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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (56179)7/26/2004 1:55:21 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 794408
 
Kerry the Green Monster
By The Prowler
American Spectator


KERRY STRIKES
Traffic in Boston was barely evident on Sunday evening as the Prowler bopped into town for the big Democratic party that is already developing across the city known for its Freedom Trail, its fine Italian restaurants and Irish bars.

But all is not well in DNC land. Throughout the city, event planners and lobbyists setting up large parties and fundraisers for the coming week were developing plans B and C due to continuing fears about local union disruptions.

"It's a mess. I've never seen anything like this," said one lobbyist in his hotel lobby. "We have a party planned, but no guarantee that it will come off, because there are threats from local unions to picket out front. Now my client is looking at covering the tab for an event that many folks won't bother to come to. It's embarrassing that it has come to this."

Two weeks ago, the man for whom this weeklong party has been planned -- Sen. John Kerry -- had been in Beantown to quell concerns about organized labor disruptions, but Kerry's attempts at peacemaking apparently didn't take.

The Kerry camp lays much of the blame for the city's ongoing troubles at the feet of its Democratic mayor, Tom Menino. Menino's people blame the DNC, as well as Kerry. All of this, despite a meeting between Menino and Kerry only a few days ago.

Menino was working feverishly throughout last week and into the weekend to reach at least tentative agreements with police and firefighters unions, as well as other municipal unions, to block any attempts on their part to upset a critical week for Kerry and the city. Late Sunday, Menino was claiming victory, claiming there would be labor peace for at least the next week.

KERRY MISSES THE SIGN
Sen. John Kerry, attempting to burnish his image as an everyman appeared at Fenway Park on Sunday night and threw out the first pitch at the Yankees-Red Sox game. The appearance was supposed to be a surprise, but Kerry couldn't help touting the event to reporters on the plane from Ohio.

"The idea of missing a Yankees-Red Sox series right before a convention week was not acceptable, so we changed the policy," Kerry told reporters.

Kerry, though, is apparently no Red Sox fan. Over the past few weeks, Kerry has claimed that his favorite Red Sox player growing up was Eddie Yost, who never actually played for Boston. Even famously liberal baseball pundit Peter Gammons, a New Englander, no less, was disgusted enough by the pandering to point out that embarrassing error.

According to a campaign staffer, Kerry was prepped on the plane from Ohio on the team's current players and manager, just in case he was interviewed during the game by ESPN, which was covering the game live. "He hasn't been paying attention, though he says he's a fan," says a campaign staffer on the ground in Boston. "But to the best of my knowledge, he's never inquired about the Sox, how they are doing, that kind of thing."

It wasn't just a love of the game that got Kerry to Fenway, campaign workers could be seen before the game on Yawkey Way loading "Sox Fans for Kerry" signs into boxes to be handed out in the stands to fans willing to hold them up during the game.

But less than 20 minutes after the game had started, a number of signs could be seen in the trash receptacles throughout the park, and Kerry volunteers were quickly picking them up so that photographers couldn't take pictures of them.

KERRY CENSORS CLINTONS
Word is that tensions between Bill and Hillary Clinton and the Kerry campaign continue apace, as the Kerry folks have asked to see the prepared remarks of both Clintons before they hit the theater in the round type stage on Monday.

"We're not so worried about the content, as much as we are worried about the length," says a Kerry adviser at the Fleet Center Sunday afternoon. "We were hearing that Hillary's introduction of the president was upwards of 15 minutes long. That's unacceptable. We just want this thing to go smoothly."



To: LindyBill who wrote (56179)7/26/2004 1:23:57 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 794408
 
I actually like USAToday well enough to pay for it when I am on vacation and the place I stop for lunch or dinner doesn't carry anything but skinny, weekly local papers and USAToday.

It's ubiquitous, of course, in upscale hotels, where I've almost always found it either outside my door (free) in the morning, or stacked up by the concierge's desk (again, free), and national chains like McDonald's have free copies on the counter at breakfast time, at least around here.

Newspapers, I assume you realize, exist for the purpose of selling advertisements. The more people read them, the more they can charge for advertisements, so giving the papers away for free increases readership (although I wouldn't be surprised if hotels and fast food joints actually have to pay something, but not fifty cents).

It's a good business model, and has enough news and entertainment value to be worth 50 cents when there's nothing else to read.