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


To: Mephisto who wrote (8820)1/11/2004 6:59:22 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Page 2

Little of Dean's charisma comes across on television. He
appears wooden and curt. But in the Schumakers' living room he
is at the top of his game.
He needs to be, too. Ed Schumaker is
no ordinary voter. He is a former ambassador and an important
local figure. He is also 'undecided'. Holding the party at his
house was a calculated move.

Dean uses the same repetitions to great effect. 'I am tired of
being divided by race. I am tired of being divided by gender. I am
tired of being divided by sexual preference. I am tired of being
divided by income. I am tired of being divided by religion. I want
a country where we are all in it together,' he chanted.

He attacked Bush relentlessly but reserved his greatest anger
for his rivals. He accused them of peddling 'Bush lite', of trying to
beat Republicans by trying to be like them. That is not his plan.
Dean does not want the middle ground. He ended with a simple
appeal. 'At the end of the day the power is with you,' he said,
triggering cheers.

After he'd gone, the four girls filed past Nora Sanders, smiling
and squeezing her arm. 'That was good stuff,' one said
breathlessly.
…………………..

But Dean has a plan, too. His plan is to win new voters. In an
age when only half of eligible Americans vote, his staff believe he
can attract four million non-voters to his cause. That is why he
does not believe in fighting for the middle.

Could Dean beat Bush?
The answer, of course, is that no one
knows. No one has attempted to win an election by appealing to
non-voters in such huge numbers. But, then again, no one had
ever tried to raise money through the internet like that.
Conventional wisdom says that the Republicans will play a safe
and steady game, ushering in victory. All the national polls so
far have Bush crushing any of his Democrat opponents. But it is
early days yet. Democrat attentions are focused on each other.
With Bush's record in Iraq, on the environment and corporate
corruption, there will be plenty of material for any opponent to
land some serious blows. Dean's campaign has energised
enough people to give his daring plan a try. No one can say it is
destined to fail.

One thing is sure: a Bush-Dean fight would be nasty.
Rarely in
modern America would voters have been faced with such a stark
choice - one of the most radical Republican administrations in
history would face off against an unapologetic liberal who has
renounced the middle ground. America, and therefore the rest of
the world, would face a historic crossroads.

The battle would be vicious. Bush is on course to amass a war
chest of $200m, doubling the previous record, which he set in
2000. Dean believes he can match it. He wants two million
Americans to contribute $100 each. With his new campaign
style, it is just about possible.

With all this money sloshing around, brutal tactics are certain.
Already Republican strategists are crawling over every aspect of
Dean's career. He could be vulnerable. Dean avoided the
Vietnam draft with a med ical note on a back problem - and then
took a skiing job in Aspen. He has ordered files from his
Vermont years sealed for a decade, prompting many to ask
what he is hiding. He is known to have a short fuse. Under the
glare of the arc lights, Dean could be one televised gaffe away
from disaster. Every Democrat remembers the experience of
Mike Dukakis in 1988. He was destroyed by an attack ad that
used the case of a released black prisoner called Willie Horton
to shatter Dukakis's image as tough on crime.

Republican strategist Karl Rove saw Dean campaigning at a
Fourth of July parade last summer. Officials close by saw him
punch the air and mutter in glee when he saw the doctor walk
by. 'That's the one we want,' Rove said.

It was dark and cold, and evening had long since drawn in. Dean
was pulling up to the last stop of his long day: Laconia High
School in southern New Hampshire. Inside, the biggest crowd of
the day was crammed into the sports hall. The sound was
deafening. This time it was not like a church. It was like a
football game: all chants and the thunderous banging of chairs.

When Dean entered he was genuinely taken aback. 'My God,'
he muttered. 'I had no idea we got these kind of crowds in
Laconia.' For the fifth time that day, Dean gave his speech. This
was the most passionate of them all. He pointed his fingers, his
cheeks flushed and he seemed to quiver with emotion.The first
standing ovation came on the subject of Iraq. 'My job, as
commander-in-chief, will never be to send our brothers and
sisters, our children and grandchildren, to fight in a foreign
country without first telling them the truth about why they are
fighting,' he told the crowd.

Six more standing ovations followed. This crowd wanted to
believe. It wanted to believe that America could be changed, that
George Bush could be beaten. But most of all, it wanted to
believe that this man - this angry, rosy-cheeked doctor - was
going to be the next President of the United States.


Dean vowed it was all possible. At the climax of his speech, he
swore: 'You have the power to take back the Democratic Party.
You have the power so that the American flag belongs to every
single one of us. You have the power to take back the White
House in 2004, and that is exactly what we are going to do.'

It took half an hour for him to leave, finally heading off on the
long drive home to Vermont. He left behind a crowd convinced
that it had seen a different future. And that future was President
Dean.


observer.guardian.co.uk