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Politics : HOWARD DEAN -THE NEXT PRESIDENT? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (2925)2/16/2004 6:51:33 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3079
 
If a British newspaper published an article about "the affair" the text and pictures should hit
our shores as well.



To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (2925)2/16/2004 7:06:09 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3079
 
Kerry denies intern rumours: Democratic frontrunner forced to speak out after website that broke Lewinsky story alleges affair

Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
Saturday February 14, 2004
The Guardian

The Democratic frontrunner, John Kerry, was yesterday forced
into denying an unsourced internet report that he had an affair
with an intern
amid signs that the race for the White House is
turning into one of the most vicious in modern history.

Mr Kerry's denial, delivered on a radio talk show, marked the
first widespread public airing within the US of the allegation,
which appeared on a rightwing website, the Drudge Report.

Mainstream American newspapers and media outlets had
shunned the story, although it was picked up by newspapers
abroad. However, there had been intense speculation about its
veracity - and the origins of the rumour - as well as the possible
effect on Mr Kerry's campaign and private life, if the story proved
true.

The Massachusetts senator is married to Teresa Heinz Kerry,
heir to the $550m (£290m) ketchup empire. In an interview with
Elle magazine last year, she said she had told her first husband
she would maim him if he had an affair.


Asked publicly for the first time yesterday whether there was
truth to the rumour, Mr Kerry issued a blanket denial.

"Well, there is nothing to report, so there is nothing to talk
about. And I'm not worried about it," he told the radio show host
Don Imus. "No. The answer is no."

The chat show confrontation occurred on a day when President
George Bush's job approval rating fell to a career low of 50%.
The Washington Post-ABC News poll also charted a low in Mr
Bush's ratings for honesty and trustworthiness, following a
barrage of reports on his military service in the Texas national
guard during the Vietnam war.

"A majority of Americans believe President Bush either lied or
deliberately exaggerated evidence that Iraq possessed weapons
of mass destruction in order to justify war," the Post said.

Mr Bush's declining popularity has caused concern within
Republican circles. This week, they launched a series of attacks
against Mr Kerry, including an attempt to paint him as a
Vietnam-era political ally of Jane Fonda, who angered many
Americans by visiting Hanoi during the war. Ms Fonda has said
she barely met Mr Kerry.

In his radio comments, Mr Kerry said he expected further
attacks. "I've been pretty well, you know, vetted and examined
from one side to the other. And I think that they're in for a
surprise. I'm going to fight back," he said.

The Drudge Report claimed that the senator had a two-year
relationship with a young woman who had fled to Africa.


Six years ago, Matt Drudge, who runs the site, helped make
Monica Lewinsky a household name by revealing that
Newsweek had researched, but not published, the affair with Bill
Clinton.

The treatment of Mr Kerry followed a similar pattern. The website
said on Thursday that television networks and news
organisations had been trying to confirm rumours of a
relationship between Mr Kerry and a woman said to have worked
briefly for the Associated Press. According to Drudge, the
relationship started in the spring of 2001.

"After being approached by a top news producer, the woman fled
to Africa, where she remains," the website reported.

However, the provenance of the rumour was bizarre. The Drudge
Report said that General Wesley Clark, who withdrew from the
race for the Democratic nomination this week, had helped
spread the rumour, telling reporters of a scandal that could
destroy Mr Kerry's campaign. Mr Clark formally endorsed Mr
Kerry's bid for the leadership yesterday.


Mr Kerry's former communications chief, Chris LeHane, was
also cited as a possible source for the rumour. Mr LeHane was
sacked last autumn when Mr Kerry shook up his campaign
machine, and later joined the Clark campaign.

guardian.co.uk