Before Dean ran into trouble he was trailing Bush by 20% in New Hampshire. Get real please. It's all over anyway.
Aides Want Dean to Quit if He Loses Wis. By RON FOURNIER, AP Political Writer
WASHINGTON - Howard Dean (news - web sites)'s top aides are urging him to abandon the Democratic presidential race if he loses Wisconsin's primary, officials said Sunday, and they're all but certain he will follow their advice.
AP Photo
Reuters Slideshow: Howard Dean
Latest headlines: · Democrats Face Off for Likely Last Debate AP - 4 minutes ago · Bush Courts 'NASCAR Dads' at Daytona 500 Reuters - 32 minutes ago · Edwards Woos Churchgoers in Wisconsin Campaign Reuters - 49 minutes ago
Election 2004
Steve Grossman, national chairman of Dean's campaign, said the former Vermont governor would seek to convert his grass-roots network into a movement that helps expand the party and elect the Democratic nominee — "and, obviously, that looks likely to be John Kerry (news - web sites)."
Several other senior campaign officials said Dean would likely bow to intense pressure from his own advisers to give up his bid for the presidency, though they disagreed with Grossman over how much — if any — direct help Dean would be willing to give Kerry.
Polls show Kerry, a Massachusetts senator who has won 14 of 16 contests to date, holding a wide lead in Wisconsin, site of Tuesday's contest. The Democratic candidates were meeting in the state for a debate Sunday.
Campaign manager Roy Neel did not dispute the sources' assertions, but cautioned that Dean is still mulling his options should he lose Tuesday.
"Governor Dean is hearing from a lot of people now with advice from every imaginable direction, but in the end, he'll make this decision about the rest of his campaign based on a number of things, including how the debate goes tonight and the Wisconsin primary Tuesday night," Neel said.
Adviser Kate O'Connor said: "He hasn't made a decision on what he's going to do, but there are a lot of people contacting us both ways."
The comments were at odds with the defiant tone struck by Dean hours before the debate in Milwaukee. "We're going to keep going, no matter what, because I think there are a lot of people all over this country who want to rebuild the party and rebuild America in a different way," Dean said on "Fox News Sunday."
Dean had told supporters via e-mail that a defeat Tuesday would end his bid for the nomination, but he has backed away from that statement in recent days.
Several top advisers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Dean has privately acknowledged that his prospects for the presidency will effectively end if he suffers another major defeat Tuesday. They leave open the increasingly remote possibility that he will waver again.
For the first time, there is a near-unanimous consensus among advisers that it would be foolhardy for Dean to continue fighting for the nomination beyond Wisconsin. The circle of die-hards has shrunk, and most confidants are telling Dean it's time to begin making plans to convert his Internet-fueled network into a long-term political movement.
"I have no doubt he'll support the nominee in any way he can, no matter who the nominee is and obviously that nominee looks to be John Kerry," Grossman said in a telephone interview from Vermont. "He may say that Tuesday night. He may wait until Wednesday or Thursday to say that."
Grossman said Dean feels just as strongly that he is obligated to press for reforms supported by voters who made him last year's front-runner. "In what form that movement takes, I can't spell that out to you and I don't think Howard could right now, either," said Grossman, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee (news - web sites).
"I believe that work will effectively be in concert with ... and fairly supportive of John Kerry, should he become the nominee, and it appears he will," Grossman said.
Other top advisers said they had doubts whether Dean would ever work directly on Kerry's behalf this year. They suggested the Grossman was trying to curry favor with Kerry.
Officials said they are discussing ways to use Dean's network to help elect Democrats to Congress, action that effectively, but not directly, support Kerry's agenda as president. Scores of campaigns aides were making plans to leave their jobs after Tuesday.
Advisers say Dean is torn between his pragmatic conclusion that the race is about over and his emotional attachment to the fight itself and his supporters. His staff is looking at several options — such as suspending, not technically ending, the campaign — that would give Dean a voice in the process even after he concedes.
"This is a delicate balancing act that has to be struck for Howard Dean," Grossman said. "His supporters, they will not want him to give up and will want to carry out the cause. His name is on the ballot in many states whether he campaigns or is less engaged. The fact is Howard Dean will do everything possible to help the nominee. He will do nothing to undercut the nominee's success."
The advisers sought to square their perceptions with Dean's public remarks.
"When Howard Dean says he's not going to quit, what he means is the battle to restore democracy and citizen participation is long-term and he's not going to quit on that battle," Grossman said.
But Dean would quit attacking Kerry, the chairman said.
"Should he not win Wisconsin, you will see a meaningful shift in rhetoric, a meaningful shift in tone and a meaningful shift in the time he spends" building his campaign base into a long-term movement," Grossman said.
___
Associated Press writer Jennifer C. Kerr contributed to this story.
Email Story Post/Read Msgs (19596) Print Story Ratings: Would you recommend this story? Not at all 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 Highly
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Story: Bush Opens Daytona 500, Courts Race Fans (AP)
More Politics Stories · Bush courts "NASCAR dads" (AFP) · Democrats Will Try a Hybrid of Old, New Policies (washingtonpost.com) · Bush's driving records disclosed (USATODAY.com) · US open to options on Iraq handover process: Bremer (AFP) · Kerry Spurs Ambitious Fundraising (washingtonpost.com)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |