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


To: American Spirit who wrote (8247)1/2/2004 12:09:43 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
After Halting Start, Clark Seems to Be Finding Legs

________________________________

By EDWARD WYATT
THE NEW YORK TIMES
January 2, 2004
nytimes.com

CONCORD, N.H. — Gen. Wesley K. Clark is having fun.

On a whirlwind tour that touched eight Southern states in two days this week, he practically bounded into the room at each event, increasingly energized by the growing crowds, by his improving standing in the polls and by a steadily rising cache of money that should carry him through the primary season.

"It's incredibly energizing to talk about what you believe in," General Clark said in an interview this week. "It's been fun going around the South, where I had a chance to tell people what I'm about. Now I think I have a great opportunity to reach out to New Hampshire voters," while most of his rivals spend the first half of the month in Iowa, where General Clark has chosen to skip the Jan. 19 caucuses.

Whether that energy will give him a boost here, where the nation's first primary will be held on Jan. 27, remains to be seen. And the campaign's ability to stay in the voters' minds over the next two weeks while the national news media is racing through Iowa is anything but certain.

The campaign's newly upbeat tone contrasts sharply with General Clark's abrupt, sometimes stumbling entry into the race in mid-September. He started with no money and no organization. In the first week, he fumbled a question about whether he would have supported the Congressional resolution authorizing military action in Iraq, saying he probably would have. He now admits the mistake, and says his record of statements before the war make clear his opposition to the Bush administration's actions.

General Clark still gets questions about why he voted for Ronald Reagan and Richard M. Nixon and why he spoke at Republican fund-raisers early in 2001, a sign that Democratic Party loyalists, the kind of people who are more likely to vote in primaries, still might not trust him.

He has responded that as a military man he voted for candidates that were strong on defense and maintained that the Bush administration's response to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, changed his mind about the president's capabilities. But those disclaimers have seemed only partly to satisfy some undecided voters who have come to see him.

"Ideologically, Howard Dean is more down my alley," said Brian Turbyfill, a law student who attended a Clark campaign rally last week in Jackson, Miss. "But if Dean is going to beat Bush in the general election, he has to carry these states, and I don't know if he can. I just don't know that much about Wesley Clark, which is why I wanted to come and find out a bit."

Steady practice seems to have honed General Clark's performance on the trail, which in the early days suffered from his tendency to digress into multiple subjects.

At an early December town-hall-style meeting in Nashua, N.H., General Clark's response to one question ran nearly 10 minutes. This week, his stump speech was more focused and his answers to questions more to the point. Lately, he has also avoided the emotional outbursts that cropped up early in his campaign when asked about subjects like Iraq or why some former generals seemed to dislike him.

The Clark campaign points to what it calls tangible reasons for its growing confidence. It raised about $11 million in the fourth quarter, more than any campaign other than Dr. Dean's.

General Clark has also earned more in federal matching money than any of the six other candidates participating in that program. In essence, that means that in a little more than three months he has raised more than candidates like Representative Richard A. Gephardt and Senator Joseph I. Lieberman have in nearly a year of campaigning.

In polls in early primary states like New Hampshire, General Clark is closing in on Senator John Kerry, who is running second but is slipping. In South Carolina and Arizona, General Clark is also moving up, and in some states the numbers indicate he is neck-and-neck with Dr. Dean. It is in those Southern states where his campaign is confident that General Clark's military experience will attract independent voters who supported Bill Clinton in the 1990's but who might have defected to George W. Bush in 2000.

The campaign also maintains that skipping the Iowa contests was perhaps the only choice they had. But whether it will prove to be the advantage the campaign expects could be a long shot.

"It was a matter of doing a good job in one place when you can't do a good job in two places," General Clark said. "The New Hampshire voters, they're not in Iowa. They're out there reading the local papers, they're worrying about local issues. I'm real happy to have some extra time in New Hampshire."



To: American Spirit who wrote (8247)1/2/2004 12:18:49 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
After Strong Fund Raising, Clark Sets Sights on Dean

foxnews.com

<<...It's now clear that I'm one of only two candidates in a position to win the nomination," Clark, a retired general, said in a statement issued Thursday. "And I'm the only candidate positioned to actually win the election because I am the candidate best able to stand up to George W. Bush and win the debate about who will best be able to make our country secure over the next four years."...>>



To: American Spirit who wrote (8247)1/2/2004 2:17:56 PM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 10965
 
Dean supporters flock to Iowa finale

msnbc.msn.com

3,500 volunteers expected as Jan. 19 caucuses approach

By Felix Schein
Campaign Embed
MSNBC

Updated: 12:07 p.m. ET Jan. 02, 2004

DES MOINES, Iowa - With the Iowa caucuses now less than 20 days away and their candidate feeling the heat from his rivals, Howard Dean's campaign staff has turned once again to their most valuable resource and most potent weapon in the fight for the Democratic nomination: volunteers. The campaign is in the process of unleashing as many as 3,500 supporters from all 50 states and beyond on the Hawkeye State’s voters.

Coming from as far away as Japan, where four U.S. citizens have committed to travel to Des Moines on behalf of the Dean campaign, these volunteers will be bused from town to town in 147 vans, utilize 325 cell phones and relax in the luxury of 13 winterized Girl Scout Camps. And all their activities will be coordinated from a nerve center located in Sen. Bob Graham’s former campaign headquarters.

In all, three waves of volunteers will make their way to Iowa before the voting begins Jan. 19. In addition to their cell phones, they’ll be armed with maps, voter lists and red hats identifying them as Dean campaign volunteers. Their activities will be coordinated by a half-dozen paid Dean staffers. Together with at least 75 paid field coordinators, they will go find Iowa’s undecided voters with the goal of luring them to support the former Vermont governor.

Says Sarah Leonard, Dean’s Iowa spokesperson, "The governor is our best tool. He is our best persuader. If we can get people who are undecided in front of him, the better our chances of persuading them."

More help from Vermont

For her part, Leonard too will be getting some help. Trisha Enright, the campaign’s communications director, has relocated to Des Moines in anticipation of an increasingly tough campaign and Paul Blank, a deputy campaign manager from Dean’s Burlington, Vt., headquarters, has joined her to facilitate better interaction between the campaign’s many offices and leaders. Notes Leonard, "We realize that these guys are going to be throwing everything they have at us over the next few days."

While the campaign wouldn’t reveal how much the volunteer effort or staff additions are costing, it’s the return on that investment that the Dean campaign is banking on. Most analysts agree that more than 120,000 Iowans will turn out on caucus night this year and that in order to win, a campaign will likely need to woo at least 30,0000 of them. A few thousand volunteers distributing campaign literature and talking to the undecideds can go a long way toward achieving that goal.

That reality isn’t lost on other campaigns. Bill Burton, a spokesman for Dick Gephardt, predicts that "Howard Dean will need all the people and money he can muster" in order to win Iowa and points to the Missouri congressman’s 21 labor union endorsements as evidence that there "isn’t a campaign in the state [of Iowa] that can match [Gephardt’s] organizational strength." True or not, Burton’s statement serves as a good indicator of how much is at stake and foreshadows just how fierce this nominating battle is likely to become.

From Oregon to Iowa

It is that reality that drew Meg Tims to Iowa. She is a Dean supporter who attends house parties and rallies, contributes money to the campaign and faithfully wears a large Dean campaign button on her lapel. Tims is from Oregon, a state where the May primary will likely come long after the Democratic nomination is decided. Undeterred, Tims has purchased a plane ticket to Des Moines, where on Jan. 16 she’ll join in the final wave of the Dean campaign there.

Asked if she had ever done anything like this before, she laughs, "Oh no, no, no, [but] I want Dr. Dean to win. I want to do everything I can to contribute to his campaign." And so, for the first time, she is off to Iowa.

With some luck, she might bump into an Iowan who’s received a letter from Paul Marthers. Also from Portland, Oregon, Marthers has written more than 260 letters, all of them personal, to Iowa’s undecided voters. And like Tims, Marthers is part of a larger effort, one that has resulted in more than 115,000 letters being sent to undecided Iowa and New Hampshire residents, all in effort to tilt them to Dean and get them to listen to his message.

It’s an organizational effort that Tim Kraft, Jimmy Carter’s Iowa campaign manager and a man long considered one of the "fathers of the Iowa Caucus," calls "amazing and unbelievable" and a big reason he signed on to help the Dean campaign this fall. Of course, how amazing and unbelievable it really is won’t be known for another three weeks, when according to the latest polls, Dean, Gephardt, or Kerry should emerge as a big winner.