind of leader who not only has seen ordinary people do extraordinary things in life, but who has been honored for such accomplishments.

Clark's campaign said Clinton had no involvement in the commercial and that his permission was not needed because the footage previously had been used elsewhere. However, the campaign said Clinton was made aware the clip would be used. Clinton aides did not return phone messages seeking comment Monday.

Chris Lehane, a Clark spokesman, said the Clinton clip was meant to validate Clark's military success in Kosovo by showing him receiving the medal.

"Given the fact that it's coming from his former commander in chief, it's particularly compelling," Lehane said.

Clinton awarded Clark the medal in August 2000, several months after Clark was relieved of his NATO command duties earlier than expected.

The ad also is another example of how Clark's campaign has highlighted his ties to Clinton.

Dozens of former Clinton staffers are working on Clark's campaign. The campaign's recently released film about Clark's life, called "American Son," is reminiscent of a film about Clinton and was made by the same person who produced that well-received piece.

Clark's and Clinton's early lives also are similar. Both were raised as Baptists by their mothers after their fathers died while they were young. Both earned Rhodes scholarships to study at Oxford University in the late 1960s.

Brazile said all the Democratic candidates have embraced Clinton in some way, including by supporting his policies on the campaign trail and in stump speeches. However, she said, Clark earns points for using Clinton in a TV ad.

"This gives the Clark campaign something that it's been lacking until now: national stature," she said. "If there's one candidate who's making a move from the back seat to the driver's seat, it's General Clark."

Clark's rivals were quick to complain that he was using an image of Clinton when he did not become a registered Democrat until after he entered the race in September and when he has praised Republican presidents.

"He shouldn't be able to wipe away that record with one photo op of him and Clinton," said Stephanie Cutter, a Kerry spokeswoman.

Jay Carson, a Dean spokesman, said the ad "doesn't make up for a lifetime of voting Republican. We're looking forward to seeing the Nixon-Reagan-Bush-Rumsfeld-Cheney ad."

Carson said Dean isn't concerned that voters will take the image of Clinton as an endorsement of Clark.

"Voters in America are very smart," he said. "They're not going to read a couple seconds of footage in an ad as anything more than a couple seconds of footage in the ad."

news.yahoo.com