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Politics : Wesley Clark -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (1235)1/17/2004 9:57:55 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1414
 
Dem Rivals Step Up Campaign Intensity


Saturday, January 17, 2004

DES MOINES, Iowa — Democrats swapped last-minute charges of smear tactics Saturday as polls pointed to the closest Iowa caucus finish since the event gained presidential campaign prominence in the 1970s.



"I'm in full combat mode," said Howard Dean (search), delivering a self-appraisal that applied no less to Dick Gephardt (search), John Kerry (search) and John Edwards (search) as they charged across the state on the race's final weekend.

The charges of distortion and malicious phone calls contrasted sharply with efforts by the candidates to sound a softer closing note in first test of the campaign season.

Kerry held an emotional reunion with a fellow Vietnam veteran whose life he saved in combat 35 years ago. "He could have been shot and killed at any time," said Jim Rassmann (search). "I figure I owe him my life."

All four contenders invoked the ghosts of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman and John Kennedy during the day, vying for acceptance as the one rightful political heir to past Democratic presidents.

The final television commercials were upbeat, as well, including one from Edwards that relied on the written word — rather than the spoken one — to make its point. "To all those who stood up, listened and spoke out. Made us laugh, question, think and believe a positive vision of hope and new ideas can change America. Your time is now," rolled across the screen.

But the campaign niceties seemed to end there.

Kerry, who has gained ground in recent polls, said Dean and Gephardt were trying to dampen his momentum in the agriculture-conscious state with a "smear effort" that distorted his record on farm issues. On Friday, the two rival campaigns provided reporters with comments Kerry made five years ago, indicating he would scale back the Department of Agriculture and revamp farm subsidies.

Kerry said during the day he would revamp the subsidy program, not end it. But Erik Smith, a spokesman for Gephardt dismissed the charge, adding the Massachusetts senator has "been sending negative mail on Gephardt for weeks."

Kerry's campaign, too, stood accused of unsavory campaign practices. Aides to Dean said at least one of their voters had received a badgering phone call from a Kerry supporter who called the former Vermont governor an "environmental racist."

Stephanie Cutter, a spokeswoman for Kerry, said the call was an "isolated incident" caused by overzealousness on the part of a young volunteer. She said he had been asked to leave the campaign, and was writing a letter or apology to the woman he called.

Neither side seemed willing to let it drop, though.

"This kid's supervisor made no apologies for his phone call. Nor did that supervisor's supervisor," said Trish Enright, spokeswoman for Dean.

Kerry's aides provided a supporter who said she had received a similarly phone call from a Dean volunteer. "I said, `I don't need to put up with this and I hung up," Leslie Sheeder said in an interview.

Aides to Edwards said an undisclosed number of their supporters had received 2 a.m. telephone calls in recent days, informing them they were ineligible to vote.

The Monday night caucuses will set the party on a path to selecting a challenger for President Bush this fall.

That made Bush a spectator with an unusually personal interest in the outcome, and he was maneuvering for advantage already.

Tuesday night's State of the Union (search) message assured him of massive media coverage, in time to quickly dim any glow that the Democratic caucus winner receives.

GOP aides said Bush would use his speech to argue that he has made Americans more prosperous and secure, citing the rising stock market, the growing economy and Saddam Hussein's capture.

Whichever Democrat challenges him will have a contrary argument to make — the worst job-creation record since Herbert Hoover, record deficits and a death toll of at least 500 in Iraq.

Before any of them could concentrate on Bush, however, there was Iowa, kickoff contest in the battle for the nomination. Statewide polls suggested a tight finish four-way finish Monday night, when caucus-goers gather in 1,993 precincts in every corner of the state. That would make it the closest contest since it achieved prominence in 1976. That was the year Jimmy Carter finished behind uncommitted but ahead of his rivals, a showing that launched him on the road to the White House.

After Iowa, the campaign moves to New Hampshire, where retired Army General Wesley Clark (search) is coming under close scrutiny because of his surge in statewide polls. Wading into perilous political territory, Clark told a voter in Laconia, N.H., that one reason state property taxes are high is the lack of an income or general sales tax.

Although Clark is skipping the Iowa caucuses, he dispatched an advance scout. "I'm just checking things out," said Bill Buck, a aide who attended one of Kerry's campaign appearances.

All four of the major rivals made multiple stops during the day — Gephardt making seven as he struggled to avoid a loss that aides said could spell the end of his long political career.

Hoping to ride a surge of union caucus-goers to victory, he stressed his opposition to NAFTA (search) and legislation granting eased trade rights to China.

In a campaign where Dean and Edwards stressing their lack of longtime Washington experience, Gephardt reminded his audience he has experience in leadership in Congress. "I know what it takes to put together bipartisan coalitions to get things going together," he said.
URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,108752,00.html



To: calgal who wrote (1235)1/17/2004 9:58:09 PM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1414
 
Democrats: Bush Not Protecting U.S. From Attacks

Friday, January 16, 2004

WASHINGTON — Despite creating a Homeland Security Department (search) and spending $10 billion to screen airline passengers and secure the nation's airports, the Bush administration hasn't done enough to protect the nation against the threat of terrorism, Democrats maintain.



Minority Democrats on the House Homeland Security Committee (search) make the charges in a scathing report, which was released Friday.

The report lists a dozen areas where Democrats say the administration has failed to adequately address weaknesses that terrorists could exploit more than two years after the suicide hijackings of Sept. 11, 2001.

Texas Rep. Jim Turner (search), the top Democrat on the Homeland Security Committee, told reporters Friday it was unclear how much the government must spend to resolve the problems identified in the report.

"The real question we must ask when we talk about funding a stronger homeland defense is, what is the cost of failure?" Turner said. "The threat to lives, the threat of a catastrophic attack would be unthinkable. Whatever the cost is certainly worth it in terms of the lives and safety of the American people."

The Homeland Security Department said the report "woefully ignores" what has been accomplished thus far.

"It is unfortunate that there are those in Congress who merely point out criticism, rather than propose concrete solutions on how they can work with the administration to make America safer," department spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan cited a number of steps taken: waging the global war on terrorism, creating the Homeland Security Department, giving new resources to first responders and port security, tightening borders, improving aviation security through professional screeners, air marshals and reinforced cockpit doors, raising alert levels, and inaugurating a program to photograph and scan the fingerprints of foreigners from many countries arriving at U.S. airports.

"Our country is much safer today than it was on September the 11th," he said. "We are doing everything we can to protect the American people and prevent an attack from happening in the first place, but there is much that remains to be done."

The 16-page document — "America at Risk: The State of Homeland Security" — culls information from the Pentagon, congressional investigators and other sources, summarizing dangers to U.S. cities, borders, ports and airways. Taken together, the information shows the administration hasn't provided the leadership necessary to handle the country's domestic security needs, Democrats say.

"In conducting oversight for almost a year now, our committee members are deeply concerned that our government is not taking strong and swift enough action to protect the homeland," Turner said.

The report comes four days before President Bush's annual State of the Union, even more important this year given the November election. Democratic staff said the document is intended to prepare party members to rebut what the president might say.

According to the report:

— The Transportation Security Administration (search) has spent more than $10 billion to screen baggage and passengers since November 2001, yet there are numerous reports of dangerous items clearing security. Roehrkasse said that figure includes a host of expenses, including hiring and training a federal screening work force, purchasing explosive detection technology and deploying air marshals.

— Al-Qaida and other groups are believed to possess thousands of shoulder-fired missiles, but U.S. commercial airplanes have no defense against the weapons. Roehrkasse says the administration is working on ways to counter missile threats.

— The Pentagon's Defense Science Board says that at least 56 new countermeasures are needed to protect against the 19 bioterrorism agents. Democrats say little progress has been made and the government is failing to sufficiently address the threat.







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