Nation-Building

"We are one people, all of us pledging allegiance to the stars and stripes, all of us defending the United States of America. In the end, that's what this election is about." -- Barack Obama, DNC keynote address, July 2004

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Tuesday, February 10, 2004

 

The Vermont Woodchuck Breaks His Silence on Dean http://ctpolitics.net/columns/cook021004.htm

posted by Editor at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Paul Cook, a Vermont native who writes for CTPolitics.net, observes the following:
Howard Dean was never a class act. He was known to be rude and disrespectful of his opponents, both in elections and in battles with the legislature. Dean is not a man who has ever developed a sense of tact and diplomacy. Being a medical doctor, he is accustomed to having his opinions accepted without question, a character flaw that years of politics have failed to diminish. Telling it like it is can be refreshing for a time, but at some point a politician needs to become a statesman if he (or she) aspires to be top dog in the land. Dean never turned that corner.

Cook also touches on the firing of Joe Trippi which he calls a "travesty," observing
"After taking Dean from unknown to frontrunner with innovative use of Internet technology, Trippi gets the boot after the second loss. What Dean seems incapable of understanding is that it was Howard Dean, not Joe Trippi, who lost. Nobody cast a single ballot for Trippi. Dean blew his lead in New Hampshire all by himself."

Overall, the column has the belief that "it's all over" for the Dean campaign.

Update: This can be discussed on an open thread at CTPolitics.net here.

 

Clark about to drop out? http://www.tnr.com/blog/campaignjournal?pid=1307

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Clark has reportedly canceled a fundraiser for tomorrow. Given his trouncing in both TN and VA by Edwards, it's clear that his Souther Candidate niche has been eclipsed by Edwards in much the same way that Kerry eclipsed his Military Candidate niche.

I don't know if Clark will even be willing to sign on with Dean as a joint ticket, but I sincerely hope that the Dean campaign is approaching him. Dean/Clark offers everything that Kerry or Edwards alone can, and substantially more. Given that Edwards is limited by federal matching funds, we might well be seeing a Kerry/Edwards dynamic soon if Dean beats him in Wisconsin, and so the advantages of Dean/Clark are going to be even more strategically essential.

Let's see what Clark does next. I suspect he will drop out tomorrow, and will lie low until Wisconsin's primary...

(link goes to Ryan Lizza;s Campaign Journal entry from on the road with Clark. The last line's the kicker.)

 

Trippi Watch, Primary Watch, and Folkbum in Wisconsin http://www.changeforamerica.com

posted by annatopia at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Per WHOIS registration for www.changeforamerica.com:

Registrant:
Trippi, Joe (WJGMKIOYYD)
1029 N. Royal St. #350
Alexandria, VA 22314
US
Domain Name: CHANGEFORAMERICA.COM
Administrative Contact:
Trippi, Joe (37242257P) (deleted for privacy)
1029 N. Royal St. #350
Alexandria, VA 22314
US
(phone # deleted for privacy)
Record expires on 28-Jan-2014.
Record created on 28-Jan-2004.
Database last updated on 10-Feb-2004 15:39:11 EST.

Via the Kos diaries, I noticed that longtime Dean National folkbum is rallying with Dean tonight in Wisconsin. To sign up for the event, click here. It's at 5:30pm (sorry for the short notice; I just received this).
I also noticed this Virginia field report filed by Vet4Dean over at Kos's place, and Kos has the early exit polls on the main page.

 

LaFollette http://www.library.wisc.edu/etext/WIReader/WER1160.html#Year1905

posted by Dana at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

You are going to hear a lot from Howard Dean during the next week on the word LaFollette.

Some background is in order.

Robert LaFollette practically defined Wisconsin politics in the early 20th century. He was a Republican, but a progressive one. He was beaten twice by Corporate Republicans, but finally became Governor in 1900. The Grolier Encyclopedia has a modest half-paragraph on his accomplishments in that office:

Wisconsin was the first state to adopt the primary for nominations for state offices. A new law taxed railroads on the value of their property, ending an inequity. Taxes on corporations permitted the state to pay its debts. A railroad commission was created to regulate rates. Funding for education was increased. A civil-service law was adopted. This legislation was drafted by political and social scientists and economists, a feature of the "Wisconsin Idea."


As a U.S. Senator, where he served for 20 years, LaFollette was one of only two votes against American entry into World War I. He won 17% of the vote as the Progressive Candidate for U.S. President in 1924, a record beaten only twice, by Theodore Roosevelt and Ross Perot. After his death in 1925, his son Robert Jr. succeeded him in the Senate, until defeated in 1946 by a then little-known war veteran named Joe McCarthy.

LaFollettism, if one can coin a term, is dedicated to honest elections, to frugality, to the public?s interest against predatory business (and firm support for the other kind), as well as to skepticism regarding blatant, self-gratifying flag-waving.

Give or take some issues, one party, and many decades, it is a description that fits Howard Dean well. It?s what we?ll be fighting for this week.

 

The Path The Media Is Taking To Stop Howard Dean: John Kerry? http://media.guardian.co.uk/city/story/0,7497,1144464,00.html

posted by Heath at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
If there was ever more reason to keep fighting for Howard Dean, it's spelled out in this article by the MediaGuardian.co.uk Read it. Read what some of us have been suspecting with a knot in our stomach ever since Howard Dean announced again that he would work to re-regulate the media on Hardball. That announcement, however, was the first time he did it in the belly of the beast: NBC parent General Electric (GE):

Says the article,

US political commentators have speculated that Mr Kerry has enjoyed the support of the media community in an effort to head off the challenge of Howard Dean, who has fallen back in the race despite being the frontrunner before the primaries began. Mr Dean made statements last year about wanting to break up media conglomerates.

It's no big surprise, I guess. Were the media interests looking for a chance to pounce on Dean after Gore's endorsement? Perhaps. We don't have to look too far to see what they did when they got their video soundbite after Iowa voted. I still think the organization we had built in New Hampshire was strong enough to blunt the electability issue after a third place finish in Iowa-- given all the other blunders out there. Not after the constant looping of what they called "The Scream," however.

murdoch.bmpPS: Looks like the article points out that FOX's key guys are giving the biggest contributions to Kerry.

Dean's been turning up the volume on the media's role in choosing who gets elected. I don't know that this will help our cause in Wisconsin, but maybe the people will hear us on the 17th if we keep pointing the truth out.

I guess we just have to work harder.

Thanks to pavingmoratorium for the heads up on this article.

Crossposted at DeanTV.org.

 

The Insurgent

posted by Dana at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
We were always going to be the insurgent.

The most remarkable political story of 2003, by far, was that the Insurgent Candidate in this year's race appeared on the scene before the Established Candidate.

Iowa and New Hampshire, then, were to be about who the "Establishment Candidate" might be.

We know the answer now. We will know if for certain if, tonight, Kerry puts away Edwards and Clark.

So why are we downhearted? This is where we wanted to be, where we expected to be, the insurgents trying to take the party back from the corporate-backed (Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley, Time Warner) establishment.

Before we can take our country back, we must first take the party back from the corporate interests who have held it in thrall, just as Bryan's Populists took the Democratic Party back from Wall Street interests 100 years ago.

So why are you downhearted? You have a cause, you have a fight, and you have a candidate. The fact that candidate wants to win, and does not want to divide the party if he can't win, should motivate you, not disappoint you.

So fight.

 

Wisconsin Still Fighting http://www.livejournal.com/users/dustpanmandan/14002.html?

posted by Brian at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Kerry may be up in the polls, but that doesn't mean Dean supporters in Wisconsin have thrown in the towel. I've mentioned before how the Dean rally in Madison was packed. I'll also add that college-age people took up less than half the crowd, which surprised even me considering he was basically on a college campus. Here, now is another statement of support for Dean from a newly registered voter in another city:

"So, by October 2002, I thought I had found a candidate. A major proponent of universal health coverage and someone opposed to the Second Gulf War. But that's not all that Governor Dean had to offer.

"As I looked into his record, I found more good stuff about him. He used his experience as a doctor to provide health care to 92% of Vermont's adults and 96% of its children. This is in a state that is not even in the top-half of the nation in income - if Dean can cover its citizens with health care, then surely he can do it as President of the richest nation in the world.

"Dr. Dean also balanced the budget as Vermont's governor, even though Vermont's constitution doesn't require it. This may not seem that important, but look at Wisconsin. Thanks to 16 years of mismanagement by Tommy Thompson and Co., Wisconsin now has a $4 billion deficit and is being forced to cut back on aid to local governments, reduce the money going to schools, and increase tuition to UW Universities. Vermont is not in that fix - they have a budget surplus and can fund social services, health care, and education without breaking the bank.

"Another stand of Dean's I admire is the Civil Unions bill he signed in Vermont. On November 7th, 2000, Vermont became the first state in the union to recognize that gay couples deserve the same legal rights as everyone else. Before this, gay partners could not be covered under each others' health insurance or make hospital visits. Thanks to Governor Dean, homosexuals in Vermont enjoy the same rights as everyone else and are not subject to discrimination from the state.
This stand took a lot of guts. Dean was forced to wear a bullet-proof vest on the campaign trail for Governor, as he received enough death threats that the State police became very concerned. He was the target of a very vicious campaign from the right-wing, but in the end, his stand won out. Vermont's voters elected him for the fifth time in a row."


By the way, the trolls here are getting downright funny. I wish I had a picture so you could all see how un-hippyish I look. Guess what? In 2002 I voted Republican for at least one of the statewide offices! And I'm for Dean! So tell me who's in the bubble again?

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Tuesday, February 10, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Dean Urges Wisconsin to Help Him Win

CNN Says It Overplayed Dean's Iowa Scream

Student becomes famous for Dean site

TV coverage of election shortchanges the public

Its Too Soon to be That Pragmatic

Party Crasher

Monday, February 09, 2004

 

In it for the long haul http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/09/politics/campaign/09CND-DEAN.html?hp

posted by annatopia at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
New TV ads are on the air in Wisconsin, and today Gov Dean stated he would find a way to stay in the race for the long haul. Roy Neel says a win in Wisconsin is a must, but I know that there are still many Dean supporters in California, Texas, New Jersey, New York, and Florida (among others) who still intend to vote Dean in their primaries and caucuses. These mixed messages from the campaign aren't helping much, IMO, but I also believe that Howard Dean should stay in the race for as long as possible. In fact, I want everyone in the race as long as possible. A prolonged primary gives the Democrats more airtime, and so far they've all successfully used that platform as a way to crack through Bush's facade of "popular wartime president".
Gov Dean has - from the beginning - been one of the strongest critics of the Bush administration. Many in the party - including those who aren't directly supporting Dean in the primaries - have acknowledged that Howard Dean gave the Democratic Party back it's voice. What he did was give them a backbone transplant. But I believe many Dean supporters demand accountability from their party. We want to vote for the nominee, but we also want that nominee to follow through on their promises. I think we all know that Gov Dean will do his best to follow through on the promises he's made - returning fiscal sanity, restoring America to it's moral high ground in international affairs, preserving our environment and providing health care - but what about the other guys?
Dean should stay in the race for as long as he can; I've always believed that. But take this as my initial reaction to this news. What are your thoughts?

 

Dean/Clark 04: a civil union

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I do NOT neccessarily want Dean to quit the race if he loses Wisconsin. The reason is because Clark and Edwards are directly competing against each other to be the Southern anti-Kerry, but neither is immune to the steamroll effect of the voter ABB desperation than Dean has been thus far. Look at the upcoming races in TN and VA - polls show Kerry is leading in both states, and the Edwards and Clark camps are in direct competition to fight for 2nd place. Dean could have been a contender in VA, but has essentially abandoned his support there. And Dean could have tried to use Gore in TN to try and establish a delegate beachhead. But now it's just Edwards and Clark who are in the running against Kerry there, and Dean has zero momentum going into WI.

Both Edwards and Clark have a win, though Clark is weaker overall since his win in OK was a tight one and he trails Edwards in delegate count. Still, neither of them are anywhere close to Dean in delegates:
Kerry - 409

Dean - 174
Edwards - 116
Clark - 82

TN has 69 delegates tied to the primary, Virginia has 82. It's virtually certain that the lion's share in each case will go to Kerry. So if Edwards and Clark split the two states, it's still unlikely that they can get to seond place in delegate count. And both are running out of resources, not to mention facing seriousquestions about viability in the non-South.

What Dean has to do is look at the outcome of Feb 10th and see which candidate is weaker (probably Clark, who has already considered dropping out anyway). Then offer a VP slot to that candidate and start running as a joint ticket.

Dean/Clark or Dean/Edwards would be a true alternative to Kerry. It would give an immediate momentum boost going into Wisconsin, where the new joint ticket would have a full week to campaign. It would let the VP go negative on Kerry without fear of the Gephardt-Dean-Iowa effect. It would be a huge media story and would deftly solve the electability concerns. Plus it is simple math - you get two for one instead of Kerry/X (insert Special Favors here).

UPDATE: Slate has an analysis that makes much the same observations, but stops just short:

Right now, Edwards looks like the candidate most likely to survive and become Kerry's sacrificial lamb on March 2. Edwards hopes that Clark loses Tennessee on Tuesday and then bows out of the race, and that Dean quits after a loss in Wisconsin a week later. That would leave Edwards with two weeks before March 2—and the intervening Hawaii, Idaho, and Utah contests—to convince voters that he has a better chance of beating President Bush in November than Kerry does.


Suellentrop doesn't extend the argument to its logical conclusion. Suppose Clark does fold, but instead joins up with Dean. It's interesting that the idea of a running mate as a political lifeblood injection doesn't seem to occur to any of the big-name media analysts...

UPDATE2: looks like the Clark people are having similar thoughts, though of course they want their guy at the top of the ticket. It's bizarre to see Clarkies writing off Dean and expressing "sadness" at our supposed loss, but Dean has double the delegates, isn't competing with Edwards for voters, and remains flush with cash (and no spending limits). Reality check, Clark dudes - we can win jointly or lose apart. But Clark/Dean isn't one of the choices.

 

Still Within The Plan

posted by Dana at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I just want to remind everyone here who thinks we've given up that this weekend's results are still well within the Neel plan, as originally outlined right after New Hampshire.

The plan was to ignore February 3 and shoot for a few delegates (check), to do well in the next three races to become a viable alternative to Kerry (check -- we finished second and picked up delegates without advertising) then to lay in wait in Wisconsin and turn the race on its head.

That turn could easily accelerate tomorrow, if Clark and Edwards do well in Tennessee and Virginia.

If Neel's plan fails, we're out on February 18. Win Wisconsin, however, and it's game-on for Super Tuesday -- New York, California, plenty of delegates to push Kerry in second to stay.

But I do get the impression, reading the notes here, the lack of new threads, and the press, that a lot of people have given-up.

Don't. Kerry is starting to be taken down by the media just as we were. He is far from 50% on delegates chosen so far.

The game is still afoot.

 

Two questions for Bush

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Mr President:

Can you give us the names of three National Guard Service colleagues who served with you between May 1972 and October 1973?

If (you believed on the basis of intelligence) Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons program, why didn't we invade Iraq before Afghanistan? In fact, why would we have to wait until 9/11?


If Dean repeated these two questions for Bush on EVERY SINGLE media appearance between now and Feb 17th, he will win the nomination and the Presidency.

 

AFSCME drops endorsement http://wcco.com/topstories/topstories_story_039090700.html

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The 1.5 million members of AFSCME are withdrawing their support. The echo chamber still hasn't mentioned it.

UPDATE: Dean has released a statement. First comment on that thread is "go Dean!".

 

where was Dean this weekend? http://www.dailykos.com/comments/2004/2/8/182150/2710/13#13

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 09, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
At dKos, Maura in VA writes bitterly about Dean's decision to skip the Virginia JJ dinner:

Dean did not back out of the Virginia JJ last night to attend his son's last hockey game. His son's last hockey game is next Saturday night, which is why he will be missing the Wisconsin Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner, and Wisconsin is his "must win" state!!!!! He made this commitment to his son months ago and he's never said he was going to the Wisconsin JJ.

But he did commit to going to the Virginia JJ, and according to Garrett Graff, Dean spokesman, in the New York Times, he went home to Vermont last night. To rest, presumably.

The JJ dinner last night was so bittersweet. Though sometimes it feels like no one could be more disappointed than me for what has happened to Dean in Virginia, my heart breaks for Don Beyer. He has given his life to Dean in this past year. He has had huge successses in Virginia, most notably by gaining the support of some of Virginia's most important Democrats, like the mayors of Alexandria and Richmond, Rep. Bobby Scott, and Rep. Jim Moran.

It was sickening to be surrounded by all of the big money "Kerry Come Latelies" of Virginia politics. The brave Virginia leaders who took a couragous stance and came out to support Dean early, rather than waiting to see who would be coronated, were left out to dry by Dean going home to Vermont last night.


There are other reports that Dean's Face the Nation apearance was lackluster, and he did not use the opportunity to critique the President's Meet the Press sunday appearance (Bush did so badly that even the conservative stalwarts at NRO's The Corner were comparing his answers to Sharpton on the Federal Reserve).

It is good that Dean is focsing his energies on Wisconsin - but the campaign is no longer aqcting with confidence. Dean is acting like a desperate candidate, not a confident one, and paying the price as voters look for a strong challenger to Bush. Dean's ads should be talking about his acccomplishments, buttressed by quotes from media sources and references, and previewing his attack strategy against Bush. Instead he's reduced to having on-screen surrogates convince voters it's still 2003. I mean, this clip of the 2004 SOTU is more effective than any of the "switch"-inspired ads[1]

Dean's canceling of campaign events in Michigan probably cost him delegates. And given how Clark's monopoly of NH didn't garner him any advantage while the others were distracted by Iowa, it's doubtful that Dean's numbers in WI would have sufferred had he maintained a broader scope. In fact, a stronger finish in Michigan might have boosted media attention - after all, he placed second in WA with 30% of the vote! But it hasn't given him any momentum. Better numbers across the board this weekend might have given some real boost that he could ride better into Wisconsin. As things stand, the Anybody But Kerry crowd is considering voting Edwards or Clark as more viable alternatives.

Dean's money should be focused on Wisconsin. But the candidate needs to be in EVERY state ahead of the WI primary. Yes, the Madison Meetup was a smash, but it was far too early in advance of the actual WI primary to have any real effect. Had Dean gone to Meetup in Ann Arbor as I had been insisting, the numbers out of WA and MI - and the media coverage - might have been different.

[1]Whose idea was it to emulate the ads of a computer company that has only 5% market share as a way to build, er, market share? Dean endorser Al Gore does sit on Apple's board of directors... hmm..

Saturday, February 07, 2004

 

winning WA! recount NH? http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/primaries/pages/states/WA/index.html

posted by Aziz at Saturday, February 07, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
interesting analysis that shows Dean lost by a much smaller margin to Kerry on hand-counted ballots, whereas Diebold machine-counted votes favored Kerry by an enormous margin. Calling for a recount seems potentially risky though.

In other news, several reports have suggested that Dean may be beating Kerry in WA state thus far - but the official counts still show Kerry in the lead (54% to 28%, with only 21% of precincts reporting). We are definitely getting delegates out of this one, though!

UPDATE: with 32% of the precincts reporting, Dean gains to 29% and Kerry slips to 50% ...

UPDATE 2: with 34% reporting, Dean slips back to 28%, Kerry falls still further to 44%, and Kucinich rises to 14%. It's clear that Kucinich's rise is at the expense of Kerry, not Dean. If Kucinich "spoils" it for Kerry, while Dean stays constant, there's a great chance Dean can eke out a win.

UPDATE 3: with 49% reporting, Kerry is back up to 48%, but Dean has also gained to 31%, and Kucinich recedes to 8%. This is a real heady race - it's clear that the numbers are volatile. Still, now that half the precincts are done reporting, it's harder for any single precinct to dramatically affect the numbers. The volatility should decrease unless there's a big pocket of Kucinich supporters out there ready to bolt Dean-wards.

 

Michigan caucus sites moved; other sites run out of ballots http://www.mlive.com/newsflash/michigan/index.ssf?/base/news-11/1076181242303271.xml

posted by Aziz at Saturday, February 07, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
untraceable dirty tricks in Michigan. Affecting Dean and Edwards voters primarily.

UPDATE from O-Blog - caucuses will stay open for two extra hours to try and compensate. whew!

 

pigeonholing Dean with VP http://nytimes.com/2004/02/06/politics/campaign/06CND-DEAN.html

posted by Aziz at Saturday, February 07, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I have to disagree with Nico here - This New York Times is long on speculation and short on details. The headline, that Dean "hints" at accepting a VP slot, seems entirely manufactured from this comment by Dean:

Acknowledging that his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination is "a longer shot than it was," Howard Dean suggested today that he would accept the No. 2 spot on a national ticket if it were offered.

"I would, to the extent, do anything I could to get rid of President Bush," Dr. Dean said on a morning radio program in Milwaukee. `I'll do whatever is best for the party. Obviously, I'm running for president, but whatever's best is what I'll do. Anything. We've just got to change presidents. We're really hurting right now.


This is a tenous link between Dean's statement and inference of a VP. If Dean publicly and explicitly says he will consider a VP slot, then that's fine, but until then it's not worth taking seriously. Just another example of the media trying to squeeze more narratives from the Drama of Dean's Fall, which they in large part manufactured to begin with.

 

reports from WA caucuses http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/2/7/183246/1586

posted by Aziz at Saturday, February 07, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
link goes to Jerome Armstrong's report over at Daily Kos. Also, Dean Nation regular phil left this report in comments:

"NEWS FROM THE GROUND IN WA: At the risk of writing a caucus report while absolutely psyched, here's the report from a Seattle district (the 46th)...

First, turnout was absolutely amazing. We had to overflow from the huge cafeteria into the gym. Our specific precinct who had 5 people show up for the 2000 election caucus had 46 people show up today! 46!

Initial tally went 2 Dean and 2 Kerry delegates -- no others. After stumping where several of us voiced up respectfully but clearly, we brought over 5 more votes and picked up another delegate. Final Delegate Tally for 46-2292 was 3 Dean, 2 Kerry, and 1 Kucinich (who also picked one up from stumping). It was just like they said at the training: being vocal, clear, and respectful can tip things in a situation like that. Micro-politics are absolutely fascinating.

Overall, the coordinator seemed to think that our 46th district seemed to be breaking 50-50 for Dean and Kerry. As we worked the room in advance, people were largely receptive to hear about Dean. Many showed up with concerns and questions.

Of course, we're all waiting to hear about WA overall. This is liberal Seattle. But the turnout makes me really hopeful about November. People are turning out -- and this was for a caucus!

Thanks go out to all of the DN bloggers and participants who have been a reliable source of daily info for me. I am in your debt.

Onward for Dean!"

thanks, phil! keep your reports coming in the comments section...

UPDATE: this thread at Kos is full of reports from delegates around various precincts in WA. It's clear that Dean is doing far better than media expectations!

 

Feed the Win Wisconsin bat! http://www.deanforamerica.com/deannation

posted by Aziz at Saturday, February 07, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The O-blog noticed that we have almost raised $40,000 - and our goal is to break the $45,000 ceiling for Dean by Feb 17th and the Wisconsin primary! We are so close - at $39,000! Remember, Dean's drawn a line in the cheese in the Badger State and this single contest determines the fate of the campaign!

What are you waiting for?! ON, WISCONSIN!

Friday, February 06, 2004

 

Kucinich to reprise kingmaker role in WI? http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/02/06/mgrind.day.fri/index.html

posted by Aziz at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
almost as an afterthought to this CNN article comes this nugget:

One trend that could work in Dean's favor in Wisconsin: A flurry of e-mails and newspaper editorials this week among Dennis Kucinich's supporters, who are urging others to rally behind Dean as the party's more viable leftist.

Sure, Kucinich draws only 2 percent of the vote in the latest Badger poll. But anyone who doubts Kucinich's power to sway an election need only look at Edwards and his second-place finish in Iowa. Stay tuned.


intriguing... any suggestions on how we might recruit the Kucinich vote in Wisconsin?

 

Pumpkinhead vs. the Smirking Chimp http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2004_archives/000220.html

posted by G at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Hello, Dean Nation bloggers! I've been a stranger since I moved beyond my Dean Nation roots and headed up to Burlington to work on economic policy for Governor Dean. We've had a wild ride so far, and on the strength of our astounding fundraising of the last two days, our spirits as high as we head into the contests this weekend and then look to Wisconsin. Hit the bat and help take us there! Now is the time more than ever that Howard Dean needs your help.

As you may have heard, Bush is going on Meet the Press this weekend. One of my old professors, Brad Delong, is leading a blogosphere brainstorm on suggested questions for Tim Russert to pose to the man. Here are my first 10. Please contribute your own ideas.

1) Mr. President, your FY 2005 Budget document includes full-color photos of you that are indistinguishable from Bush-Cheney, Inc. campaign photos. What would be a fair price for you to pay the American people for turning the federal budget document of the United States into a campaign brochure?

2) Mr. President, you owe your presence in the White House to the fact that in 2000 your brother Jeb and your Florida campaign chair Katherine Harris illegally removed from the registration rolls 57,700 voters, the vast majority of whom were African-Americans. Can you name any greater election crime in the history of our country?

3) Mr. President, I have been told by a reliable source that Dick Cheney vets all economic briefings you receive. Cheney once told Paul O’Neill, “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.” However, your own chief economic advisor, Harvard professor Greg Mankiw, wrote in his Principles of Economics textbook that “government budget deficits reduce the economy's growth rate.” According to conventional estimates, using assumptions adopted by your own Council Economic Advisers, the debt you have created will raise interest rates and reduce annual national income by $3000 per family by 2012. When will you demand that Cheney resign?

4) Mr. President, your budget does not include any money to support our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan in FY 2005. Why won’t you support our troops with funds after FY 2005?

[Follow-up] The CBO has projected continuing costs for the war on terror at $30 billion per year over the next five years. This funding is not in your budget. Why do you want to cut off all funding for the war on terror at the end of FY 2004?

[Follow-up] If you intend to ask for more money later, why are you not putting that in your budget request now?

5) Mr. President, you promised, "I came to this office to solve problems and not pass them on to future presidents and future generations." How big is the national debt and how much has it grown since you took office?

[Follow-up] As a direct consequence of your tax policy, over six years an American family of four will take on $52,000 more in its share of the national debt. When did you change your mind and decide to pass on problems to future generations? Would Jesus mortgage the future of our children like this?

6) Mr. President, are you ashamed to be the first President since the Great Depression to have net job loss during your presidency?

7) Mr. President, unlike Presidents in previous economic downturns, you have failed to provide adequate fiscal relief to the states. You have also placed new financial burdens on the states, chiefly through unfunded mandates like No Child Left Behind. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, “A conservative estimate suggests that federal policies are costing states and localities about $185 billion over the four-year course of the state fiscal crisis.” As a consequence, states and communities have been forced to raise taxes and cut services. This has been called the “Bush Tax.” Half a million children have been cutoff from access to health care. Wouldn’t you say that these children HAVE been left behind? Is cutting children off health care just stupid, heartless, right-wing policy, or is it an affront to God?

8) Is the resemblance between Dick Cheney and Dr. Evil mere coincidence?

9) On March 30, 11 days into the war, Donald Rumsfeld said in an ABC News interview when asked about weapons of mass destruction: "We know where they are. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat." Exactly when did you learn he was lying?

10) Last August, while our soldiers were being killed nearly every day in Iraq, you tried to cut their pay. Why do you hate America so much?

 

taking our country back was never meant to be easy http://interestingtimes.blogspot.com/2004_02_01_interestingtimes_archive.html#107601252734708036

posted by Aziz at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Chris at Interesting Times has a great rejoinder to the defeatism of some of the more easily-discouraged ranks of Dean supporters:

Did people really think that taking back the Democratic party would be an easy task? Did they think that, even if Dean got the nomination, that that would mean we got it back?

Taking back the party will be a hard slog that could take years. But it will take even longer if you cut and run at the first sign you aren't getting what you want. That's Naderism to its core.

Dean HAS made a difference in this party even if it doesn't show it at the highest levels. A lot of pundits are trying to say that Dean has given the Dems a backbone transplant so he isn't needed anymore and neither are we (except for our votes and our money).

Bulls***!

We are needed to make that transplant real. We are needed to KEEP the party chanting the Dean message UNTIL THEY MEAN IT.

Running away just because Dean didn't get the nomination and just because he got screwed by some members of the establishment (aside: not all Democratic leaders screwed Dean and Dean is not entirely blameless in the troubles he has had) isn't going to help one damn bit!

Taking back the party will be a process that will NEVER end. Even if we get it back it will only be temporary. This is a fight that WILL continue from now until the end of time.


I have to admit that I find any suggestion that Kerry to be worse than Bush, or no different from, to be as asinine as the arguments of Green voters who maintain todaqy that they did the right thing in voting for Nader. And look where that got us.

 

Thinking Back; Looking Ahead

posted by Heath at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
DeanTVCarlson2.JPG
(Manchester, NH 1-26-04)

It’s been nearly two years now since many of us started to formulate our opinions about Howard Dean and set our individual plans into action. Even the best soothsayers amongst us could not have predicted just how very successful we have been in turning that action into results.

My individual plan concentrated on the media. I felt that an insurgent candidate from a small state would either be ignored or tamed by the mainstream media. My thought in making a documentary about Dean was that I could also use the footage gathered to help promote his message. Of course, I’ve been doing just that at DeanTV.org and here at our information artery, Dean Nation, ever since. Ultimately, I thought if Dean could win the nomination, a documentary ala “Journey’s With George” would be helpful to the cause if it were released prior to the general election.

Sure, in the beginning there were hopes of an inside HQ documentary mirroring D.A. Pennebaker’s, The War Room, based on Clinton’s operation. Needless to say, Dean’s success came much quicker than anticipated and, fortunately for all of us, professionals from Hollywood started moving in with more experience, money and resources than I could ever offer. I can’t wait to see the many documentaries that I think are floating out there about Dean. Hopefully, one will be aired before Wisconsin to show this kind, self-actualizing soul who has been fighting so hard for us while being co-opted in so many ways.

As my strengths and abilities to bring something to our community table became more defined over time, part of my goal was (when Dean got the nomination) to turn the cameras more on the loyal opposition: Santorum, DeLay, Rove, Coulter, O’Reilly, Hannity…

I started this phase in Iowa. I’m not paparazzi, but having Hannity beating up on Trippi to get him on his show called for action. After all, they cozied up next to me at the bar I'd been sitting at first in Des Moines. I may have crossed a line since it was "after campaign hours," but when Hannity started to rant and rave and yell at me to turn the camera off, I did so knowing my goal had been achieved in this test. When he calmed down, Hannity seemed much more polite to our old friend Trippi. In fact, when I ran into Hannity in New Hampshire again, he was downright hospitable to me as he wondered if I might not use the footage. “Are you Trippi’s boy?” he asked. “Nope, I’m independent for Dean.” The next day, Primary day, I went to visit Hannity again when Dean did his radio show. He did a double take on me as I leveled my video camera on him (the only one in the room), and wouldn’t you know it? It was one of the more pleasant interviews I’ve ever seen Hannity give to an “ultra-liberal” like Dean. Mind you, the polls didn’t look good that day for Dean so perhaps Hannity was giving him a break. Never the less, the experiment went pretty well, I thought.

Now, to the point: Since I wasn’t going to be the inside War Room guy, the documentary in the past year evolved into more of a check, or study, on the role of the media in choosing our leaders. Some of you may have seen some of the clips of the interviews I’ve gathered with the journalists/pundits on the road (as well as with the people, and cooperative campaign staff). After the so-called Scream in Iowa, the 6 networks were handed the sound/picture bite they had been craving for so long to stop Dean. I’ll spare you the conspiracy theories since we all know what they are. I will say this, however; individually, the pundits don’t pick the pictures, or how many times they are going to be run on their shows, or looped on the network feed. Such decisions are made by the entertainment editors on the inside. God knows how their decisions are influenced from the food chain above them. I’m sure at FOX, for instance, Roger Ailes has a heavy hand in making such decisions--as he did in calling the election for Bush prematurely/combatively in 2000.

I asked the same question to the individuals in Iowa and New Hampshire: Would any of these other candidates be talking about the things they are talking about if it wasn’t for Howard Dean standing up in the first place? Carlson, Begala, Novak, Carville, Alter, Fineman, Matthews, Greenfield, Oliphant, Crowley, Schneider, Scarborough, Williams, Klein, Hannity, Cameron, Crawford etc. all told me, unequivocally, “No.” In New Hampshire, I actually heard the regret about what happened with the scream since it came at such a crucial time. Heads hung low. Craig Crawford actually got into the “hazing factor of Howard Dean.”

And so, as we now see articles, and extra exposes and time allotted to Howard Dean—the nostalgia, or guilt being slipped in between the lines (they’ll all back themselves up with the idea that Howard Dean brought it upon himself in Iowa, though), my small hope is that somehow our campaign leaders have a plan to capitalize on this sentiment leading up to Wisconsin on the 17th. I’m hoping our money and time will go to a strategy that goes beyond ads and aggressively tugs at the individuals in the media to sing a new storyline tune for Howard Dean leading into Wisconsin. I’m not a professional strategist but my two cents is that Dean could get one last fair assessment before the establishment completely buries the candidate that fostered enough guts in the other candidates to co-opt his message. Alas, it may be too late.

Personally, I hope some creative thinking is used between now and Wisconsin to pique the voters and the media moguls' interest again. I don’t pretend to know the answer to that when we’re trying to look “presidential.” I do know that Wellstone’s ads in his first election catapulted him over the establishment candidate in Minnesota. Wisconsin is made up of the same kind of people. But that’s just an example. Maybe you could jot down your ideas here too? Maybe we really are being heard now that we're back to the basics again.

I just know that I’ll keep giving to the bat in the hope that, this time, we have a plan that plays into the media’s hands as well as the voters of Wisconsin.

The cameras will be watching.

 

CROSSFIRE doubts us

posted by Aziz at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Joe Rospars emails to inform us that Tucker Carlson issued the following challenge last night on CNN's Crossfire:

"The Dean campaign claims to have raised more than 100 grand today, $55,000 of that just in the hour between noon and 1:00, all of which raises the important question, who in his right mind would give money to Howard Dean at this point? Well, if you're one of those who did, we want to hear from you. Explain yourself to CROSSFIRE@CNN.com. I'm fascinated by that."


Write in! and leave a copy of the email you wrote in the comments.

Remember - the Dean Nation goal is $45,000 by Feb. 17th. Have you swung the bat? Let's give Tucker Carlson something to be "fascinated" by!

 

Wisconsin is the key http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/2/6/23050/40475

posted by Aziz at Friday, February 06, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
via Dean Nation alumnus Jerome at DailyKos, is this prophetic article from June 2003 arguing that Wisconsin will be the clincher for the nomination:

Wisconsin is the lone primary on this Tuesday and, more important, the last big test going into Super Tuesday. The state has a very unpredictable electorate. Sure, there are the Madison liberals, but independents could mess with this primary big time. There's no party registration in the state, meaning the primary will be as open as they come.
[...]
But it's not just the independents that make this contest interesting; the Wisconsin electorate has a little bit to offer every major candidate in the field. There will be no excuse to skip -- there's no one with a regional advantage, although one could argue the winner of Iowa should have at least a tiny leg up. But regional candidates haven't succeeded in Wisconsin in the past, so what's to say a Gephardt couldn't walk in with a big advantage?

This will be the state that will either sink the front-runner or solidify him; there's no two ways about it. And winning Wisconsin, since it is a swing state for the general election, will trigger the media into declaring the winner the most electable Dem.


Of course, the article was written long before Lieberman or Gephardt's withdrawal. Still, the facts of an open primary, no party registration, and a strong independent tradition make the state very competitive for Dean, despite poor poll numbers from UW (which admits to being unable to gauge the impact).

Likewise, a win in Wisconsin will be transformative. Winning Wisconsin means that electability is not an issue anymore - especially given WI's swing state status. That should help stem the tide of soft support from Dean to Kerry and make Dean much more competitive for Super Tuesday - where the grassroots support can mobilize.

Thursday, February 05, 2004

 

About Wisconsin

posted by Brian at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I've only been in this state for a few years, so don't take this as authoritative. But here are some things to keep in mind.

Wisconsin has a progressive tradition. This was Robert LaFolette's state, and today it is Russ Feingold's. People here have a soft spot for candidates out to challenge the system. However, it is not a far-left state. "Dane County Liberal" carries the same baggage in Wisconsin politics that "Massachusetts Liberal" does in national politics. Jim Doyle won the 2002 gubernatorial primary by beating back both Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk and a Milwaukee congressman named Tom Barrett. He did this by dominating upstate.

Here's something else: Fiscal conservatism has been a huge issue here lately. Dean needs to tout his credentials in that area. In fact, he needs to tout credentials and plans everywhere he goes. Otherwise, pragmatic voters who want to know what you're going to do and not just what you stand for will go to someone else.

Here's another thing:The big news the past few days has been the state legislature's attempt to override Governor Doyle's veto of a bill legalizing the right to carry concealed weapons. The override attempt failed by one vote when a Democratic representative changed his vote at the last minute to support a governor of the same party. There is a great deal of pro-gun sentiment here. Even the most liberal candidates talk up their hunting credentials to cater to those northwoodsy sentiments. The Libertarian Party got over 10% of the vote in the 2002 gubernatorial elections in part on the basis of that issue.

In other words, Wisconsin voters are fiscally conservative, liberal on social issues, and like their guns. So if they vote strictly on how best to represent their views in the national debate, Dean has a great chance of winning this state. And a key is to make sure they do that rather than fall for an aura of inevitability set up by Iowa and New Hampshire.

 

after Wisconsin

posted by Aziz at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Dean has rightfully drawn a line in the sand for Wisconsin - but let's think for a moment beyond a victory there. Dean will have won a state, but still will face a hostile media, an establishment friendly to Kerry, and other candidates drawing blood.

It's time to start thinking about strategy again, instead of tactics. And one strategy that needs to be put on the table is to sweeten the deal for voters wondering why they should choose Dean. The answer is simple: Dean should choose a Veep running mate.

That running mate needs to be Southern, to compete against Edwards. And a military man, to compete against Kerry. The natural candidate would be Clark, but unless we win Wisconsin we can't make a decent argument to his camp as to why they should settle for #2. A Wisconsin win however will give Dean all the operational advantages - money, grassroots, and delegate count. Clark and Dean are competing for the same voters, just as Edwards and Kerry are (and I predict a Kerry/Edwards ticket on the horizon in practice if not in name soon enough). Dean needs to address the issue of basic survival with Clark, and point out that together they may yet stand whereas apart they fall.

Kerry/Edwards is going to be a compelling ticket. Certainly far better than Dean/X or Clark/X. But Dean/Clark is something else entirely - a civil union, whose whole is greater than the sum of their parts. The writing is on the wall for Clark and Dean regardless of wins in OK and WI - unless they find a way to make a bold move that freshens them in the eyes of voters who collectively yearn for Anybody But Bush.

Dean/Clark is our natural next step after Wisconsin. The media buzz and coverage will be a natural boost to Super Tuesday, and the operational and logistical advantages of the two top-funded candidates will also be a powerful argument to the mass of undecideds out there who still buy into the "electability" meme. It's our only hope.

 

This is the time for deeds, not words http://www3.deanforamerica.com/site/TR?pg=personal&fr_id=1090&px=1179278

posted by Aziz at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The line in the sand has been drawn, and we must marshall our resources for this stand. If it is our last stand, let it be glorious. If in the end Wisconsin chooses Kerry over Dean, we can guarantee at least that Kerry will have had to fight for that honor.

We are only a few scant thousands away from having raised $40,000 for Dean. I have raised our Dean Nation goal to $45,000. Can we, Dean Nation, raise over $5,000 in two weeks? WE MUST. I have posted appeals to this blog for over a year to raise funds, for all of us to join the ranks of Dean Minutemen and Dean Riders, or even at the very least join the $100 Revolution. Many of you have responded, but many of you remain. THE TIME IS NOW.

WE MUST RAISE MONEY TO WIN WISCONSIN. This is our last stand. This is our Alamo.

Dean has been our candidate. Despite the disappointments of the past month, we must remember why Dean was our first choice. We held Dean to a high standard because we knew he would assume that responsibility and not let us down. We must do no less for him - else the entire idea that this reinvention of politics, the innovation of fundraising apart from the special interest, the very idea that we the People could have the Power to take our Country back - was a massive conceit.

WE must step to the plate as never before and show Dean that there is Power left in the People, and that his crusade of two years was not in vain. If we fail him now, Dean becomes nothing more than Don Quixote, tilting at the windmill of grassroots power, when in fact it was nothing more than an illusion arising from reading the Federalist Papers once too many times.

This is not a referendum on Dean. It is a referendum on US. We must respond to this call - and even if it be our last, we must make sure that we say to our children that yes, we fought for our country with the only tools and weapons we had.

This is your last chance to take your country back. Who will stand with me?

In Les Misérables, Enjolras asks his comrades, the people of Paris: "Do you hear the people sing? Singing the song of angry men?". Combeferre joins in, urging "Will you join in our crusade? Who will be strong and stand with me?" Indeed, beyond the barricades there is a world we long to see. The day is at hand, if only we have the resolve to seize it.

 

This Was Always The Plan http://blog.deanforamerica.com/archives/003554.html

posted by Dana at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
There's a lot of complaint over at the O-blog about Dean's insistence that we win Wisconsin.

But let's be clear. This was Roy Neel's plan all along.

At some point, a candidate who loses early must draw a line in the sand and say, "Here I stand or fail." Lieberman stood in Delaware, and failed. Clark stood in Oklahoma and succeeded. Edwards stood in South Carolina and succeeded.

Neel's plan does not depend on Edwards or Clark. He sees them as, essentially, regional candidates who can't compete with Kerry in the blue states.

Only Howard Dean can do that.

So it starts in Washington and Maine this weekend. We really need to win at least one of those, and do well in Michigan. Pull out all the stops and hope for the best.

But Neel's plan does not depend on Washington or Michigan or Maine. "We'll do well," is all he'll say. We won't put our fate on the line in a caucus. We want ground of our choosing.

Wisconsin is ground of our choosing. We're challenging Kerry there. We're doing there what Edwards did in South Carolina and Clark did in Oklahoma.

Frankly if we can't win in Wisconsin we can't win anywhere, and we should drop out.

So stop complaining, and work the plan. Roy Neel is the man Howard Dean chose, Neel is the man Dean believes in. Dean is the man we believe in, and this is the plan Dean decided upon after New Hampshire.

Work the plan.

 

Dean on Wisconsin: "The entire race has come down to this." http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=615&e=2&u=/nm/20040205/pl_nm/campaign_dean_dc

posted by Editor at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Dean has drawn a line in the sand. Clark and Edwards did this and they're still fighting. Gephardt and Lieberman did too and they went packing. It's Wisconsin or bust, folks. If Dean fails to win Wisconsin, we'll all be picking a new candidate.

"We must win Wisconsin," the former Vermont governor said in a memo to supporters. "A win there will carry us to the big states on March 2 -- and narrow the field to two candidates. Anything else will put us out of the race."

In a fund-raising plea, Dean, who spent $40 million on a gamble that he could wrap up the Democratic presidential nomination with early victories in Iowa and New Hampshire, asked supporters for $50 contributions so he could raise $700,000 by Sunday to pay for advertising in Wisconsin.

"We must launch our new television advertisement on Monday in the major markets in Wisconsin," he said. "To do that I need your help."

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Thursday, February 05, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Campaigns move forward

Dean Vows to Continue

Wisconsin Donors Give More Money to Howard Dean

Is It Passion or Common Sense?

The great American snow job against Howard Dean

Howard Dean Wins the iVote Internet Primary

Wednesday, February 04, 2004

 

Dean Does Madison

posted by Brian at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I went to my first meet-up tonight, as well as saw Dean in person for the first time. It was a real treat. The event was held in the Club Majestic, and I was standing on the completely full balcony, looking across at another completely full balcony on the other side and above the table area which was, of course, completely full. The volunteers were going around with their sign-up cards, where I signed up for a couple of things, and people all over were talking politics, from the Bush AWOL story to pre-emptive war. The crowd as a whole was so big that, as noted in the comments below, they had to start sending people into nearby buildings, and I think we in the Majestic were less than half the total turn-out.

I didn't recognize the first speaker, but he rocked, listing cities in Wisconsin which we are going to win before letting out the patented Dean "Yearrgghhh!" Kathleen Falk, the popular Dane County Executive went next, introducing the Governor. And then, Howard Dean stepped out. I had a brief period of adjustment, as happens when you've seen someone on TV for ages and ages and then suddenly he appears before you in the flesh, a real live human being with a voice and hair and skin. Yet that only lasted for a moment, for truly had you been there you would not think it too melodramatic to compare him to an avatar of the American spirit, exuding and drawing us into a vision of hope and can-do idealism before he even opened his mouth.

This was a charisma like I have never experienced before, and his presence is such that I say that although Dean is not known for his great height, in the mind's eye he was one of the taller figures around, taking control of the atmosphere in the room as surely as he has the atmosphere of this entire campaign. His only "gaffe" was when he talked about Michigan's affirmative action policy; regardless of the issues, defending Michigan is not permitted in Madison, a fact of which he was quickly informed by the audience. I keep hearing that John Kerry is Presidential because he looks like a President from central casting, but the people who say that do not have a sense of history. I have to admit the Kerry does look like a movie President, but then most movie Presidents are failing at defending us from aliens or something, not being "Presidential."

Howard Dean is a leader. He has led Vermont for over a decade. He has led his supporters to heights no one thought they could reach. He has led the Democratic field to its present stance on the issues. And soon, if all goes well, he shall lead America. For Howard Dean alone among all the candidates carries the aura of vision and the credentials of ability that make a true President. When deciding what counts as Presidential, we should not look at who's been in Congress the longest or who does the best job at following the standard political scripts - after all, Abraham Lincoln, perhaps our greatest President, was elected after a single term in Congress.

Rather, to be Presidential is to make people want the future which you can bring about. I want health insurance for every American according to a plan that will actually pass through Congress. I want to repair our international alliances so that the United States once more stands as the moral leader of the world. I want to globalize human rights and not just corporate rights so that we can have a world where people are more than just business assets to be discarded at will. And I want a country I can be proud of, a democracy where the special interests don't rule from the shadows, and where ordinary Americans once more control the processes of our own lives.

And that is why, when we picture the world 50 years from now, we can see the Howard Dean we've all come to know, a Howard Dean aged by his office, his face cast in marble like the great Presidents of old sitting before a painting of him in the oval office dealing with a crisis today unforeseen And as schoolchildren pass through on their field trips, they are told of how in a time of despair, this man brought the promise of a new beginning; of how when the forces of fear threatened to overwhelm our values this man brought hope and restoration; of how when people said he couldn't do something, he went ahead and proved them wrong, and most of all how he showed that the United States is not just a nation of special interests and pundit-identified population groups, but a community of shared ideals, ideals every generation of Americans has sought to live by and succeeded at just a little more than the one which came before. And then the schoolchildren will file out, anxious to be on with their lunch time, except for one little girl who remembers, and takes to heart the message of Howard Dean, and message which transcends today's issues even as it responds to them. And that little girl will go on to solve the problems of her day, enriched by an understanding of society and an example of how to lead it.

That is what it means to be Presidential. And while I think all the other Democrats are probably electable, I see only one as truly Presidential. And if that's the test for whom we should nominate, then let it be Howard Dean.

(By the way, sorry about not having pictures. I don't have a camera.)

 

report from Madison meetup

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
just received this email from Don Jones don_wis in the comments):

Well, it is a blow-out. I had to leave early. But......

The Club Majestic is full...fire marshall said they have to now go to one out - one in. The great thing is they filled it during the fund-raising
period and you definitely could not get in without paying at least $25 a head.

They've arranged for overflow at Madison's (the next door bar and restaurant) and, I think, at the Argus (a bar a half block away that is one
of THE hangouts for legislative staff and members). The Gov. will hit those places after his Club Majestic appearance.

Good broad turnout...AFSCME, SEIU, UAW (!), a contingent of Libertarians with their state chair, GLBTI is out in force, also 'real' pols both party
Dems and labor Dems (here 'real' means folks who work campaigns almost professionally).

Very good mix of ages...very good.

Don (don_wis)


Let's get some photos!! For all you non-Madisonians, the Majestic is a big place. It used to be the Majestic Movie Theater. Ah, State Street in the spring...

 

Snapshot: Remember Who's Fighting For Us

posted by Heath at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
DTVhands.JPG

 

There is no other option...

posted by annatopia at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Aziz asked me to repost this from the comments section below, so here ya go. It's just my little rant about why we can't give up. If any of this is confusing, I was replying to a few comments left on Dana's "Just Win, Baby" post. You might want to read the string for the entire context.

re, i feel like you do so often, and that's what howard dean sparked so much hope in me. i see in his platform a sensible way to get our country back on track. i see in the man a strong leader who won't lie to us and who doesn't have a zipper problem. i as well was disengaged for a few years. i've done my share of party building, but i've never been so vested in the outcome of a campaign. perhaps that's part of the problem. we haven't been able to get joe average vested in the success or failure of this campaign.

robert, i really appreciate your comments. i totally agree that the "product" was not properly marketed. dear god, if there's anything the rethuglicans gets right, it's marketing. it's a sad fact.

and as for the affection that many of us feel for trippi, for myself, i have that affection because i never thought that my contributions could matter. i never thought that anyone running a presidential campaign could ever care about what the average person thought. i never thought that *people mattered* to those in power. joe proved me wrong and showed me that we *can* matter. that we *do* matter. sure, he made some mistakes, but i'll always be grateful to him for reaching out to this community and taking what we said at face value.

what i fear most is that this was our last shot to matter, that this was the last campaign that really was "of, for, and by the people". i fear that if we don't reform the process *now* that we won't get another chance. i don't see any of the other campaigns valuing their supporters like DFA does (with the exception of the clark campaign, who really values their 'roots as well). and when people don't matter, what else does? money and power, i guess. and so many of us have fought so hard to change that. and i can honestly say that at this point it feels like we won't be able to accomplish that goal, and that would be the worst tragedy of all.

and god forbid we get four more years of the lying, awol, smirky squatter in the white house. i can't picture an america that would reelect that corrupt liar, yet like Re i meet people every day who are so oblivious to the damage that's been done over the past three years that sometimes it makes me want to throw my hands in the air and apply for canadian citizenship. but i refuse to be a quitter and leave this country in the hands of ignoramuses like NY. i mean, am i supposed to just give up and leave, or am i supposed to stay and fight like a good patriot would?

i choose to fight. and if america goes down, i'll go down with her knowing i've made every effort to right this sinking ship.

that's why i'm still here. that's why i'll continue to support howard dean until he tells me it's time to move on.


And just to add a few more thoughts... the Democratic nominee will get my support no matter what happens. Bush must be stopped, his every lie exposed, and it will be up to the Democratic party to do that (lord knows Big Media won't). I will continue to work here in Texas to further the cause of participatory democracy, and if we can make Howard Dean the nominee I will be one happy camper. But if we don't, I'll still be in the trenches fighting against the right-wing ideologues that have co-opted the Republican party until they are driven from their positions of power and ostracised from the public debate. There is no other option. This country is in trouble, and it is up to we the people to change that.
One thing I've learned during this campaign is that if enough of us get together, we *can* create change. One of my biggest sources of frustration has always been that, as one person, I can't change this thing by myself. But together we are so powerful. We've already changed the tone of the debate, and we've shown the Democrats how to raise money under the new campaign finance laws. We've also helped refine the message that is now being used by all the contenders. We've got to follow through after the primaries with due diligence and make sure Bush is tossed from office, and we've got to continue to work on building up the party.
Bush must go, be it at the hands of Howard Dean or some other nominee. There is no other option but to stay and fight.

 

Just Win, Baby

posted by Dana at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
All right. Edwards and Clark have done the business.

In both states where Kerry was seriously challenged, he lost. He's vulnerable.

That is not the way my local paper is playing it, of course. Kerry won 5, we won zero.

Roy Neel told us to expect that. But now that Edwards and Clark have shown they are serious contenders we must do the same. Before this can become a two-man race, it must become a four-man race.

The longer Dean goes without a win, the bigger the monkey on our back becomes. Maybe he's just an acquired taste, like tequilla or truffles. That's how we're being thought of right now.

The only cure for that is a win, starting in Washington or Maine. (Michigan would be nice, and perhaps Kerry's new vulnerability makes that possible.) We have chosen the ground. Clark and Edwards will be pulling for us, because if no one can beat Kerry outside the South neither of them really stands a chance.

The theory Neel is operating on is that, the more Democratic the state, the better our chances. That theory will now be put to the test.

It's up to us. The pressure's on.

Just win, baby.

 

Dean to attend today's Meetup in Wisconsin?

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Can any of our resident Badgers confirm? I suspect Dean will attend either the Milwaukee or the Madison meetup ...

If its true, it makes much more sense than my earlier repeated insistence that the Meetup in Ann Arbor. Recent polls don't look that great for our chances in Michigan:

Kerry maintained his lead in Michigan just three days before state Democrats vote in caucuses, according to a statewide Detroit News/Mitchell tracking poll.

Kerry is favored by 56 percent of the 450 likely Michigan caucus voters surveyed.

Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean placed second in the poll with 12 percent support. Nearly 20 percent remain undecided.

The poll was conducted Sunday through Tuesday by The Detroit News/Mitchell Research & Communications Inc. The margin of error is plus or minus 5 percentage points.

Michigan Democrats will vote at party caucuses from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. About 25,000 voters already have cast ballots over the Internet or by mail.

Michigan is the first major industrial state in play, and the 128 pledged delegates at stake are the most of any contest to date.


though the Arab and the Muslim vote should hopefully come through to put us above the delegate threshold, and there's a large pool of undecideds whom we need to make our appeal to (remember: negative attacks backfire). Edwards will likely sit out Feb 7th.

The point is that Dean's only advantage is the grassroots - and the meetups are at the heart of that. Dean needs a return to roots, as it were. And Dean needs to keep looking ahead, to try and build momentum for Super Tuesday. That's been the plan the campaign has pursued and a real win in Wisconsin might make the difference.

Here's our ideal-realistic scenario:

Feb 7th: finish second in Michigan (competition: Kerry)

Feb 10th: win Virginia, finish second in Tennessee (competition: Edwards and Clark)

Feb 17th: win Wisconsin

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Wednesday, February 04, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Kerry will still have to compete for Democratic nomination

Door Is Open, if Not by Much

Dean Eyes the Next States

Howard Dean strikes back

Dean Focuses on Weekend

Howard Dean Holds Out Hope

Tuesday, February 03, 2004

 

It's a nail-biter in New Mexico http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/primaries/pages/states/NM/

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Check out the numbers so far from New Mexico! Dean and Kerry are tied for 27%, Clark close behind with 25%, Edwards trailing distant 4th with 9%. Numbers as of 9:57 PM ET, but the votes are still being tallied...

UPDATE: Kerry pulled ahead by a respectable margin, and Clark eked out ahead of Dean to grab second. Still, Dean is above the delegate threshold. Remember that the pundits were calling Dean toast, yet he was still able to compete hard in New Mexico, despite no media presence.

 

Judy, Judy, Judy http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040216&s=pollitt

posted by Amanda at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I've been a longtime fan of Nation-columnist Katha Pollitt but this recent column about Dr. Judith Steinberg Dean -- helpfully and humorously titled "Judy, Judy, Judy" (remind anyone else of John Kerry muttering "Dean, Dean, Dean" or is it just me?) -- is absolutely a must read. And the good doctors make the cover of the magazine, no less. It's like Howard and Judy go to the zoo. How fitting. :-)

Best line in the article (okay, that's saying something):

"The doctors Dean seem to be in need of some tips on togetherness and building a healthy political marriage," opined Maureen Dowd, a single woman who, even if she weds tomorrow, will be in a nursing home by the time she's been married for twenty-three years like the Deans.


OUCH. HEH.

Oh ok, one more:

What if the media tried on for size the notion that having an independent wife says something good about a candidate? For example, maybe, if his wife is not at his beck and call, he won't assume the sun rises because he wants to get up; maybe, if his wife has her own goals in life, her own path to tread, he won't think women were put on earth to further his ambitions; maybe, if he and his wife are true partners -- which is not the same as her pouring herself into his career and his being genuinely grateful, the best-case scenario of the traditional political marriage -- he may even see women as equals.


Indeed.

 

February 3, 2004 Vote Open Thread

posted by Editor at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Edwards has won SC. Trippi is on MSNBC and Roy Neel is speaking right now...

...go nuts...

 

the Prize http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4147124/

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
You know, I feel pretty good tonight. I'm well aware that Dean is likely to be below the delegate threshold tonight in most of the states. But we have to have faith in ourselves. Right now there are thousands of Dean supporters out there working hard on visibility and outreach. And Dean is out there too, talking to ordinary people and getting his message out.

The main goal here is to build momentum, which can crest on Feb 7th. And then onwards to Feb 10th.

If the campaign falters, though, it won't be because we didn't try. I remain disappointed that Dean probably won't be at the Ann Arbor meetup, that he hasn't publicly leveraged his endorsements from Gore and Jesse Jackson Jr. yet. I am disappointed that Dean didn't seem to recognize the symbolic importance of South Carolina, or that Roy Neel hasn't said anything about Tennessee or Virginia yet. All these things are failures of motivation from the campaign - not us. But campaigns are large and massive entities that even the candidate himself doesn't really control so much as be tolerated by, like a wormrider from Dune.

At the end of the day today, Dean will have energized us. We remain convinced that he is the best candidate for the nomination, and we are acting on that belief. Some of us are on the ground, others are blogging, all of us have thrown in money at our bat time and time again - have you noticed we are almost at $40,000?

I feel good. This is February 3rd and the election is nine months away. Nine months is enough for a political gestation of sorts. We, Dean Nation and the 700k strong supporters of Dean are the embryonic seed of a new political movement. Dean may be at the apex of this new form of political life, but ultimately it is we who are the flesh and blood.

Stop looking at polls, Dean Nation. Stop looking at primaries! Start looking at the election, and at the energy that we have marshaled to get to where we are today. And reflect on this: we have only just begun to fight!

I'm feeding the bat tonight. Join me and let's make news tomorrow - Dean may not win delegates, but he is winning hearts and minds. And my dollars.

UPDATE: Joe Lieberman will likely withdraw if he doesn't win Delaware tonight. If that doesn't cheer you up, what will? :)

UPDATE 2: Superdelegates stand firm - and Al Gore is out there below the radar, where it counts!


Al Gore campaigns for Democratic presidential hopeful Howard Dean Sunday at a church in Detroit. Michigan holds its Democratic primary on Saturday.

 

Trippi on MSNBC tonight

posted by annatopia at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I was waiting for confirmation before posting this, and we've finally got it. Former Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi will be on the special edition of Hardball tonight. The show starts at 7pm EST, and from what I understand, Joe will be providing commentary on the election returns.
Also, consider this an open thread for this afternoon. I think all of us are pretty busy today, so posting may be light. The floor is yours.

 

A random hodge-podge of thoughts

posted by annatopia at Tuesday, February 03, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Today is mini-Tuesday, and Kos has a rundown of the latest poll numbers here. Adn according to some early diary reports, turnout has been through the roof in Delaware and South Carolina.
If we take nothing else from today - including delegates - it's that the Democrats are motivated and eager to beat Bush. They are going to the polls in droves, and that should scare the beejebus out of Karl Rove. If our base is motivated (and no doubt we must give at least partial credit to the Dean movement for this trend), that's a good thing. If we can draw in new voters, that's a good thing. Both Iowa and New Hampshire had great turnouts, record numbers of new voters, and some serious ABB displays. This bodes well for our party come November.
I'd also like to take a moment to thank everyone on this blog who's taken it upon themselves to get out in the streets and support Howard Dean. In particular, I'd like to recognise JenInSC, who pioneered the letter writing effort in South Carolina. Major kudos to the grassroots in Missouri, Delaware, North Dakota, Arizona, Oklahoma, and New Mexico as well. They have had a much tougher job over the past few weeks and they deserve serious applause for sticking with the plan and doing their best to GOTV. If we get *anything* out of today, it will be thanks to the grassroots. I just wanted to make sure that they know how much we appreciate and admire their efforts.
Looking forward, the Michigan contest is Sunday Saturday. Michigan allows online voting, and many in the Dean camp have speculated that might help us. As of last week, only 7500 internet ballots had been cast and only 7500 have been cast via snail mail. Michigan is expecting a turnout of at least 100,000 voters. To add another twist, populat Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm endorsed John Kerry the other day. Congrats to the Kerry camp - Ms. Granholm is a great asset.
The great state of Maine is holding their caucus this weekend, and it looks like a Kerry-Dean tossup at the moment. Washington State also holds their contest this Sunday Saturday, and I think we all know that the Dean grassroots there are strong. For upcoming events in Washington state, please keep your eye on washington.deanforamerica.com.
By all accounts, we're looking pretty good in Wisconsin on Feb 17. although nothing is certain at this point and the situation is changing daily. Depending on how things shake down tonight (Edwards has pledged to drop out if he doesn't win South Carolina, and others may drop as well if they don't pull out key victories), Wisconsin could be the place where the anti-Kerry emerges.
Burlington has announced that employees will be getting paid again next week, which is a good thing. The money is still rolling in (over $3 million raised since Iowa), and the grassroots (while a bit shaken after the events of the past few weeks) are still growing. Over 630,000 Americans have joined Dean for America, and Meetup is close to 190,000.
Overall, compared to some of the other guys, we are doing just fine. But it's certainly crunch time, and I'm hoping the grassroots will be able to deliver some delegates today.

Monday, February 02, 2004

 

An Open Secret http://www.opensecrets.org/presidential/index.asp?sort=C

posted by Dana at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Why are we so certain Dean can survive poor results tomorrow and continue on?

Well, it's an open secret.

Specifically, it's opensecrets.org, which collects financial reports from all the campaigns. Here's the key figure, cash on hand, as of Saturday, January 31 December 31:

Howard Dean $9,647,361
Wesley Clark $3,404,975
Dennis Kucinich $2,629,441
John Kerry $1,605,428
Joe Lieberman $612,161
John Edwards $275,212
Al Sharpton $7,535

Now, victory will help Kerry re-charge. But how will Edwards, or Lieberman, if they fail to do well tomorrow? How will Sharpton?

Need some more confidence. Talk to the bat. Over $500,000 has come in since Saturday, just on the bat.

In other words, someone is going down tomorrow, and it is not going to be us. And where does Clark go from Oklahoma? Where is his infrastructure in Tennessee and Virginia?

No, it's not going to be easy. But we can do it. Let people know we're competing, with a few well-produced TV ads, let them know what the competition is, and people will come. Already, over 630,000 have come. More come all the time.

We can do this thing. We just have to execute. Let our competitors go down, one-by-one. Make the case against Kerry, and win.

 

1992 Results http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/2/2/235151/6327

posted by Brian at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
"Quantum" from Daily Kos has posted the results of the first 13 primaries/caucuses from 1992. Bill Clinton won exactly three. There are definitely differences between now and then, but this does show that every year is unique, and the early favorite can trip up quite easily. John Kerry is running off aura. I grew up across the river from Missouri and have a lot of friends and family from there, and I can tell you he should not be dominating based on anything else. And as that aura wears off, those who would declare the race over will discover that there's a contest again.

 

Another Ad http://www.cinemetrix.com/home/demo/dean

posted by Amanda at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Several Massachusetts Deaniacs were interviewed for this ad for DFA.

Pass it on!

http://www.cinemetrix.com/home/demo/dean

 

the slow road http://www.tnr.com/blog/campaignjournal?pid=1274

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Ryan Lizza's Campaign Journal blog has been essential reading. He takes a look at the delegate counts and offers a rather important critique of the stated strategy of the Dean campaign:

According to Roy Neel's strategy memo, Dean is hoping for two paradoxical results tomorrow. On the one hand Neel wants Edwards and Clark cleared from the race. On the other hand he wants Kerry weakened. Of course, the way for Kerry to be weakened is for Clark and Edwards to beat Kerry in Oklahoma and South Carolina, thus keeping them viable. Neel is also silent on his plan for the February 10 Tennessee and Virginia contests, which together are worth 151 delegates.

Finally, Dean spent two years and $45 million trying a version of this strategy in Iowa and New Hampshire. It didn't work.


There's a reason Neel has been silent about Feb 10th - it's because they are ignoring the grassroots base. What's needed is a high-level call to arms by Dean himself to his supporters in the Feb 3rd and the Feb 10th states, to bracket his own personal efforts fpor Feb 7th.

The impression I get is that the campaign is trying to play it safe. Dean spoke openly about racial issues once - but now he is ceding South Carolina. And Jesse Jackson Jr has reportedly been seen with Kerry - not surprising given that Dean hasn't even tried to capitalize on that support or endorsement. Dean likewise spoke openly about the need to court the southern voter - and now it's Kerry who is on record as saying that the Southern voter has the same concerns as the northern one. Dean's message is being co-opted and with it, any distinction between him and the rest of the field.

The main advantage Dean has is us. We can only do so much on our own. But a campaign strategy that leaves gaping holes with barely any mention of how they can be filled - or even a public acknowledgement that the grassroots are being actively asked to plug them - is running with one hand tied behind its back.

 

Good News from Kerryland

posted by Amanda at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
QUESTION: If you hold a statewide organizing meeting in John Kerry's homestate only a few days after the New Hampshire primary -- and after much media crowing about Howard Dean being a has been and John Kerry being a shoo in -- will anyone show up?

ANSWER: You betcha.

On Saturday, January 31, Massachusetts for Dean held an all-day organizing meeting -- a morning session at UMass-Amherst and an afternoon session at Boston University. We planned the meeting in the midst of the Iowa and New Hampshire efforts. In other words, this meeting got planned in about a week and many folks in MA found out about it at the last minute and in the midst of the latest round of the anti-Dean media circus (which has been especially strong in Massachusetts, not surprisingly).

How many people showed up? Close to 50 in Western Mass, and well over 100 in Boston. It was standing room only to hear Steve Grossman (National Co-Chair of DFA) and the Governor's brother, Bill Dean (who lives in MA), and listen to presentations by MassforDean organizers about: what we'll be doing to help out in Michigan and Maine; registering MA voters by the February 11 deadline; MFD's media strategy; and GOTV in MA for March 2. The Q&A and breakout sessions were lively and went well beyond the time limits.

The energy at these meetings was INCREDIBLE. People are not discouraged; they are energized; they are determined. In some ways, it was like an enormous statewide meetup. There was a good mix of longtime Dean activists and quite a few newbies (we invited our whole mailing list and DFA sent out a notice to all their tens of thousands of supporters in MA).

We even got some media coverage. NECN (New England Cable News) dropped by the Boston session and interviewed Steve Grossman.

What we have built is amazing. What we have inspired is amazing. We are much more powerful than we sometimes think we are. And while we shouldn't kid ourselves -- this is going to be a tough tough climb -- we cannot forget: WE HAVE THE POWER. Onward!

 

Today's Inspiration http://artsci.wustl.edu/~gsbarkin/Dean

posted by Dana at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Graduate student Gareth Barkin has home-produced one of the best Dean commercials I've seen in some time.

The link in the paragraph above is to a Windows Media Player file. The link in the headline leads to files in other formats.

This has been one of the chief grassroots complaints against the campaign, the quality of its commercials. Since I don't live in Iowa I didn't see any of the official ads, but I can tell you this one is pretty good. It combines an honest attack on John Kerry's record with an uplifting pitch for the Dean message. Its only fault is the length -- 1:30. But that can be fixed.

 

Dean must attend the Feb 4th Meetup in Ann Arbor http://dean2004.meetup.com/537

posted by Aziz at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Roy Neel gets it partly right:

Thanks to many of you, our crowds over the past week have been phenomenal -- thousands in Michigan, South Carolina, Missouri, New Mexico, Arizona, Washington, Milwaukee, and Detroit. Tomorrow Gov. Dean will be in New Mexico and Arizona, back to Washington, Wisconsin, and Michigan. He is the quintessential Energizer bunny of presidential campaigning -- I'm amazed by his energy and durability!


I'm pleased to see that the campaign is making stops in Feb 7th states while the rest of the field focuses on the Feb 3rd lineup - but remember that Clark had weeks to himself in New Hampshire, yet still finished 4th (sans delegates).

A rally, even with thousands in attendance, is just a stump speech. A Meetup however is something far more tangible. Meetups, unlike rallies, are where we really convert hearts and minds to this cause, as opposed to rewarding those who have already signed on.

And Michigan is the prize - here are teh number of delegates at stake by state (via Ryan Lizza):


February 3 (269)
South Carolina (45)
Missouri (74)
North Dakota (14)
Arizona (55)
New Mexico (26)
Delaware (15)
Oklahoma (40)

February 7 (204)
Michigan (128)
Washington (76)


Focus, oh Wolverines! You must get Dean to the Ann Arbor Meetup on Feb 4th. If Dean does not show, I predict he will lose the state. It's up to us to make the case.

 

The 15% Solution

posted by Dana at Monday, February 02, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Clinton's famous line of fighting "until the last dog dies" is fitting this morning.

That's what the Dean grassroots have to do tomorrow. Because a lot of media pundits will want to stick a fork in us after the results come in.

But we're fighting, in every state. Jason Gervich sent a letter he got printed in the Arizona Republic on Dean's electability. The o-blog is filled with heart-warming stories of Dean visibility in New Mexico, in North Dakota, in Delaware -- in all the February 3 states.

And the Good Doctor himself has been racing across the country like a man possessed, rallying the troops. Even Roy Neel has found a more down-home voice on the o-blog.

Just so we're crystal clear on what we need tomorrow.

Delegates.

We can get delegates in any Congressional District where Dean scores 15% of the vote. Even if we get, say, 8% in one state, we still score delegates if it's 15% in a CD.

And not all these races are primaries, either. North Dakota is a caucus. Governor Dean drew over 500 to a North Dakota rally just a few months ago. We can do well there if we just show up.

Also, ignore the spin. This is last-gasp time for Lieberman, Sharpton, Edwards, and Clark -- not us. If Lieberman gets shut-out, if Sharpton or Edwards can't win South Carolina, and if Clark can't win Oklahoma, they're gone. That's OK -- it brings the one-on-one contest with Kerry closer. And if any of these candidates scores a breakthrough tomorrow that's also good, because it slows Kerry's momentum.

We don't have to win. So if we do win anywhere it's huge. And we have a great organization, especially in the Hispanic communities, in New Mexico and Arizona. We've got a ton of fans in North Dakota. We've been organizing Delaware. (I hope I'm not leaving anyone out.) Just remember, tomorrow is about delegates, not ultimate victory.

Let's get some delegates. Remember the 15% solution. Better days are coming.

Sunday, February 01, 2004

 

SPECIAL interest Kerry

posted by Dana at Sunday, February 01, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Since Tuesday many people on this blog (and the o-blog) have been suggesting what issue will knock John Kerry down, and give our guy another shot at winning this thing.

We’ve had fair charges (Dukakis-Kerry) and unproven charges (Botox-Kerry). We’ve had irrelevant charges (Ketchup-Kerry) and relevant ones (Waffler-Kerry).

But the only judge who counts, Howard Dean, has spoken, on Meet The Press this morning. The winning entry is (drum roll)… Special Interest Kerry.


Pictured (so as not to annoy the good people of Kellogg, in Battle Creek, Michigan, site of a primary this Saturday) is a failed extension of the “Special K” line. (The original product is delicious. I have some in my pantry right now.) Kerry, like the product pictured, will, if chosen, fail in the market.

To be effective a charge must not only be true, it must play into existing doubts about a candidate. This charge does, because it shows that Kerry, like Bush, says one thing and does the opposite. He’s as phony as a “compassionate conservative.”

Here is the story on which the charge is based, which in turn is based on a simple analysis of campaign finance records.


While Senator John Kerry regularly promises to stand up to "big corporations," his campaign has taken money from executives on Wall Street and those representing the telecommunications industry, which is under his purview in Congress. Mr. Kerry denounces President Bush for catering to the rich, but he has depended more heavily on affluent donors than the other leading Democrats except for another populist, Senator John Edwards.


But wait, there’s more:

Mr. Kerry has criticized the current "creed of greed" and faulted Mr. Bush letting "the privileged ride high and reap the rewards." But his typical donors share at least one similarity with the president's, an ability to give $2,000, the legal maximum.

Fifty-five percent of Mr. Kerry's money has come from donors giving $2,000. For Mr. Bush, the comparable figure is 73 percent, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

The center's analysis shows that small donors, those giving $200 or less, have provided 12 percent of Mr. Kerry's campaign money, the same percentage they provided for Mr. Bush.

So, can John Kerry make the most important case of this campaign, namely that George W. Bush is beholden to special interests and a Democratic President won’t be?

The answer is he cannot. He will be taken apart by the Bush machine, plucked like a chicken. He is the easiest candidate for George W. Bush to beat, not the hardest.

The hardest is the man who has gotten his money from people like you, and thus is only beholden to people like you.

If Democrats are serious about winning, and serious about making a difference, the candidate they must choose, starting in Wisconsin, is Governor Howard Dean. It’s now up to us to make this case in every way, and every place, we possibly can.

Saturday, January 31, 2004

 

Trippi Still Working After NH Concession Speech

posted by Heath at Saturday, January 31, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
DeanTVTrippi.JPG

What a warrior.

 

It's a Ground War http://dean.postersforamerica.com

posted by Editor at Saturday, January 31, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The bat is still swinging, but the campaign doesn't have the money for an air war in the next seven states. To pick up delegates, we need a ground war from the grassroots. The grassroots built this campaign, and they can do it again, this weekend - help show that you still support Howard Dean. Pick a pre-designed sign or easily create your own:


 

One-on-One

posted by Dana at Saturday, January 31, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
What makes Roy Neel so confident Howard Dean can come back?

First, there is us. We may not be able to win a primary by ourselves, but we can certainly keep Dr. Dean from meeting Howard's End. With $1.4 million on the bat, with thousands of activists in every February 3 state, we may not win any but we won't be shut out of delegates.

Second, there is the math facing General Clark, and Senator Edwards. They're from the South, they have to do well there. If the Massachusetts Senator smokes them in places like Oklahoma, Arizona and South Carolina, their funds are going to dry up faster than water on a hot griddle. At that point, he expects, the networks will point at Sharpton, Lieberman and Kucinich, then point to the door. (If Clark or Edwards pulls a surprise Tuesday, by the way, good for our side, because it slows Kerry's mometum.)

Third, of course, Neel is aiming for the small table. That's where the late debates are often held, around a small table. Even if there's no table, the rules are adjusted, so candidates can no longer rely on their stump speeches and have to think on their feet.

This is where Howard Dean will shine through. Consider how well he did on Hardball after the Thursday debate? Fifteen minutes of fast back-and-forth on Iraq, he talked as rapidly as the hosts, and he finished with his very best point -- the enemy of my enemy may not be my friend, he's my enemy. Devastating.

Kerry can't survive in that kind of hothouse. Dean will tear him apart. Neel is depending on that, and I think he's right.

Friday, January 30, 2004

 

Roy's Mis-speak http://blog.deanforamerica.com/archives/003471.html

posted by Dana at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I get what Roy Neel is saying.

We don't have to win Tuesday. We don't even have to win the following Saturday.

If we just hang around, picking up delegates where we can, and saving all that money coming in off the bat, we can get Kerry all alone, starting around Wisconsin, and most delegates will still be unchosen.

In other words, we're to become the "anti-Kerry."

Fine. Good. Wonderful. But does he have to put it this way:



we have elected to not buy television advertisements in February 3 states, but instead direct our resources toward the February 7 and 8 contests in Michigan, Washington and Maine. We may not win any February 3 state, but even third place finishes will allow us to move forward, continue to amass delegates in Virginia and Tennessee on February 10, and then strongly challenge Kerry in Wisconsin.



When he could just as easily have put it this way:



We have decided to fully empower our grassroots supporters through February 17. We believe you will keep us competitive while other candidates falter.

This has always been your campaign and, for the next true weeks, that will literally be the case. We believe you can shock the world, that with your hard work we can turn this race around, and that we can dominate the delegate selection process from Wisconsin onward.

You have the tools, you have the enthusiasm, you have the will to take this party back and take this country back.

Let's go get 'em!



The first is the language of a Washington insider, writing for the punditocracy. The second is the language of a general directing his troops toward the next big battle and forward toward ultimate victory. The first could have gone off in an e-mail to the Washington press corps. We need something more.

With all the pundits now writing us off, what we need from our general most right now is a pep talk. It doesn't have to sound like Joe Trippi. We know Joe Trippi. We love Joe Trippi. Roy Neel is no Joe Trippi.

Sigh. I guess I just miss ol' Joe.

 

The Misunderstanding of Judy Dean http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4066284/

posted by Christopher at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
For those who haven't seen this, Gersh Kuntzman over at Newsweek/MSNBC writes a very complimentary article on Judith Steinberg Dean. It's just one more reason I have so much respect for both Howard and Judith Steinberg Dean. When I read this, I thought "finally, somebody gets it." This isn't some sort of slick media play to attract points. Howard and Judy are real people. Vermonters know this and understand who they are - I think many of the people who have become involved in this campaign appreciate a "real person" running for president. Howard and Judy Dean are certainly real people - good and bad together. Capable of doing great things, and capable of making mistakes and moving on.

I'm tired of demanding "the right look" for president. I want a President and First Lady with substance and self-awareness. I thought this article just reflected so well on Judy - and it says something positive about Howard's character that he picked such a woman to be his partner.

"In what is supposedly an enlightened age for women, we in the media should be celebrating Dean's independence, not questioning it. Shouldn't it be refreshing to meet a woman who'd prefer to be a doctor than gazing longingly from the edge of the stage as her husband delivers the seventh identical stump speech of the day? (And how come all of my supposedly gifted media colleagues missed the irony of an independent, modern woman, who nonetheless has one foot in that bygone age of doctors who make house calls? That alone should have won her points.)"

In The Interview, Mrs. Dean again showed us her humility, her professionalism, her dedication, her...what's that word?...her integrity (I almost forgot the word because it's such a rare sight on television). Every time Dean opened her mouth, I found myself hoping that my daughter grows up to be Judith Steinberg Dean.

Yet the more she spoke, the more "sins" she rang up.

"I don't watch TV that much," she said. Diane was visibly upset.

"I am kind of private...and I have a medical practice which I love," she said later. "And I think it's really important for me, and Howard knows it's important to me. But, I also love Howard, and I think he would make a terrific president...And, I think if I can help him, I will. And that doesn't mean he's going to disrupt my life, disrupt my patients, my son, but if he calls on a Saturday, and I'm not on call that weekend, I'll be out there Sunday." Imagine that, a husband and wife who support each other's careers. Diane was skeptical."

The interview goes on like this. At any rate, thought I'd share it with all of you... and three cheers for Judy!




 

The Biggest Bush Fraud Of All

posted by Dana at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Time out for an issue vital to the 2004 Electoral Finals, namely the economy.

The Bush Administration claims everything is lovely. They base this on two quarters’ GDP growth, which itself is based heavily on rising stock prices.

Prices are up from a year ago, as much as 20%. But the fact that is being hidden is that the value of the dollar is also down, by an equal (sometimes greater) amount.

This does not just mean a European vacation is out of the question. It also means that foreign investments in our economy are, despite the rising stock market, actually falling in value. Japanese, Chinese, Arab, and European investors are all losing money on their dollar investments.

Now consider that both our trade and budget deficits are largely funded by foreigners. China’s purchases of dollars are the biggest “seller financing” deal of all time. (We get stuff, they get dollars, they don’t change those dollars into Chinese currency.) It won’t continue if the value of those dollars keeps declining.

Consider too that for generations the dollar has been a “reserve currency.” Oil is priced in dollars, and our government pays for the national debt in dollars. This is an advantage enjoyed by no one else. Every economic collapse in the developing world, whether in Asia, Africa or Argentina, is tied to their currency’s fall in value against the dollar. Their loans were in dollars, their currency fell against the dollar, so no matter how much they paid back, they owed more and more. No other nation, other than ours, can actually finance its debts by just printing more money.

That is about to change. Oil exporters won’t take dollars forever if those dollars turn to water in their hands. Bankers won’t lend us dollars forever if those dollars turn to water, either.

At some point, maybe this year, Russia or Saudi Arabia could start demanding oil payments in something more stable, say, Euros. As the Euro becomes a “reserve currency” our economic power wanes permanently. So does our economic independence. Our best companies, even our land, can all be had on the cheap.

A falling dollar fuels higher interest rates, higher prices, and falling real incomes, even if things seem OK in the short term. George W. Bush did this deliberately. A falling dollar makes our exports cheaper, and imports more expensive. It’s short-term gain for long-term pain. He hopes to keep the scam going through, say, November.

There is only one Democrat who has called Bush and Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan on this fraud. That Democrat is Howard Dean.

The question for America today is this? Are you going to let Bush get away with this fraud as well?

No? So what are you doing TODAY to make sure he doesn’t?

 

Diane Sawyer Gets Religion http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/news/012904_nw_dean_scream_abcnews.html

posted by Amanda at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
A quick post -- courtesy of John and Tom on the Zonkboard -- about Diane Sawyer's recent (yesterday) review of the media's treatment of the "I Have a Scream" speech.

In short, Diane gets many network bigwigs to admit that they blew it way out of proportion and didn't put the speech in context -- i.e. Dean had to shout to be heard over the roar of 3000+ supporters. A fact that many of us who were there, including many reporters, knew all along.

A rare case indeed to have the mainstream media admit they made a big blunder. Perhaps we should write this date on our calendars...

Read the story here; watch the segment here.

 

February 3 Is Up To Us

posted by Dana at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I wish Roy Neel had said this more explicitly. But the message seems clear to me nonetheless, and it should be clear to you.

The Dean campaign is going to put its ad money into the February 7 states with the most delegates. February 3 belongs to the grassroots.

I know we "failed" in Iowa, and in New Hampshire. But I have a theory on that.

We were too thick on the ground. We tried too hard. We put too many chips on "red" and, when we didn't win outright, we looked like losers.

Not just Dean. But Dean Nation.

Well this weekend is our chance for redemption. If you live in Missouri, Arizona, New Mexico, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Delaware, or North Dakota, we are all depending on you this weekend.

The Web site has the tools. Voting has begun in most of those states. You can be bringing people to the polls NOW. You can be distributing literature, you can be launching phone trees, you can be e-mailing links to things like Common Sense

You can even, if you choose, add your own negative talking points. It's not being done by Dean for America. It's up to you.

If the grassroots can turn out a better-than-expected showing, if they can win only one or two of these states with no help from Burlington, then the story of February 3 will be about our power, and how Kerry failed.

Get to work, people. You have four days to turn America around.

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Transcript: Democratic Candidates Debate in South Carolina

Kerry not unstoppable, analysts say

The Dead Center

Gwen Ifill speaks with former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean

Howard Dean is visiting Michigan

Democrats vow to roll back Bush tax cuts

 

Face Facts

posted by Trammell at Friday, January 30, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Let us face some facts.

1). This race is not over.

2). Even if Dean loses the nod, our movement is not over.

3). If indeed Dean loses the nod, we, WE, must keep this movement alive.

4). If Kerry gets the nod, his first test of leadership is to bring us in. I predict he might fail -- but if that happens (and I think we still could win -- and will, I pray) I hope he is successful. However, I doubt his leadership. Despite his Vietnam record, this man is a whiny coward (in my view) and that concerns me -- greatly. Much.

5). If, somehow, we do not get the nod (and we may not) I beg of thee -- we must, at all costs, keep this movement alive. We ARE the...

Fiscally Responsible Progressive Wing of the Democratic Party

And yes, Kerry-Heinz, I'll consider leaving ya'll behind -- yes, an unswaying stalwart Dem like me....will do nothing more than vote for you -- you want us Dean folks to lift a finger for you? Overture, overture, again......make it good.

Overture, and sing, sing, sing. A promise or two would help.


Finally, speaking of "electability" -- Dems are having some suicidal thoughts, I guess. Dean, the Leftish Reagan Wild Card, is the ONLY one who could win (except maybe Edwards).

We must fight ever and harder and more relentlessly than ever.

Do you wanna volunteer for Kerry?

Exactly. The time is now, do what you can -- this could, be, perhaps, the only moment in our lives to Take Back America!

What can, what will, you do?

As I've stated in other posts on different topics:

NOW, FOLKS: IT-IS-TIME

We can win this, if you, YOU! -- will do all YOU can do.

Thursday, January 29, 2004

 

Trippi Interview http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3910275/

posted by Editor at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Joe Trippi will be interviewed by Deborah Norville tonight at 9 pm EST on MSNBC.

UPDATE (Matt): Trippi will also be on Hardball tomorrow night. It should be noted in the Governor's post on the O-Blog that he hoped Trippi will later decide to return to the campaign as a strategic advisor.

UPDATE (Matt): Elegant, classy, honest, all around wonderful. Trippi says, "I love the grassroots," he still called the movement "we," he was clearly emotional about leaving but not at all bitter. He still says he firmly believes Dean will win and that this campaign is the nation's "last chance" to get things right. I remember the nights in the early campaign when I would get personal e-mails from Joe. I was amazed how someone in his position would actually respond to my individual thoughts. He impressed me so much then; he continues to impress me now.

 

Open Thread: SC Debate

posted by Editor at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

Go nuts...

Here's hoping for a turnaround...

 

Grassroots Reacts to Changes @ DFA http://www.here-now.org/shows/2004/01/20040129_2.asp

posted by Amanda at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Just in case folks missed it, DN's own Anna Brosovic, along with Colorado Deaner Tony Thompson, appeared on WBUR Radio's "Here & Now" earlier today. WBUR is the flagship NPR news station in Boston.

Here's the link. (Click on the LISTEN button -- segment begins about 4:30 minutes in).

Way to get media in Kerryland, guys -- and excellent job!

 

media visibility crusade - on the cheap

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Here is how Dean can immediately get exposure in the Feb 3rd states without expensive ad buys:

  1. get on local talk radio. His Hannity appearance was excellent, and I heard he appeared on Hannity's TV show with Colmes last night to follow up. Deliberately target conservative media - that makes Dean look unafraid to challenge the right wing and also gets him broader access. Plus what other candidate is sticking it to the wingnuts? Certainly not Mr. Front Runner.

  2. Target national daytime television. Someone suggested Oprah (with both Howard and Judy!), other good avenues are Rosie O'Donnell and the Wayne Brady show. Lots of undecided voters are captive audiences at home during the day, and an informal apearance can give him a chance to make an appeal based on his record of accomplishment. It's those ordinary people watching TV at home that disproportionately are feeling the pain of the Bush economy and are wondering what these Democrats are doing for them.

  3. Stump in South Carolina with Jesse Jackson Jr and with Al Gore. Spend a whole day there talking to local church communities. Attend a service in Sunday and give out a yell for God.

  4. Target Hispanic media like Unavision - there must be daytime talk shows on the Hispanic networks where Dean can appear. Is Dean fluent in Spanish? If so, hold the entire interview in that language. If not, ask someone from Latinos for Dean to appear with him on the show.

  5. Get on late-night television. Dean should do at two of the following shows: Saturday Night Live, Late Show with Conan O'Brien, Letterman, Leno. Avoid cable talk shows since it's a more limited market (though do take up Chris Matthews on his open invitation to Dean for HardBall)

  6. Run grassroots-created ads on basic cable channels - USA Network and TNT for example are cheaper to buy ads on than primetime television, and they reach as many viewers. Launch a new bat dedicated to funding this effort. Use the best ideas from Project Deanlight and Switch2Dean in their entirety without any edits or changes - just dump them on those markets.



This should keep his visibility high in the Feb 3 round and sustain momentum into Feb 7th. After Feb 3rd, though, he needs to spend all his time in the Feb 7th states to be on the ground making his case in all the local media (including making a direct pitch to the various newspaper editorial boards asking for their endorsement).

On Feb 4th, Dean needs to attend a meetup in Ann Arbor. Make it the biggest meetup ever - let's shatter the old New York record. Hey Michigan for dean, are you listening? Bombard Burlington with invites now, you guys! Send two people to drive to campaign HQ and camp out waiting for Dean to invite him in person!

After Feb 7th, he needs to maintain his visibility:


  1. Appear on The West Wing on NBC by having Martin Sheen throw his weight around.

  2. Blog interviews. Dean needs to conduct a telephone interview with Daily Kos, Liberal Oasis, Atrios, and Blogging of the President. Dean also needs to take the time to personally answer the Dean Nation Interview Questions.

  3. Work together with MoveOn.org to utilize the best ideas of some of the ad winners from their recent Bush in 30 Seconds contest. Gore can help make a case for this and Rob Reiner can edit the films, along with recruiting the actual producers of the home-grown submitted films themselves. Put Heath Eiden and Karl Frisch in charge!

  4. More late-night television - finish off the ones he didn't get to before Feb 3rd.



what else? Remember he has to be on the ground between Feb 3rd and 7th in Michigan and Wisconsin. IMHO it's a waste of his time to go stumping on foot before Feb 3rd, anywhere, because voter memory is short and voter fatigue will be high. If he maintains the media visibility campaign as suggested above then he can swoop in to the Feb 7th states and capitalize on the momentum. And that leaves the time before Feb 3rd to do the other things suggested above that are more unorthodox.

And note how the laundry list above relies heavily on contacts and endorsers and netroots supporters. That is by design. More suggestions along those lines are needed.

UPDATE: added some more bullet items. Keep the ideas flowing in comments!

 

get Jesse Jackson and Al Gore to South Carolina with Dean

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
We need to be visible in South Carolina - and Gore and Jackson need to pull their weight. We don't need to win SC, but we MUST show up. Dean is the oinly candidate with a credible claim to appeal to the black vote, but repudiating SC will send the wrong symbolic message. Discuss.

UPDATE: and of course, get Bill Bradley out there in Michigan! Where are the endorsers?!

 

General McClellan

posted by Dana at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions


A reporter called me to ask about Trippi. It’s part of the “picking of the bones” process.

While we were talking an analogy occurred to me, from the first Civil War. (I credit Vietnam as the second.) It came in historian Shelby Foote’s praise of George McClellan, the Union General fired in 1862. “He really built that Army,” Foote said, and much of what that Army did afterward was a tribute to McClellan.

No analogy is perfect. Trippi combined much of McClellan’s organizational brilliance with the imperfections of generals who succeeded him, like Ambrose Burnside and Joe Hooker. Trippi fought, hard, but the costs exceeded results in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Dean lacks the luxury of the years Lincoln spent in finding Grant. He also needs someone with Lee’s tactical brilliance – Grant really won by grinding the opponent down through superior forces.

And what of Roy Neel? I know him best from my work on the technology beat, where he ran the US Telephone Association during the boom. Yes, he’s an insider, but we need one now. He’ll be the first to tell you he ain’t Robert E. Lee.

But this is not a time for fighting. This is a time to make a case. And the case is there to be made. John Kerry was Michael Dukakis’ Lieutenant Governor, he is Teddy Kennedy’s junior Senator, he has never run anything bigger than a Senate office, he’s a defensive politician at a time that calls for offense. He is yesterday’s man. The last really courageous thing he did was throw away his medals at a VVAW rally. The definition of insanity is to repeatedly do the same thing and expect a different result. Kerry is the same thing.



Right now Democrats need to play offense, not defense. They need an executive, not a legislator. They need someone new, not someone old, borrowed or blue. When it comes to true electability and the personal qualities the nation needs there is just no comparison. Dean was making this case last week in New Hampshire. Neel can press it.

Most of us, meanwhile, are clear on who and what we’re working for. We’re working on making Howard Dean our President, for to take this country back from the idiots now in charge of it. It’s the Union, not the General, who matters to us foot soldiers.

Your orders, General Neel?

 

Where we stand http://www.notgeniuses.com/archives/001618.html

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Go read this (lengthy email) from a Dean supporter, to a Dean supporter, that bluntly and frankly discusses where we stand. It makes a rational and principled case for why we need to continue and persevere, without any rose-colored Kool Aid drinking whatsoever. Read it in full.

 

NYT on Trippi departure http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/29/politics/campaign/29DEAN.html?ex=1390712400&en=1661d9184fa00c75&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This is the definitive article so far on the Trippi departure, including some hints that the shakeup wasn't as smooth as it appeared beneath the surface. I'm really just posting it for completeness, but I've decided to focus forward from here.

UPDATE: well, I guess I should state my opinion on the matter. I agree with the assessment that Trippi is a brilliant tactician - but a terrible strategist. (definitions here and here). Trppi recognized the potential of the netroots, and his contribution was to let it breathe freely and grow on its own. But he never really tapped into it for ideas. The O-blog contributes nothing to strategy, unlike here at Dean Nation where all we talk about is strategy. But the only idea that they ever ran with was embracing Meetup after we promoted it. And even that embrace ultimately fizzled down to just crowing about the number registered; ask yourself - why wasn't Dean at the Iowa or NH meetup before the primaries?

If the campaign was an internet startup, then Trippi was the brilliant CEO who founded the company. But the campaign has grown far beyond that stage, and we need someone with experience on the grown-up, experienced side of the fence. I'm very pleased at the choice of Neel and I think the timing was overdue.

 

Dean's Money Advantage Dwindles http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58369-2004Jan28.html?nav=hptop_ts

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The money situation is indeed tight. Still no confirmation of the $5m rumor, but it is clear that the campaign overspent in Iowa and New Hampshire. Given that we are entering a media-centered phase of the campaign, this is a bad thing. This WaPo article sheds a lot of information on how the fiscal issue affects the primary strategy for Feb 3rd and 7th:

Rivals including front-runner John F. Kerry are buying TV ads in South Carolina and other states holding primaries or caucuses Tuesday, but the former Vermont governor has chosen to forgo further advertising in this round, focusing instead on the Feb. 7 caucuses in Michigan and Washington state, campaign officials said. The decision marks a notable shift in fortunes for an innovative candidate who revolutionized fundraising via the Internet and led all Democrats in 2003 by collecting nearly $41 million.

"Clearly his decision to spend heavily in New Hampshire was at the expense of not spending in Arizona, New Mexico and South Carolina," said Evan Tracey of TNSMI/Campaign Media Analysis Group, which tracks media expenditures. "You are essentially leaving the paid media field to your opponents."
[...]
Dean, according to campaign aides, has calculated that he can remain credible by picking up enough votes to win some delegates in the Feb. 3 states, even without renewed advertising or a first-place finish.

Dean expects to run strongly in Michigan and Washington, a Dean aide said. What's more, in contrast to primary contests that require heavy spending on TV ads, caucuses involve more ground-level work, such as identifying supporters and getting them to caucus sites. Much of this work can be performed by volunteers, enabling a candidate to preserve cash.

Dean must win some contests in the next two weeks "or he'll have trouble raising money in the future," said Steve Weissman, associate director of the Campaign Finance Institute, a nonpartisan group based in Washington.
[...]
Kerry, the winner in Iowa and New Hampshire, has bought TV time in all seven Feb. 3 states. He also is enjoying the wave of free news coverage that accompanies front-runner status.

"I don't think everybody has the capacity to fight in every state," said Dean campaign chair Steve Grossman. "We are going to use our resources wisely." Dean, he said, "must win a state somewhere" by Feb. 7.

 

media navel-gazing http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58426-2004Jan28_2.html

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The media discovers it has the power to affect people's opinions. In other news, Diane Sawyer followed up on her "Dean aren't you really a raging lunatic? Judy, Isn't Dean a manic psycho?" interview by conducting an investigation into the Dean Rebel Yell coverage. She concludes that the coverage was unfair. I'm sure the New Hampshire voters are paying attention.

These attacks made Dean stronger. I don't hold a grudge in that sense - and I want Kerry to undergo the same trial by fire so he too becomes stronger. I only object to the media's sudden interest in meta-analysis. Drop the pretense, guys, and go for your narratives of the hour. We'll cope... and win.

 

voters are rational actors

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
As I posted yesterday, it's tempting to take shots at Kerry. But drawing all the contrasts in the world between Kerry's legislative record and Dean's executive one wont change the simple fact that Kerry won Iowa and NH fair and square. Telling Democrats who have chosen Kerry that they are fools, or dittoheads is not going to help our cause.

Worse, it might damage it. The last thing we need is to re-entrench the perception of Dean as attracting idoelogical crazies and cultists who sneer down their noses at the average Joe. I'm strictly a "People are rational actors" guy.

Lets focus on telling the campaign what they should do right to draw people, not telling people what they are doing wrong to get them to switch. There are a lot of other oters out there who are uncommitted who are more fertile ground for Dean's ideas than the soft support that switched to Kerry.

Forget Kerry. Forget Trippi. Focus on Dean, and how to get this campaign back on message so it's the same one that all of reading this blog were drawn to last year.

 

open thread

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 29, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
decompress!

Wednesday, January 28, 2004

 

TMS Continues Ad Effort http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4089404/

posted by Editor at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
MSNBC: "The ad team of McMahon and Mark Squier will remain on the campaign, but they have been told to build a broader ad team that includes creative input from Hollywood and New York specialists to produce better spots, a senior official said on condition of anonymity."

I'm not sure this is a good idea. Thoughts?

 

ABC News: Dean Machine Shake-Up http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/Politics/WorldNewsTonight/Dean_Campaign_Changes_040128-1.html

posted by Editor at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
ABC News has an interesting story on the Trippi removal. Selections:
In an emotional meeting with members of the Burlington, Vt.-based staff this afternoon, Trippi thanked them for their hard work and vowed to continue to fight for Dean's candidacy.

Dean was in the room and acknowledged Trippi but the two did not shake hands, according to a staff member who was present.

...

Trippi ruled the campaign's organization with an iron fist, hiring political and field staffers — many of them quite young — who were loyal to him. In the process, he clashed with members of the Vermont guard loyal to Dean, like Kate O'Connor, Dean's longtime aide, and Bob Rogan, the campaign's deputy chief of staff.

...

Dean was said by several sources who are close to him to have been very upset by what happened in Iowa, and blamed Trippi's staff, in part, for being disorganized and for running poor-quality television advertisements.

Dean and Trippi also had disagreements over spending. Dean is very tight with his budgets and would often veto ideas Trippi proposed.

The relationship between Dean and Trippi has been somewhat strained in the intervening week, according to sources loyal to both Trippi and Dean.

Dean limited Trippi's role in New Hampshire, told him to return to Burlington, stay off television, and the candidate essentially transferred the campaign's executive authority to his New Hampshire state director, Karen Hicks.

...

 
posted by Editor at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
From Dean for America...
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 28, 2004

Statements by Governor Howard Dean and Joe Trippi


BURLINGTON--Dean for America released the following statements tonight:

Democratic presidential candidate Governor Howard Dean, M.D., issued the following statement:


"I am deeply grateful to Joe Trippi, who has decided to leave the campaign. Joe has made enormous contributions not just to our campaign but to American politics -- revolutionizing the way in which people are brought into the democratic process and helping hundreds of thousands of people to believe in political change again.

"I am pleased to announce that Roy Neel will be relocating to Burlington to assume the position of Chief Executive Officer of the campaign effective immediately. Roy brings enormous experience both in management and national politics. He will be an invaluable resource to our campaign.

"Last night the people of New Hampshire reaffirmed that their strong support for change and for a campaign based on standing up for what is right and delivering results not rhetoric.

"This campaign is a marathon not a sprint. I am committed to carrying our campaign through the coming weeks to primaries and caucuses all across the country. We will continue to offer the Democratic Party a candidacy based on courage and conviction and a campaign based on hope, not fear.

"This campaign is about all of us. I am grateful for what we have done together so far but our work is far from done. Now we must redouble our efforts, not simply to win the nomination but to change America."



* * *


Dean for America Campaign Manager Joe Trippi released the following statement:


"Dear Friends,

"The Governor has asked Roy Neel to come in as CEO of the campaign, and I have resigned as campaign manager.

"I've always believed that the most important thing was to change our country and our politics.

"I'm proud of all of you and the work we have done together. I may be out of the campaign but I’m not out of the fight.

"Don't give up -- stay with Howard Dean's cause to change America.

"Thank you.

"Joe Trippi"

-- 30 --

 

Shakeup http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040128/D80C37DG1.html

posted by Editor at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

MSNBC is reporting that campaign manager Joe Trippi has been reassigned. Gore's Roy Neel to take over campaign.

Developing story... Click link above for initial story. Thanks to Mike on the zonk board for the link.

UPDATE (Aziz): another link just posted with a lot more information. Here's info on Neel:

Neel, Gore's former senatorial chief of staff, served as chief executive of the U.S. Telecom Association in Washington before working on Gore's 2000 presidential campaign. Neel was named to head Gore's transition team in anticipation of the former vice president winning the White House.


sources say that Dean asked Trippi to stay on the payroll, but Trippi decided to leave. "I may be out of the campaign, but I'm not out of the fight," Trippi was quoted as saying.

UPDATE (MATT B): Here is the O-Blog posting on Neel from 1/7/2004.

 

audio: Dean on Sean Hannity show (1/28/04) http://abcrad.wmod.llnwd.net/a49/external/0102cABAAHQAAAAcDle6yKhvE1c0LnEJnNwFajD8QD92LOnSD/hannity/dean012704.wma

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I have to say, that Dean's apearance on Hannity last night (after Kucinich, who also went on TV later that evening) was fantastic. Hannity endorsed Dean, claiming he'd be defeated against Bush, and Dean used the Reagan analogy, which was a brilliant counterstroke. Dean managed to meet Hannity on almost every point with a better answer straight from his stump speeches.

The man was made for talk radio. He needs to get out there NOW. We need him on the Chris Baker show here in Houston. weneed him on YOUR local talk radio, also - chime in and list your local conservative radio hosts wo fantasize that the are the next Hannity or Limbaugh. Let's get Dean on the shows!

 Dean on the Sean Hannity show

 

Should Dean compete for Feb 3? http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Politics/ap20040128_1138.html

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This ABC article details the difference of opinion in the campaign today about strategy. Dean wants to carry on to the Feb 3 states, and his staff is against the idea, preferring to lie low (as Chris Suellentrop speculates in Slate). What do you think? open thread ...

 

Gored http://www.cjr.org/blog/archives/cat_distortion.asp#000063

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
via Campaign Desk:

Most of the questions asked in the official exit poll for the New Hampshire primary today are routine: Are you liberal or conservative, black or white, male or female, and, by the way, how did you vote?

But then out of nowhere comes this sucker punch: "Regardless of how you voted today, do you think Howard Dean has the temperament to serve effectively as president?" No other questions about specific candidates were asked.
[...]
Reading from an official statement, a harried spokesperson for the National Election Pool, a consortium of ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, Fox and the AP that administered the poll, told Campaign Desk: "Dean's temperament has been much discussed throughout the campaign. He fell from a significant lead in New Hampshire. Did questions about his temperament after the Iowa speech contribute to that? The exit poll would be remiss if it didn't try to find out."

The spokeswoman stressed that because this was an exit poll, it wouldn't affect New Hampshire's results. She's wrong; the very existence of the question, first reported this afternoon by Howard Kurtz at WashingtonPost.com, could well sway late voters.

More important, what about South Carolinians, Missourians, Arizonans, and all the rest who have yet to vote? Even if few startled New Hampshire voters answer "no" to that loaded question, it seems certain to make news -- and to supply ammunition to Dean opponents.

 

Trippi in trouble? http://www.sevendaysvt.com/insidetrack/

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
An article from Seven Days VT has some pretty astonishing gossip from inside sources in Dean's campaign:

Seven Days has learned that the disaster in Hawkeye Country last week caused a major realignment of Dean for America’s campaign hierarchy. Sources tell Seven Days that Campaign Manager Joe Trippi, the colorful Internet whiz who led the longshot Vermonter’s meteoric rise, has had his own wings plucked.

Dr. Dean, sources say, has taken control of the campaign checkbook from the Trippster and handed it to Deputy Campaign Manager Bob Rogan.

Rogan once served on Dean’s gubernatorial staff, before leaving for a management job at Vermont’s largest electric utility. He came back last year for the presidential bid. Now he and longtime Dean aide Kate O’Connor are steering the Dean campaign warship. There are clear indications that if Dean limps on after New Hampshire, Joltin’ Joe Trippi will be gone.

So, too, will Trippi’s Washington, D.C., consulting firm Trippi, McMahon & Squier. Steve McMahon has been producing Howard Dean for Governor TV commercials for a decade. The spots he did for Ho-Ho in Iowa are cited by grumbling Dean supporters as a factor in Dean’s poor showing there.


Frankly, the few ads I have seen were terrible. And I have been long incomfortable with the seeming conflict of interest in having TMS do the ads when the T was also the campaign manager. How could an objective decision get made in that scenario about the quality of the ads? This is all the more critical since we have entered the media-centric phase of the campaign.

But should Joe take the blame for the Iowa and NH losses? I don't know. Joe deserves credit for the Internet aspect of things but we all know that the campaign needs to grow beyond that - while keeping its character intact. In Iowa, the campaign did grow out into the real world, but it became something unrecognizable in the process.

Another issue that needs to be addressed is the burn rate. Yes, Dean has raised more money than anyone else - but how has it been spent? On orange hats? Trippi's strategy was always to concentrate on Iowa and NH for the win and coast to victory. And I did get the feeling that fundraising was indeed being taken almost for granted (and this is the real reason why the mailing list memberships have hit a plateau.)

Campaign staff shakeups are common to all the other campaigns - most notably front-runner Kerry. I don't know enough to have an opinion on whether Joe deserves the axe for Iowa and NH. If anything, I'm biased against it out of sheer personality admiration. But winning is more important. What do you think?

 

forget Kerry - it's domestic policy, stupid

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
There's all sorts of juicy things you could sink your teeth into about Kerry - like this telling anecdote from Chris Suellentrop in Slate:

In Manchester, Kerry gave a touching speech about the importance of veterans and of "keeping faith with those who wore the uniform." As soon as it was over, a woman stood up and said, I'm not a veteran. What are you going to do for the average person? At a firehouse in Hampton yesterday, a man told Kerry that he thinks it's unfair that people say a New Englander can't connect with people from varying backgrounds. And to prove that you can do it, he says, explain the importance of the icon on my hat. Kerry is mystified. "The Latin? The Ten?" he asks. Malcolm X, the man explains.


But the simple fact is that the race between Dean and Kerry is about Dean. We need to draw people to Dean first. Most of Kerry's support is relatively new, and part of the reason Dean lost support in Iowa was because he went negative. Let Clark (and Lehane) focus their fire on Kerry - but and emphasise that Dean not only knows what the X means, but he's got Jesse Jackson Jr. to vouch for it.

All those endorsements are garbage unless they are leveraged. We need simple commercials - Jesse Jackson Jr. Talking frankly about Dean and race, Gore talking frankly about Dean and Iraq - and Dean himself talking about what he has to offer, his success with Dr. Dynasaur and Success by Six. It's the domestic polcy, stupid.

Forget about Bush Lied and 16 words. Focus instead on the plight of our veterans who have to buy their own plane tickets home on leave and how their benefits are being drastically cut.

Forget about the federal deficit and talk about the raised property taxes which negate the "middle class tax cut" (say it with the sneer quotes). Mention payroll tax cuts.

Dean often talks about how Americans feel left out of the political process. He needs to start showing those people how their concerns are being addressed. It's not about Iraq or deficits or any other long-range national issues. It's about the here and now. It's about consistent job loss. It;s about corporate tax breaks as a reward for moving workers overseas. It's not about the big picture, it's about the facts on the ground.

And the voters will make the distinction between Dean and Kerry on their own, inexorably, inevitably.

Is the campaign listening anymore? I don't know. Joe Trippi hasn't left a comment on Dean Nation in many long months. The official blog remains an echo chamber of motivational speeches and dry logistical coordinating info. I don't know if they even remember we are here. But we are here, and we need to make noise, and fight to get our campaign back on track.

 

tv ads open thread

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
let this one be just for your TV ideas...

 

Winning On Electability

posted by Dana at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Here is what killed us last night.

New Hampshire Democrats bought the idea that the Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party is, by definition, its more liberal wing, thus its least-electable wing.

Kerry beat us among moderates, and he pounded us on electability.

Over the next week we're going to get a lot of help in taking him down. The media is going to provide much of it. Kerry was Michael Dukakis' Lieutenant Governor. His voting record is more liberal than Teddy Kennedy's. He has never held executive office. Etc. etc. etc.

Wesley Clark and John Edwards are going to help us in this. They are going to direct all their fire on Kerry. This is a good thing.

Governor Dean's ads, meanwhile, are going to start sounding more like the speeches he gave last week in New Hampshire. Overtly or not, they will make the points I made here last night. We are going to run to Kerry's right, on Dean's record, and take back the moderates.

It then becomes crucial that the anti-Kerry vote not go to Clark or Edwards, and that we take the "electability" issue back as well.

That will be even easier.

Start with extravagant praise. John Edwards is a great lawyer, what we wouldn't give to see him as Attorney General instead of John Ashcroft. Wesley Clark is a great military thinker, what we wouldn't give to see him as Defense Secretary instead of Donald Rumsfeld. And Joe Lieberman, wouldn't he make a great Chief Justice when William Rehnquist retires?

But none of these men, as worthy as they are, has any more chance of being elected President in November than Al Sharpton or Dennis Kucinich.

At some point this spring, they will all run through the $45 million they are allowed to spend under the campaign laws. At that point, they will go under virtual house arrest. They will not be able to buy ads, they will not be able to travel, they won't even be able to pay their Internet bills.

That is the law. Bill Clinton used it to hammer Bob Dole in 1996. George W. Bush used it to hammer Al Gore in 2000.

Today Bush has 200 million dollars ready to shock and awe us with the largest ad campaign in political history. He will spend that money turning Edwards into a Breck Girl, Clark into Beetle Bailey, or Lieberman into the devil himself.

The only way Democrats can compete this summer is for 2 million people, or more, to match Bush's $200 million with $200 million of their own. Our campaign can do that. Theirs can't. We would be proud to serve with any one of these worthy gentlemen, but the law as written, the law we will follow through this November, gives them no hope of victory, none.

Run to the right, become the only hope, and the nomination is ours.

Then comes the hard part.



 

radio ads open thread

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Let's brainstorm! what would make the perfect radio ad? tailored to which state?

 

The Anti-Kerry http://www.deanforamerica.com/site/TR?pg=personal&fr_id=1090&px=1179278

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
When I started this blog on August 30th 2002, John Kerry was the front-runner and Howard Dean was this niche candidate who attracted me by his ideas. When Dean was crowned the front-runner by the media at the close of 2003, it was by definition a peak. But the peak gets the most exposure, and the withering media barrage that Dean has faced - and survived - has strengthened the campaign. It is now Kerry's turn to face the same barrage - which he avoided all during 2002 even though he had front-runner status, and all during 2003 when he was given up on for dead. And that means we get some breathing room. We'd rather have victory, but it's never bad to be given time to re-assess.

Yesterday, a governor of a small rural state lost in New Hampshire to a Massachusetts Senator. The parallels to Clinton in 1992 are strong, but they end today. From here on out, it is Dean making his own history. Clinton lost the first ten contests and regrouped in the South. Dean can't afford to lose ten contests and his natural base is the West. We need to focus on how Dean can win, and today we must stop looking at 1992.

Dean is on familiar ground again - while seasoned analysts like Kos have written him off, I think they are unconsciously) guilty of drinking the media self-importance Kool Aid. Even if Kos is right that the media has an interest to "end this thing as quickly as possible" (I disagree - the media thrives on frontrunner-underdog narratives), it's the height of cynicism to suggest that the voters truly are irrelevant. The primary is ours, not theirs.

I see a very simple scenario ahead. Dean is the anti-Kerry. Only these two candidates have the resources to compete against Bush. Edwards and Clark have celebrity status but the media oxygen has been sucked away - they rate editorials and analysis, but very little actual coverage. Watch for E and C to start sharpening attacks on one of the front-runners and leaving the other alone - my guess is K/E and D/C form "gentlemen's alliances" which may translate to actual Veep roles after the nomination - but don't bet that any of these four will drop out until the final bell (barring some disaster such as Edwards losing badly in SC).

From here, it's a media war. Not candidates doing barbecues and high school speeches (though those will of course continue), but a classic ad blitz on radio and television. In this war, the Dean grassroots (organized through the Dean Commons) will act in parallel to the Dean Unions (especially in Wisconsin and Michigan). The opponent is the well-oiled, and highly experienced, establishment machine that Kerry inherits. Either of these are a force to be reckoned with, and we will see K and D pick up states delivered to each by reasonable, neither tight nor massive, margins. The battle will last all the way to the convention and victory is directly related to effort on the ground, precinct by precinct, state by state, delegate by delegate.

That means it is up to us. Why hasn't that bat broken $700K yet? Dean busted his arse for two years in New Hampshire. Amanda and Jason and Anna froze theirs going from house to house, street to street, door to door. What have we done? NOT ENOUGH.

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Wednesday, January 28, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
How long will Dean fight on

New Hampshire Focusing on Iraq, Health Care and Economy

Howard Dean the man for the job

Dean Sees Silver Lining in Second Place

Dean 'very pleased' with New Hampshire finish

Kerry wins again

Florida could play big role in nomination

Tuesday, January 27, 2004

 

How We Will Beat Kerry

posted by Dana at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This candidate is amazing. Howard Dean is better than us, better even than his campaign managers. He is a brilliant politician.

All week Dean has been telling us how to beat John Kerry. We haven’t been listening. Kerry won Iowa by out-organizing us, and won New Hampshire by stealing our message.

He will not win again.

Howard Dean has shown us the way, in the debates, and in his town hall meetings. We can easily run to Kerry's right, on all the key issues, not just using rhetoric, but with hard facts. It comes down to these three key points:

1. Get this, South Carolina. Dean was FOR Gulf War I. Kerry voted AGAINST. Saddam Hussein was in Kuwait, Bush I had the approval of the UN, he had the entire world on our side and John F. Kerry voted NO. Then, when Bush II had no case, Kerry voted aye, and now tries to pretend he didn't. He’s a fraud on national security.

2. Listen up, Missouri. Dean can BALANCE A BUDGET, Kerry never has. John Kerry voted FOR this record deficit, both for tax cuts and spending increases. Want to visit Canada, Australia, Europe or Japan? YOU CAN’T AFFORD IT. That’s just the first step in a rapid process of economic destruction that can only be reversed by moving to balanced budgets, as in the 1990s. Howard Dean has balanced budgets. He will balance this one. He's a grown-up.

3. Are you hearing this in Arizona? Dean can PASS his health care program. Kerry can’t. Dean’s plan is simple. Buy insurance for the neediest, sell it to the nearly-needy. No big bureaucracy, no change in your present coverage. He did it in Vermont, which is no wealthier than the average state. Kerry wants a BIG GOVERNMENT PROGRAM for health care, another HillaryCare plan that won’t pass and thus won’t solve anything.

The good news, troops, is we will have a lot of help all next week. Edwards will be in South Carolina, hammering home these same points. Clark will be in Oklahoma. Even Joe Lieberman will be saying this in Delaware.

Yes, we need some new ads, and some new literature, but these are the facts. These are just the points Dean hammered home on the stump this last week. The problem is it didn’t sink in. No candidate from Massachusetts has ever lost the New Hampshire primary, and that streak continues.

So John Kerry tonight takes his place alongside President Henry Cabot Lodge, President Edward M. Kennedy, President Michael Dukakis and President Paul Tsongas. Fine.

We have him right where we want him.

Now let’s go out, prove the case, win the marathon, then go after George W. Bush.

 

Do You Want to Stand Up, or Sit Down? http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/primaries/pages/epolls/NH/index.html

posted by Christopher at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Based on the early results, I'd say finishing a strong second in New Hampshire is just what the doctor ordered for Dean. The pundits predicted his collapse after Iowa, and New Hampshire voters have repudiated their predictions. While this isn't a huge victory for Dean, it puts him squarely in position with Kerry as the two major candidates in this race.

Some interesting exit polling from CNN:

29% of New Hampshire voters said that "standing up for beliefs" was their top quality in a candidate. Dean led all candidates on that score (47% to Kerry's 20%). That was the top quality voters were looking for in their candidate. Another interesting take was on the candidate "most likely to shake things up" - again Dean overwhelmingly (44% to Clark's 14% with Edwards at 13% and Kerry at 12%).

What this polling tells me is that voters are afraid. They're afraid of George Bush, and they're voting for Kerry because 60% of them think he's "most electable." For my money, a leader who "stands up for his beliefs" and "shakes things up" is exactly the candidate who is "electable."

Let's all work together for first on February 3rd!

 

How We Will Beat Kerry

posted by Dana at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

 

"A Crushing Defeat"

posted by Editor at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Chris Matthews just said that Kerry will win by double digits and it will be "a crushing defeat" for Howard Dean. Sen. Kerry addresses his supporters in a few minutes. Howard Fineman of Newsweek says that now Dean's only option is to start hitting Kerry on his record, as and insider, etc. Further, he says that what "they want on the blog" (he didn't specify Dean Nation or the O-Blog). Is it? Is there any other option?

 

Dean Matching Funds Challenge http://www.deanforamerica.com/site/TR?pg=personal&fr_id=1090&px=1179278

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Take the Dean Nation Matching Funds Challenge - pledge to contribute one dollar per % point that Dean draws in NH!

 

real-time precinct results coming in http://www.thewmurchannel.com/politics/2792974/detail.html

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
as of 6:55 PM CST, Dean is in 2nd by 12 points, but ahead of Clark and Edwards by teh same margin. Only 8% of precincts reporting.. click and obsessively refresh!

 

Dean on Hannity tonight

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Listen in - this should be great! Dean is scheduled to be on the show in the last hour. I think that's the 8-9pm hour CST, but correct me if I am wrong...

shamelessly stolen from the o-blog.. BTW Kucinich is on with Hannity right now and doing really a great job!

 

Open Thread: New Hampshire Primary

posted by Editor at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The polls are still open, but not for long. MSNBC is covering the primary, Lou Dobbs is surprisingly talking about securing our borders (see my rant here). But let's get the open thread started and discuss the Dean campaigns showing tonight.

Update: Polls are closed. MSNBC and CNN are both saying it's a close race according to exit polls.
Update: Fox News says exit polling is Kerry by seven points. Also reports Trippi would be greatly pleased with those numbers.
Update: CNN has projected that Sen. John Kerry has won New Hampshire.
Update: MSNBC has projected that Sen. John Kerry has won New Hampshire.
Update: Fox News has projected that Sen. John Kerry has won New Hampshire.

 

Report from Manchester, NH

posted by Amanda at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Hey everybody!

I'm here in the Manchester office where there are about 30 of us (mostly from Massachusetts for Dean) making phone calls to strong Dean-leaners, trying to get every last potential Dean voter to the polls. This place is absolutely throbbing with voices, phones ringing, and people dashing around.

About an hour ago, Tom Hughes (NH Field Director) announced that they're cautiously optimistic but we need to pull out all the stops this afternoon. He was really pumped and led the whole HQ in several rousing rounds of clapping and foot stomping. The building was shaking!!!

If you're in NH, do whatever you can in the next few hours. If you're not in NH and you can make it here, start driving now! And if you can't make it, send happy thoughts and good karma to all of us in NH! We're gonna be hoarse by tonight, I swear. Oh and pray for the snow to wait 'til 8pm when the polls close!

Remains to be seen if we'll get home to Boston tonight, what with the storm and all. We'll all be gathering at the Univ of Southern NH to watch the returns and listen to Gov. Dean once the resolts are announced, so we may be here late and by then there may be much white stuff to drive through. But we brought our pillows and blankets in case we need to crash here for the night. ;-)

GO DEAN!!!!!

 

Half-Time Score http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/1/27/185137/760

posted by Dana at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
DailyKos, who admittedly has a bias in our favor, printed some early exit polls from New Hampshire this afternoon.

Fingers crossed folks. He notes in his item (linked at the headline) that these are like half-time scores at the Super Bowl, and may mean absolutely nothing. But there are good signs from Karen Hicks' visibility operation, and the game isn't over until the final whistle.

LA Times:
Dean 34
Kerry 33

ABC News:
Kerry 37
Dean 31

If these scores hold up, we'll have enough to call it a comeback. If we eke out even a one-vote victory, we're the lead story.

One more note. Kos says MSNBC will broadcast exit poll numbers at 4 PM.

Don't. Give. Up.

 

fashion observations done right http://www.prospect.org/weblog/archives/2004/01/index.html#002309

posted by Aziz at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
There have been numerous, painful examples of fashion-critique aimed at presidential candidates. We all remember the earth-tone thing with Gore and more recently the sweater thing with Clark - it's nothing but lazy journalism and worse, it actually dilutes the importance of the political process by dragging it down to the very definition of superficiality.

Today, though, Garance Franke-Ruta does fashion analysis right. Not by inferring from the Doctors Deans' clothes what they are trying to spin, but a simple observation of who they are:

If you've ever spent time in the medical arena you know that being a physician is something very different from being an attorney, which is what John Edwards, John Kerry, and Joe Lieberman are. Your stance to the world is simply different if you're a physician, because -- outside of a few specialties, like plastic surgery -- your power doesn't come from how you look or how you appear or even how you sound. It comes from your knowledge and the capacity to do things no one else is authorized to do in their daily lives -- to touch bodies, to demand of individuals, to prescribe courses of action -- and from the human power of interaction. You can't convince people to be healed, no matter how eloquently you speak about disease and suffering or what you wear. You have to actually do something to make a person better. You also have to do the right thing. And if you don't, the consequences can be dire and literally deadly.

The Deans today have doubtless been shaped by their profession as much as their state of residence: Judy Dean wears exam-room shoes, a pair of comfortable slip-ons with rubber wedge heels that seemed a close relative of nurse's shoes, and Howard wears penny-loafers. He's got a pair of coke-bottle-thick gold-wire-rimmed aviator style glasses he wears sometimes when he thinks the press isn't looking. He still wears a square-faced, gold-tone watch that would look perfect poking out of a white, lab-coated sleeve. She doesn't wear make-up -- not even powder -- and looks like a person who has spent years in a job where how she looked was entirely secondary to what she could do. They are doctors, not Vermont hippies, and they helps explain their anti-aesthetic aesthetic as much as anything else.

 

Henry Cabot Lodge http://www.politicallibrary.org/TallState/1964rep.html

posted by Dana at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions


Before you look at the last polls (which show Kerry pulling away), and before we see any real results (which may be quite different) a little historical perspective for y'all.

Back in 1964 the Republican Party faced a choice between fighting or accomodating. Democrats had been in power most of the previous 32 years. The only exception, Dwight Eisenhower, had come from the accomodationist or "Dewey" wing of the party, and his vice president, Richard Nixon, failed election in 1960.

But there was a new voice in the world, a Republican telling his fellow party members that they needed to stand up for themselves, unafraid, that they must have Republican principles. He even had a book, "The Conscience of a Conservative."

The man, of course, was Barry Goldwater.

Now I know I'm going to be roundly criticized for this post, because, in the end, Goldwater lost the election. But Goldwater also changed history. Goldwater took over the Republican Party for conservatism, which was the first step toward taking over the country. He was a very important figure.

Anyway, you may be interested in knowing how Goldwater did in New Hampshire.

He got stomped.

Goldwater finished in a near-tie for second with Nelson Rockefeller, at about 20% of the vote, and the winner was a "favorite son," Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts. Lodge, who had been Nixon's running mate in 1960, was an accomodationist, which we'd now call a "liberal" Republican. He was cagey, had made a career of working at the feet of rampant Democracy, and he represented the fear that a full-throated roar on behalf of principle would not work.

In the end, remember, Lodge was wrong. In the end, Goldwater won the nomination. Yes, he failed at the election, but he turned his party, and he turned history.

I said this six months ago. If that's the worst you can say of Howard Dean, and I think it is, then he is a major, vital, important figure in our time, and his cause is worth fighting for.

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Tuesday, January 27, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Hardball interview: Howard and Judy Dean

The Misunderstanding of Judy Dean

Democrats fire shots in final New Hampshire push

Six signs to watch in New Hampshire vote

Congressman visits Blacksburg to gain support for Dean

Monday, January 26, 2004

 

Open Thread: The Daily Show

posted by Editor at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Gov. Dean sat down with the Daily Show's John Stewart. Not the funniest sketch that TDS has ever done, but I think it did show Dean as somebody who is willing to joke around and have fun. Couple this with his earlier interview with Dr. Judy Dean on Hardball, and I think he's had a good media day. If Zogby is right and NH is watching... who knows?

 

The Only Thing We Have To Fear http://www.hpol.org/fdr/inaug/

posted by Dana at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
For over a week the Dean campaign has done everything right.

The rallies have been huge. The candidate has been wonderful. He won the debate by going consistently to the opponent's right, in a state that lets independents and Republicans vote in the primary. The press has begun ganging up on the other guy for a change. The polls have been moving. The field organization is first-rate. We have all the late momentum.

But I am also prepared for the possibility we may lose tomorrow, to John Kerry.

Two sets of numbers concern me. First, over half those surveyed think John Kerry can beat Bush. Second, a Newsweek poll actually shows Kerry beating Bush.

Many Democrats would sell their souls to beat Bush. And, in New Hampshire, many may be about to.

Because I have a better chance of beating George W. Bush than John Kerry has. We have seen this movie before. Kerry was Michael Dukakis' Lieutenant-Governor. As a Senator, Kerry has usually been in the minority.

Kerry has spent his entire public life on the defensive, and it shows. He's cagey. He voted for the war, not because he thought it was right, but because he figured he could spin it, as he has. He voted for No Child Left Behind. When Bush has bullied, Kerry has retreated, like a good lieutenant before a superior foe. Then he has told voters that, no, that wasn't a retreat, it was a "strategic withdrawal," a "reconnaissance in force."

Governor Dean, on the other hand, has been a political general. Yes, it was a small state. Yes, most were modest battles. But he won them, even the tough ones. And he made life better.

So Dean's not the trouble. The "I Have A Scream" speech isn't the trouble. The trouble is this whole concept of "the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party." (Polls show liberals are with us, moderates with the more-liberal Kerry.)

I believe in the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party. We can't hope to win, as Democrats, until we're proud to stand as Democrats again. We can't win, as Democrats, until we act like Democrats again, until we stand fast again, until we refuse to retreat again, until we are ready to attack and win again.

John Kerry won't do that. His public career shows no examples of the personal courage he displayed in Vietnam, or in the anti-war movement.

But when you've been beat like a dog long enough, as Democrats have, your courage can fail you.

Franklin Roosevelt was right. What we really have to fear, tomorrow, from our fellow Democrats, is fear itself.

 

media navel-gazing http://www.msnbc.msn.com/Default.aspx?id=4064624&p1=0

posted by Aziz at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I am here to defend the media. Why? Because this "article" by Howard Mortmann, at MSNBC.com, does the media a disservice by claiming to be a part of it. In fact, Howard Mortman is a regular contributor to NRO, and stated on NPR that Enron didn't qualify as a political scandal. The article linked above is a collection of blogger quotes, without any reference to where the quotes came from or any links. I am going to give Howard Mortmann the benefit of the doubt and assume that every unnattributed quote is accurate, because I don't see any reason to think he is a liar. But a column saying that bloggers are biased from, well, Howard Mortman is at least deliciously ironic enough that it becomes a good story. It's a familiar modus operandi for Howard Mortmann, though. I wonder when he gets around to doing a similar expose on what the folks at Free Republic say?

But there is a real media bias, as opposed to political-opinion-writer-masquerading-as-real-journalist bias. And you can find no better rigorous documentation of that bias by consulting one of the finest new blogs on the web - the Campaign Desk from the Columbia School of Journalism. The blog is fantastic (and doesn't spare the Dean campaign or any other - keeping us a bit honest too). One of the recurring topics is "Spin Buster", which documents exactly how the media feeds on itself. Their systematic dissection of how Dean's Rebel Yell became the Angry Dean meme is essential reading in understanding how reporters end up writing pieces "devoted solely to the storyline that they have helped to create."

Keep the CJR blog on your reading list - and you'll learn what media bias really is.

 

Greetings from New Hampshire

posted by Amanda at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Hey everybody.

I've had no time to post for days now. Frankly, I'm still recovering from Iowa. But this is my third day in NH and I just wanted to chime in with my two cents.

First, allow me to say a big 'ol WORD to Anna's post below about why we lost in Iowa. Our precinct captins not being experienced and well-trained and ready to play hardball and way too young -- this was the weakest link. Period. Lots of other factors -- most notably the toolish media -- but the precinct captains would be at the top of my Top Ten List of Reasons Dean Lost Iowa. Live and learn, eh?

That said, Karen Hicks runs a much different and much tighter ship here. I have several friends who work in Manchester HQ and they rave about her. This gives me great hope.

I've been to several events up here over the past few days. Had the privelege of seeing Howard and Judy at the "Women for Dean" event the other day. If you haven't seen the video of the event, please do. It's available at C-SPAN, I believe. I'd post the link but I have only a few moments to post. :-)

Anyway, Dean was just fabulous at this forum on women's issues. Judy was great, too. They both came by the overflow room prior to the main event. I happened to be in the front row of the overflow crowd so I got to shake both their hands and get some good pics. As he was exiting, a group of African-American teens from Chicago sang their Dean rap song for the Drs. Dean. It was so great -- they had led the whole room singing it a few times as we were waiting. Here's how it went (my memory isn't perfect):

I'm a Deanocrat
Yeah Yeah
I'm a Deanocrat
Yeah Yeah
It's not about where we've been
It's about where we're goin'
Where are we goin'?
To DC, baby!
To DC, baby!


Needless to say, the Deans loved it. A great moment.

This morning, I was at a town hall event where Howard and Judy both spoke...preceded by Martin Sheen. This was a highlight -- our MA group just missed Martin in Iowa and we were quite bummed. He did not dissapoint. He compared Dean to Bobby Kennedy -- a comparison I wholeheartedly endorse. Dean did very well, altho it was a more subdued crowd so there was a tad less energy for him to feed off and he seemed tired. There were also several incredibly rude and loud LaRouche hecklers who, god willing, will not be the focus of much media coverage. They were yelling and screaming about how Dean is the only Dem candidate who's never criticised Dick Cheney (LOL) and that Dean is hence a lier, etc. Typical loony ravings. Dean was quite patient with them, saying he respected their freedom of speech and they should do the same and let the woman in the audience who was waiting to ask a question do so. When they wouldn't shut up, he asked his staff and the security folks to please remove the hecklers. The crowd was totally cheering him on.

Oh another tidbit. Some of us from MA have been trying to get the media to pay attention to the fact that (1) John Kerry does not have much popular support in his home state; he is not loved a la Ted Kennedy; his constituent service stinks and everyone knows it; his legislative record is mediocre at best; his vote on Gulf War 2 pissed off a ton of his constituents etc. and (2) Dean has enormous support in MA. We've been trying to get press coverage here in NH for several elected officials who've endorsed Dean. There was a good article in yesterday's NY Times on the subject -- check it out.

Anyway, at the Dean-Sheen-Dean event today (hee), who should sit down next to me and ask if I'm an undecided NH voter or a Dean supporter? Gloria Borger. So I bent her ear on the Kerry-not-popular-in-MA-but-Dean-very-popular-in-MA angle. She was polite but probably won't follow up. Ah well, will keep trying.

Lots to do, must get a move on. Onward!

 

Points South http://www.pointswest.blogspot.com/

posted by Trammell at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Well, Trammell has arrived in Los Angeles, California! The move is complete and I'm unpacked and settled in. How ya doing Dean Nation? Sorry I haven't been more communicative. Boy have a missed blogging a bunch with all the recent goings-on in Iowa and New Hampshire!!! So, just a quick note and you'll likely see a post or two from me in the next day or so.

Cheers and say hi, - Trammell

 

Why The Polls Are Wrong

posted by Dana at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Math time, boys and girls!

Here's what the pollsters and the news media won't tell you. Here's why the polls are wrong.

Get out your statistics textbooks. Let's turn to the section on "total universe." The larger the market, the more accurately you can forecast its behavior, because the easier it is to get a representative sample.

In a national election, the total universe is over 100 million, so it's relatively easy to get a representative sample.

In a New Hampshire primary, the total universe may be 100-150,000. We don't know. Not only that, but because the total potential universe is small, it's very hard (nearly impossible) to draw a representative sample from it. All the "tricks" pollsters use to even out differences among samples, which work well with a big universe, skew the results further with a small universe.

In a national election, where 100 million vote, you need to change 1 million minds to get a 1% movement in the polls. In a New Hampshire primary, you need a change of 1,000 minds. You can get the same impact by changing the contents of the sample, by changing who actually turns out.

So there is no way for the polls to be right in New Hampshire, and frankly, they never are. They are nearly always wrong. Last time, in the Republican primary, polls taken the day before the election showed Bush up 4% on John McCain. He lost by 17%.

What does this mean? First, momentum is important, and right now it appears Dean has it. Second, Get Out The Vote (GOTV) activities mean everything. You've got to get out all the voters you can. Then you hope for the best.

Fingers crossed.

 

open thread

posted by Aziz at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This is it! BTW< rumor has it that Dean will be on the Daily Show tonight. can anyone confirm?

 

dead Iraqis and dirty tricks http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/01/26/dean_decries_iraq_war_in_return_to_strategy/

posted by Aziz at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
the full quote from Dean in New Hampshire:

You can say that it's great that Saddam [Hussein] is gone, and I'm sure that a lot of Iraqis feel it is great that Saddam is gone, but a lot of them gave their lives, and their living standard is a whole lot worse now than it was before."


(emphasis mine). Kudos to Dean for actually talking about dead Iraqis (the one topic that left and right seem to gloss over in the debate about the cost of Iraqi freedom). However, watch for Holy Joe Lieberman, Senator War Hero Kerry, and possibly Edwards in print handouts to ground personnel to spin this as "Dean says Iraqis are worse off after Saddam!" without mentioning that he was explicitly talking about dead Iraqis. Infamous AP writer Nedra Pickler already "fails to mention" that fact in her dishonest headline.

It also seems that someone is calling New Hampshire families at 4am with recorded messages claiming to be from the Dean camp. The NH HQ for the Dean campaign quickly issued a statement:

Statement from State Director Karen Hicks
Posted by Timothy Jones
on Sun, 01/25/2004, 12:50 pm

Today, Karen Hicks, Dean For America's New Hampshire State Director, made the following statement:

"In recent days, our campaign has been hearing reports from New Hampshire voters that they are receiving:

* phone calls early in the morning and late at night;
* "robo calls" from soulless machines, not calls from considerate people;
* calls claiming to originate from the Dean campaign, but do not;
* and even harassing calls and bigoted messages.

Let me be very clear. The Dean campaign does not call New Hampshire homes before 8:30 am or after 8:30 pm. Our calls are made by respectful people, not droning machines. Our callers tell the truth.

We call on the other campaigns to make the same commitments.

We are grateful for the extraordinary engagement of New Hampshire's people in this race. But our campaign believes that everyone deserves some peace, some respect, and a truthful message."


What links these issues is the way in which a major target remains painted on Dean's back, despite all talk of Clark and Kerry needing to focus their guns on each other. Clark might well lose to Edwards for third place, and the other campaigns stil see Dean as a major threat - they fear the bat.

Now, it's too early to tell whether the other campaigns will run with the dead Iraqi quote, since not even Newsmax or Drudge have gotten around to it yet. Maybe the campaigns will remain above the fray. And I personally doubt that any of the campaigns are directly involved in the phone scamming, though whoever is responsible is probably someone senior enough to have access to the resources necessary for the stunt. Only Kerry has really gone explicitly negative. I think we are seeing a ground war fought by extremists within the Kerry camp and also by RNC strategists in sync (but not in collusion) out of Deanfear.

Still, we know that these smear campaigns do work. So, follow the directive of President Bartlett - today is Howard Dean Day in the Granite State. Show your suport by feeding the Comeback Bat and let's root for our team freezing their butts off in NH! Show Jason and all the other volunteers that you're with them in spirit - feed the bat!

 

Yes, We Have A Chance http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4060197/

posted by Dana at Monday, January 26, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Given up for dead in New Hampshire just a few days ago, the Dean campaign has roared back into a statistical dead heat with that of John Kerry, according to the latest MSNBC/Zogby tracking poll.

That poll had Kerry ahead 28-25, but that is within the poll's margin of error. Dean has gained 7 points in the Zogby poll in two days.

We've done this by staying positive, allowing Kerry to go negative, on both Clark and on us. This is precisely the mistake we made in Iowa, focusing only on Gephardt, going negative on Gephardt, while Kerry and Edwards stood above the fray.

The key to the next 24 hours is to keep the pressure on. Keep talking to people. Accept "no" if that's the answer. We can win if we get the votes of independents, so find them and make sure you can get ours to the polls.

It's all going to be about GOTV (get out the vote) tomorrow, with snow expected and temperatures under 10 degrees. Zogby has Dean leading in New Hampshire's Second Congressional District, but that's where the distances to the polling places are greatest. He also has us leading among voters under 30, which are also those least likely to vote.

There's an old football saying called "Finish The Drill." By that they mean work right through the tape to the finish line, because it's the team that finishes strong, with energy left in the last minutes of the fourth quarter, that wins the game.

Finish The Drill, Deaniacs. Or take it in another context, that of the great New England poet Robert Frost:

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

Sunday, January 25, 2004

 

Dean and Bin Laden http://www.tnr.com/blog/campaignjournal?pid=1242

posted by Brian at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I see from this Kerry attack mailing that they are using Dean's comments on trying Osama Bin Laden. Not to put too fine a point on it, bit if the Israelis can try Adolf Eichmann, surely we can try Bin Laden. In some places, people clamor for trials of those who have wronged them. Perhaps Americans have grown so complacent in our prosperity that we've lost track of the things that make us truly great. Fortunately there's at least one candidate in the race who understands, and is level-headed enough to keep them foremost in his mind.

That is all.

 

Sunday in New Hampshire

posted by Jason at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
First, computer time is a rare commodity here in the New Hampshire state Dean for America office. My apologies for the abrupt ending yesterday and in advance today.

Today was in almost every way an ideal day. All day, positivity and optimism surrounded me. Dr. Dean himself said that tracking polls were definitely going in the right direction and that we were the only campaign moving at all.

I started the day in a much better state, after having hung out with several other volunteers and slept in an actual bed. This morning, I was lucky enough to see a town hall meeting conducted by the Doctors Dean at SNHU, which you should watch if you can (it was taped by C-SPAN). The place was packed -- I arrived 15 minutes before it was scheduled to start, and the overflow room was overflowing. Before the Deans spoke, they actually came out to the overflow room first for a quick introduction (which was an extremely thoughtful gesture to the folks in that room). After a fine introduction by Judy in the main room, Howard proceeded by, simply, inspiring. He was presidential, but he was also real. You should watch the speech if you can; it was taped by C-SPAN. I can't do it justice here.

After the town hall meeting, I went back to the off-site volunteer office and canvassed with an interesting guy from D.C. named Micheal (sic). We went to probably 25 doors before it got dark, dropped off tapes of the Diane Sawyer interview, and talked to about 10 people -- several of whom were strong Dean supporters. Afterwards, I came back to the state office and did some voter ID calls, inviting people to events.

They need me to unload videos from a van... more later.

 

Time’s Arrow Points To You

posted by Dana at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I saw something yesterday, on the streets of my home town, that chilled me to my bones.

It was an old VW bug, painted pink, with a pig’s snout and ears welded to the hood. On the side was painted “Pink Floyd,” with the logo from their “Dark Side of the Moon” on it, the triangular crystal refracting a rainbow. No big deal, until I looked at the driver. His hair was white, and his white beard hung down to his chest. He wasn’t the owner’s father. He was the car’s builder.

Here in the middle of life, or a campaign, we can easily forget Time’s Arrow, or where it points for all of us. But figure the driver for 60. He was 30 when he made that car.

Then look around at this election. John Kerry defines himself as a Vietnam Veteran, Wesley Clark was a captain in that conflict. Even Governor Dean was seared by it, cheered to declared 1-Y for the draft after Kerry threw his medals away, and his good brother Charlie dead in Laos.

All that was all 30 years ago, and more. Kerry’s defining himself by Vietnam is like a Progressive in 1904 wearing his Civil War medal. Salute, but it’s irrelevant. “[Vietnam] is young people dying for the wrong reasons, because leaders don't do the things that they should to protect them. Yes I do [see a parallel with Iraq].”


He’s living in the past. Maybe we all are.

James MacGregor Burns writes in his book “Transforming Leadership” that two points mark a Transformative Leader, the kind of leader we all see in Governor Dean.

First, a movement arises around him that he did not create. (Check.)

Second, leaders emerge from within that movement.

Win or lose in New Hampshire, it is time for Phase Two to commence.

I think Anna Topia would make a great Congresswoman from Texas. I do. She’s old enough to run, by her own admission. Maybe, in 2004, she’d be swamped, perhaps even in the primary. But she would learn, and grow. She could try again, and win.

Aziz could be a Senator, and Jason a Mayor. Matt B. could be whatever he wants to be. Christopher, Amanda, name your position and go for it. Maybe you, dear reader, should be considering a run for City Council, or School Board. When Jimmy Carter ran for re-election in 1980, young Dr. Howard Dean licked envelopes.

Don’t look my way, though. I’m 49. I like naps, I’ve got high blood pressure, and I’ve always been more of a a Tom Paine-in-the-neck than a Jefferson. But I’ll be here on the sidelines, cheering you all on.

Let the last words here be Burns’.

"Can we, in coming decades, mobilize throughout the world a new, militant, but peaceful army -- tens of thousands of leaders who would in turn recruit fresh leaders at the grass roots, in villages and neighborhoods, from among the poor themselves, to fight and win a worldwide war against desperation?"

It’s your time now.

 

Kerry Goes Negative http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040125/pl_nm/campaign_kerry_dc_1

posted by Christopher at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Apparently the Kerry camp is sensing what the rest of us are... Dean is making a comeback in New Hampshire. Today, Kerry accused Gov. Dean of "flip-flops" on taxes and foreign policy. Umm... Senator Kerry, are we doing a little projecting here?

Howard Dean stood up to George Bush's unilateral action in Iraq - Senator Kerry voted for it, but then voted against the $87 billion to fund it, and has spent the entire campaign trying to explain his positions on the issue...

On the economy, Howard Dean says we need a balanced budget and the only way to get back on track is to repeal the "Bush Tax" - Bush's ill-advised tax cuts for the wealthy in this country. Senator Kerry says we need tax cuts, and by the way, we're going to fund education, provide more health care, etc., etc.

I'm not saying those aren't good goals, but the reality is that Dean is the only candidate with the courage to say there's no free ride. We've all got to pitch in to get the economy and the budget back on track. Dean has been extremely consistent in his positions during the campaign - it's the others who have shifted to try to appeal to Dean's supporters. Nice try, Senator Kerry, but it won't wash.

 

German Trial Hears How Iranian Agent Warned US of Impending al-Qaida Attack http://www.guardian.co.uk/september11/story/0,11209,1130338,00.html

posted by Conan at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This guy was a surprise witness at the trial of an al-Qaida operative. This is breaking news. Here are the money quotes:

The United States was warned of impending September 11 terrorist attacks by an Iranian spy, but ignored him, German secret service agents testified yesterday in the trial of an alleged al-Qaida terrorist.

The spy, identified as Hamid Reza Zakeri, tried to warn the CIA after leaving Iran in 2001, but was not believed, two German officers who interviewed him told the Hamburg court...

...The testimony at the Hamburg trial could heap more embarrassment on the US state department and secret services, which have denied allegations that they were forewarned of the attacks.

The White House and US intelligence agencies have been plagued by accusations of a catastrophic failure since the four planes were hijacked to such devastating effect in 2001.
***************************************

Allow me to begin the embarrassment-heaping process. Dean has been castigated in the press for his December 1 statement on the Diane Rehm public radio show speculating that the Bush administration may have been forewarned about the 9/11 attacks. I remember thinking back then that sooner or later the truth would come out and Dean would look like a prophet. Well, somebody get the guy a laurel wreath, because he's a-prophesizing. Dean does not need to back off of the antiwar platform – he needs to wait calmly as the chickens come home to roost for Dubya. And not too many chickens can roost on a Shrub.

You can find the Diane Rehm interview here:

http://www.wamu.org/dr/2003/drarc_031201.html#monday

(Can't figure out how to make this a hyperlink).

Conan Dean Carey
PhD Candidate, Japanese Literature
Tabling Coordinator, Stanford Students for Howard Dean

 

Americans Love An Underdog http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/1/25/164234/982

posted by Dana at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

Today, two days before the New Hampshire primary, every poll shows our campaign trailing that of Senator John Kerry.

The margin is anywhere from a few points to dozens. Some say we have momentum. Others say we've got nothing.

But know this.

Americans love the underdog. We don't root for Goliath, even when we're Goliath. We root for the scrappy little guy. We relish the comeback. It's in our nature.

Americans like to see the little guy come off the deck and hit the big guy in the chin. It's when everyone says you can't that Americans say you can.

It's always been that way. Especially in New Hampshire.

George W. Bush didn't win the New Hampshire primary. John McCain did. Bill Clinton didn't win it. Paul Tsongas did. Even crazy Pat Buchanan pulled a New Hampshire surprise.

So why the long faces? Our candidate is doing everything right, and has been since Thursday. Our people are working hard. Our support is committed. We have been running to the right of Kerry all week -- all we need to do is get his less-committed supporters to notice.

And even a strong second place puts us in decent shape heading South, where Kerry has less organization. Assuming, as some polls indicate, it's Wesley Clark who New Hampshire voters are about to throw under the bus, we have yet-another growth opportunity, because (as some of my friends have been pointing out), Clark's campaign has been doing some good things with software lately.

So repeat after me. There's no need to fear, Underdog is here.

 

RNC thugs in Iowa, and how Kerry handed us our a**... http://www.woi-tv.com/Global/story.asp?S=1607003&nav=1LFXKHOc

posted by annatopia at Sunday, January 25, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
One final brain dump about Iowa and then I'm done. The reason I waited until today to write this up is I was hoping someone would post the video from the Drake University event last Saturday in Des Moines. Since the video is still forthcoming, I guess I'll have to spill and hope whomever has it releases it later.
What am I talking about? Go click on the article above and read all about it. The RNC sent thugs to Iowa to disrupt our events. At the Drake University event, the RNC thugs stormed the event holding large Bush/Cheney04 signs and chanting "4 more years". A shoving match ensued and eventually they were driven from the room when everyone sang "The Star Spangled Banner" in unison.
Why all the fuss over a candidate that poses "no threat" to Bush? Because they don't know how to beat us. There are several conventional ways to attack the two Johns, the General, and the other candidates. And can those candidates stir up the kind of grassroots passion that will drive our GOTV efforts this fall?
On Sunday I got to watch the ten minute video of what transpired at Drake University. I don't know who took the video or where it is now, but someone out there has the footage and hopefully it'll be floating around the 'net soon. Everyone needs to see the kind of tactics these thugs are employing. For the good of the entire party all Democratic supporters need to know how far they'll go to beat us.
Now on to Senator Kerry. I really need to give him props (as we all should) for building a super stealth field organisation that kicked our butts in Iowa. This article credits Michael Whouley, longtime Democratic activist. Props to Mr Whouley. I'm glad he's on the Democratic side. Anyway. Whouley built the network, and got Kerry people into the important positions of leading the many of the precinct caucuses. This is where we blew it. We sent inexperiences newbies up against trained field operatives. On top of that, we tried to play nice and they didn't. The Kerry and Edwards people ran the show. They sat undecideds between the Kerry & Edwards groups and relegated us to the other side of the room. They planted their own supporters among the undecideds and were able to sway them. The Edwards people even came with their own attack packets which included smears against Dean and the others, and they used these arguments to sway undecideds. Mr Positive, yea okay. Anyway, the point being that when it came to the caucuses, these two were better prepared and we weren't. Our volunteers weren't up to speed, and there was random talk of overselling the Iowans, and it simply failed us.
This is why I was so upset when I came back from Iowa. I felt we could have done a much better job of being prepared. We should have trained harder, screened our phone lists better, and we should have prepared for dirty tricks. And above all, we did not need to go negative for those last few weeks. Gephardt/Dean took each other down a few notches.
But we can do better.
Apparently the field organisation in New Hampshire is much better than they were in Iowa. Based on the new ads, it seems our ads folks have learned their lesson. It also seems that the New Hampshire volunteers are better prepared as well, and above all, this is a primary. One person, one vote. How do I think we'll fare in New Hampshire. Well honestly, I think we need to prepare ourselves for a second or third place finish. I don't think we have enough time to catch Kerry, but the polls seem to indicate a slight recovery for us. The media blitz bounce is finally showing up, and things don't look so bad right now. Just remember that we have the resources to fight another day. We need to be thinking about Feb 3.
I'm anticipating a decent showing on Tuesday. But I also want everyone here to anticipate a media Gore-ing of us if we don't place first. Please get your pens and emails ready, because we are going to have to push back no matter what happens. I was serious the other day when I said the media was not our friend, so please get ready to write some letters/emails on Wednesday.
Here's a list of addresses for all the major media outlets (culled from the comments section over on Counterspin):

evening@cbsnews.com
nightly@nbc.com
mtp@nbc.com
nightline@abcnews.com
info@ap.org
atc@npr.org
onlinenewshour@newshour.org

Thanks for letting me ramble on. I still had all these things on my mind and getting them out seems to help. I still believe we can win the nomination, and I hope that you have not lost faith. Ignore the trolls that keep dumping on this board. They want to dance on our grave, but we're not dead yet.

Saturday, January 24, 2004

 

New Hampshire Part II

posted by Jason at Saturday, January 24, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The New Hampshire campaign is vibrant, hopeful, and chaotic--and may very well propel us to victory on Tuesday.

One travel day and one full volunteering day later, I am at the center of things in Manchester. Saturday started encouragingly, with excellent message and canvass training from David Bringer and other organizers in Manchester. David's open Q & A was very informative and encouraging. My last-minute arrival made it difficult for me to find a place to go (provisionally, California volunteers were assigned to Keene, NH); however, I spent much of the day performing odd tasks at the volunteer staging office in Manchester (accompanied by many extremely nice people from SEIU Local 1199 and others from Rochester, NY). After reporting back to the main field office in the evening, I felt much more productive, calling supporters and undecided voters to persuade them to vote for Dean on Tuesday and to invite them to see Governor Dean and Dr. Judy Dean's town meeting at the Southern New Hampshire University's Hospitality Center at 9:30 Sunday morning. [Everyone is invited!]

I managed to meet and talk to many very nice, very committed, very real people. Howard is truly people-powered, and I can't imagine that any of the other candidates has as amazing a base of supporters as Dean.

I'm heading off to a place called "Creative Classroom" to stay tonight--undoubtedly an improvement over the Manchester Y. I anticipate a highly productive day tomorrow.

Being in the thick of things, I'm completely insulated from whatever might have appeared in the media in the last 48 hours. Heading out now... more tomorrow.

 

Sounds Like Someone Just Made Our Mistake http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/01/23/60minutes/main595431.shtml

posted by Dana at Saturday, January 24, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Our mistake, to hear the pundits tell it, was to go negative, specifically on Dick Gephardt in Iowa.

As a result, caucus-goers went for more "positive" candidates, Kerry and Edwards.

This sounds pretty negative to me.


"That's the first time I have heard a general be so dismissive of lieutenants, who bleed a lot in wars."


That's John Kerry (who served as a lieutenant in Vietnam) on Wesley Clark (who rose to the rank of general, but was still a captain in Vietnam). Kerry continued:


"[Vietnam] is young people dying for the wrong reasons, because leaders don't do the things that they should to protect them. Yes I do [see a parallel with Iraq]. This president breached faith with the lesson...we learned in Vietnam. You truly should go to war as a matter of last resort. This president rushed to war without a plan to win the peace."


Sounds like someone losing their temper to me. Does it sound like that to you?

It also makes you wonder about the judgement of a more mature John Kerry, who voted in 2002 for the Iraq version of a Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, doesn't it? It further makes you ask again who opposed the war from the start. (The answer to that you know...Dr. Howard Dean.)

All this Sunday on "60 Minutes." And two days for all that to sink in before New Hampshire votes.

 

The Beauty Of Low Expectations

posted by Dana at Saturday, January 24, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions


I could be wrong, or this could be setting up nicely.

Expectations for the Dean campaign in New Hampshire have hit rock-bottom. A three-day average of tracking polls (Wednesday-Friday) shows Kerry with his biggest leads yet. Some even show our man in third, behind General Clark.

Some liberal pundits, notably Eleanor Clift, have already written Dean off because of “The Scream,” even though she was personally in the room and didn’t think it bad at the time.

But consider. Dean had a great day Thursday. New Hampshireites now have to consider a vote for Kerry as anointing him the nominee. Republicans are focusing their attention on him. He is trying to run out the clock.

It could be the big crowds now at Dean events are like groupies at a band’s farewell tour. I haven’t surveyed where they’re from. Or it could be that New Hampshireites are re-evaluating a man who is, after all, their neighbor and who they did, after all, say they supported until a few weeks ago.

Right now the national media is setting up the equivalent of “high jump bars” at the New Hampshire finish line. Lieberman needs to get into double-digits, at least, and finish third. Clark needs to beat Lieberman and Edwards. Dean only needs to beat Clark. Kerry needs to win, and win big.

The hurdles are being set with the expectation that, on Wednesday, the media will all be writing about John Edwards. His expectations are absurdly low, the next week’s contests favor his home base of North Carolina.

But, as I said, they are also being set low for us. A 28-22 loss, a solid second place, would have looked like disaster a week ago. Now it looks delicious. Anything better, it gets better still.

It is good to have the press write your obituary. It was good for Kerry, after his “motorcycle” appearance on Leno. It was good for Edwards. It can be very, very good for us.

Figure there will be 150,000 New Hampshire primary voters, which is optimistic. Can we get 50,000 of them, including independents, voters who don’t want the game to end in Kerry’s favor (as they didn’t want it to end for us a week ago), conservative Democrats (who heard a pretty conservative Dean in the debate). There’s less room for our troops to be out-manuevered as there were in the caucus. Voters show up, vote, and leave – eazy-peazy.

This is not a bad place to be. We’re desperate. We need to do something NOW. But we have the troops, we have a calmer candidate, we have a chance.

All we ever wanted was a chance.

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Saturday, January 24, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Dean Touts Strength Of His Convictions

A Livelier Dean Speaks Out, but in a Reassuring Mode

Dean is best candidate for the White House

Voters Search for Virtue in Dean's Faults

Is There a Doctor in the House

Dean Draws
Supportive Crowds


Stand by your man '04

Primetime Dean


Friday, January 23, 2004

 

New Poll http://www.americanresearchgroup/nhpoll/demtrack

posted by Brian at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The bad news is that Dean fell a bit...

Kerry - 34%
Clark - 19%
Dean - 15%
Lieberman - 6%

The good news is that if commenters on Daily Kos threads like this one are right, this drop is the result of losing a high Tuesday number, and today's result is actually higher than yesterday's. You can decide how much faith to place in one-day totals, but these are grounds for optimism. All February 3 results, of course, will be affected by New Hampshire.

 

Please Judy, Please...

posted by Heath at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
DeanTVLondonderry1-23-04.JPG
It sure would be neato if Judy Steinberg Dean pops up on the Sunday talk show circuit this weekend. All indications seem to show that her presence softens Dean's image and keeps him front and center. What a funny twist of late: Kerry dwarfed by the media because Dean is more interesting than Kerry's so-called message. Continuing to throw the Judy Dean bone out the back door for the big media dog will keep them from barking too. The feeling I got from the spin room at the debate in New Hampshire last night was that they all feel a little bad about the "hazing" of Howard Dean. Not all of them are yapping about their handling.

If I owned a media company other than DeanTV, or was trying to build a compelling story to sell ads and build a viewership/readership, I'd certainly be interested in building Dean back up for South Carolina. After all, it seems like the ratings dip every time Kerry starts to ramble on in the Senate, I mean, on the campaign trail. What a boring Presidential election that will be for the media party. At least with a Dean nominee one can get around him on the airplane. He may not serve Grey Poupon like John, but I'm confident Dean would keep it fun--the same way he's made politics fun for young people again.
2DeanTVLondonderry1-23-04.JPG

This morning Dean continued to struggle with a cold. His voice is hoarse, low, and cracking but that tear-jerking determination of a man who's fighting for us even after being clipped is as strong as ever.

Here's a video clip of a lady who wanted to talk about Judy if you have time to check it out. When all is said and done in NH it will be interesting to see the gender breakdown:

QuickTime
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Windows
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From the DeanTV "Fairly Balanced" Network; where we encourage everyone to engage the media in any way you can. (Londonderry, NH 1-23-04).

 

New Hampshire Voters Return to Dean http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/mmedia/politics/012304-2v.htm

posted by Editor at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This is being noted on the O-Blog. It's worth a watch.

 

Dean Draws Appreciative Looks in New Hampshire http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040123/ap_on_el_pr/dean_34

posted by Christopher at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Howard Dean is getting a second look from New Hampshire voters who a week ago had written his campaign off following the Iowa Caucuses, according to a new AP report from Ron Fournier:

"When we saw him up their shouting and yelling, it put a lot of us on the fence. There's not a lot of difference between these guys so it doesn't take a lot to move us from one to another," said Ed Hennessy, 58, a retired union worker in Nashua, N.H., who deserted Dean last week.

"But I'm back in his camp. It was just a slip of the tongue, and nobody's perfect," Hennessy said. "I've got to give him credit for speaking from his heart."

"I think we've turned the corner and we're going to come back up, and the question is can we close the gap between now and Tuesday," Dean said, though it's too early for polls to reflect opinions after the debate.

Lindley-Soucy, cradling her baby at a Dean event, was not a supporter, certainly not immediately after Iowa. Suddenly, she's curious.

"He comes across as honest, even when it hurts," she said.

Fields, 66, a mental health counselor from Londonderry, said the media has made too much of the speech, a sentiment echoed by others.

"I think he was too tame to tell you the truth. I hope he doesn't back down," she said.

Gloria Kelley, 53, a union worker who attended one of his events, said she still has her doubts about Dean.

"He was over the top, wasn't he? It makes you wonder about his judgment," she said. Then a smile crept across her face, and she said, "I think I'll give him a second look, if the media doesn't mind."

 

Dean says Greenspan should go http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3424599.stm

posted by Aziz at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Here's something long overdue. Granted, Kucinich also expressed the same opinion in the debate, but Dean can raise the profile of Greenspan's performance far more effectively:

"I think Alan Greenspan has become too political," [Dean] said.

Dean added: "If he lacks the political courage to criticise the deficits, if he was foolish enough - and he is not a foolish man - to support the outrageous tax cuts that George Bush put through, then he has become too political and we need a new chairman of the Federal Reserve."

 

Passion http://abcnews.go.com/sections/Primetime/US/howard_judy_dean_transcript_040122.html

posted by Dana at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
“Being in love with somebody is a terrific thing, but if you only marry somebody because they're in love … you're in love with them.That's why the divorce rate is 50 percent” -- Dr. Howard Dean

We Dean People feel passionate about our candidate. We are in love, many of us for the first time.

But you can’t make a real relationship out of passion, and that’s what most Americans want with their President, a relationship. We want to believe we can trust the President. So ordinary men remake themselves to win this trust, and the result is the usual phony politician.

Dean is trying to remake himself without changing himself, which is good. But while many pundits lay the current problem in the polls on his shoulders, and many others lay it on Trippi or the ad staff, I want to lay it somewhere else.

I’m going to lay it on us.

A lot of people are being turned-off by what we’re doing, and by the passion with which we’re doing it. Like lovers, we want it very badly, maybe too badly. And the more ardently we press our case, with letters, e-mails, home visits, phone calls, the less we look like a political movement and the more we look like a cult.

Right now no one believes in us, except for Dr. Dean and the people in Burlington. But if we’re going to make a comeback in New Hampshire, we have to go through many of the changes the Doctor himself has seemed to go through these last few days.

I mentioned some of those changes earlier today. We need to trust the people again. In our cynical age that’s tough, especially when we feel spurned by them, as we felt spurned by the people in Iowa. But in a democracy, trust in the people is the only path to success.

We have a weekend to turn things around, to present a different face to the people of New Hampshire. We need to be more comfortable with ourselves, and what we believe in. We need to make many more people comfortable with us, and with our candidate again.

Don’t blame the press. Don’t blame the candidate. Don’t blame the campaign. Don’t blame the pundits.

If you want to make people perceive us differently, look in the mirror. You want a relationship with other voters, a trusting, honest relationship. You don’t need them to fall in love with you, or with Howard Dean. So don’t beg, don’t whine, don’t believe just in money or ads or shoe leather.

Instead, believe in yourself. Testify. That’s what you need to do this weekend, testify. Testify to your faith in yourself, in your ideals, in your country, and in your fellow citizens. You have the power to do that.

You won’t change everyone. You won’t change most people. But perhaps, with faith, you can change enough opinions to make a difference, and make Howard Dean into The Next Comeback Kid.

 

I Have a Huge Amount of Respect for Voters http://abcnews.go.com/sections/Primetime/US/howard_judy_dean_transcript_040122.html

posted by Dana at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
“They're going to do whatever they do and I'm going to accept their verdict because that's how democracy works. And then the day after New Hampshire, we're going to go to South Carolina and Oklahoma and Arizona and New Mexico.”

On Howard Dean’s big “Comeback Night” this is the line I thought we needed most to hear again.

It came near the end of the Diane Sawyer interview. I think it defines what went wrong, and what still may be wrong with Dean Nation.

Persuasion is seduction. You’re trying to sell to cynical customers. I think many people failed to take “yes” for an answer in Iowa, and some may be failing today to take “no” for an answer in New Hampshire.

If you’re working on the campaign this weekend, you’re a salesman. The best say the product sells itself. Howard Dean proved again last night he is his own best salesman. You need to trust that, but also trust your customers as well. Don’t argue. Smile. Listen. As in Dean’s “Top 10” list last night, switch to decaf.

Even with his big Iowa bump, John Kerry didn’t get far ahead of us. Now we’ve gotten a bump. On Tuesday, I think, Howard Dean will be the Comeback Kid.

But as we work toward that moment, and the moments to come a week later, you’ve got to have faith that the voters will see what we’re selling, compare it to what else is on the Democratic shelf, and make the right choice. And if they don’t, we also have to respect that choice.

 

transcript: New Hampshire Presidential Debate http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A39875-2004Jan22.html?nav=hptop_ts

posted by Aziz at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
There's quite a lot of ground covered here, but what caught my attention was at the beginning, where Peter Jennings asks Kerry and then Dean about how they would respond to the inevitable GOP portrayal of them as tax-raising liberal fanatics. After Kerry answered, it was Dean's turn:

I'm going to take a different position than everybody. I think we ought to get rid of the whole Bush tax cut, and here's why: There was no middle-class tax cut.

Sixty percent of us got $304. Has your property tax gone up more than $304 because the president cut cops on the beat, refused to fund special education, refused to fund No Child Left Behind? How about your college tuition? Has that gone up more that $304 because the president cut 84,000 kids off Pell Grants in order to pay for the tax cuts for people like Ken Lay?

DEAN: Your health care, has that gone up because the president cut 500,000 kids off health care?

There was no middle-class tax cut in this country. Somebody has to stand up and say, we cannot have everything. We can't have tax cuts, pay for health care, pay for No Child Left Behind and pay for an adequate defense.

I believe we ought to have balanced budgets. I've done it 12 times. That is the real issue in this campaign. The future health of this country depends on a balanced budget. And we've got to start telling the truth and stop making promises.


Since Gephardt is out of the race, Dean is the only one left to make this argument, and he's absolutely right. He didn't mention any payroll tax cut issue in his response, but that's likely because he is waiting for the President's budget so the Dean plan can have solid numbers to compare against.

The other part that drew my interest was (of course) Sen. Edwards' response to the question about Islam. I frankly didn't have a problem with it - it's discussed in more detail over at UNMEDIA and I invite anyone who is interested to visit to discuss.

 

video: New Hampshire Presidential Debate rtsp://cspanrm.fplive.net/cspan/idrive/c2k012600_demdebate.rm

posted by Aziz at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions

 

transcript: Judy and Howard on Primetime with Diane Sawyer http://blog.deanforamerica.com/archives/003332.html

posted by Aziz at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
See post below for video. Click to read the whole thing, but I was most interested in this exchange on the subject of temper (emphasis mine):

Diane Sawyer: And, some of the political analysts have said that the real problem is that it tapped into another concern, it seemed to re-enforce the concern that had been brought up before about your pressure gauge. And, how you control it. And, specifically the whole issue of temper. So, can I ask you Mrs. Dean, does your husband have a temper?

Judy Dean: Not much. I mean, you know … we've been married for 23 years, and uh, he … he … he is very easy to get along with…

Diane Sawyer: Ever seen … temper, how often does he lose his temper around you?

Judy Dean: I can't remember the last time. He just doesn't get that angry. I mean, he doesn't. You know, he just … he's very kind, very considerate, and uh … it just doesn't happen.

Diane Sawyer: A couple of things on the campaign trail I want to let you address here. Uh, we saw the instance where a Republican, admittedly combative Republican, in one of the town halls asked you a question, and you had a splash (?) point, you reacted …

Howard Dean: You know, I'm not going to say what I, what the guy did, or what he didn't do, or anything like that. My attitude is this basically, uh, I believe people ought to respect each other. And, I want to hold everybody to those standards. I want to hold myself to those standards. And, I want to hold everybody else to those standards. People, you know, this anger stuff, which is, essentially (?) began last March when other campaigns started to spin it, because of the passion of the campaign, I don't really react to that, because I'm not particularly an angry person. And … but I do stand up for people's rights. There was … there was an incident where uh, I think it was an ABC camera person …

Diane Sawyer: Right.

Howard Dean: Uh, was interviewing me, and another cameraman from another station hit her on the head on purpose with his camera, because he wanted to get a better shot. I stopped the interview. I told him to behave himself, uh, and … and to knock it off, and that wasn't the way people treat each other.

Diane Sawyer: And, was there an event where you showed up and then walked out because …

Howard Dean: That's not true. Uh, what happened there, that was a Martin Luther King event. And, uh, one thing we find is that often events like this, including this tape, sort of has a life of its own, when they get in the … in the Beltway (Inaudible) What happened in that event was that 200 people, media people jumped after me. They knocked down one of the congressmen from Iowa, knocked down an aide. Uh, I was supposed to go to a Martin Luther King ceremony. When they got there, the press was so unruly, that I realized I was going to disrupt the ceremony, so we just left. Uh, you know, I do have standards for respect, and I think it's important for people to respect each other, regardless of whether they're media, or whether they're politicians, or whether they're ordinary people, and I do expect people to show respect for others.

Diane Sawyer: But it isn't the first incident in which temper has come into question, and recently a story has been circulating now about the mid-'90s, at a hockey game for your son, which ended in the police being called, and that you were one of the parents there, and then … then you apologized. You called and apologized.

Howard Dean: That (?) didn't (?) happen (?) either (?) A lot of this stuff is urban legend. Uh, there was a hockey game where there was an incident on the ice. Uh, the team was suspended because the coaches threw sticks out on the ice. Don't forget, wherever I traveled as governor, I had a police esc … a police escort. Uh, so I think that if there had been a problem, that I would have been taken out by my own police guys for my safety. A lot of this stuff is about urban legend. And, it happens because uh, other people have observed (?) uh, some of the things I do as anger. I will stand up for what I believe in, and I will stand up to protect weaker people, uh, but I don't often blow up. I think I did not yell at a staff member in 12 years when I was governor. That's just not what I do.

Diane Sawyer: So did you lose your temper at the hockey …

Howard Dean: I never, there certainly was no fighting, there was no … it was nothing of that sort. I don't … I don't remember exactly what this is talking about, but I've never … never been kicked out of a game, I never have uh, you know, been uh, escorted out by any police or anything like that. I had my own police to follow me around in case there were any problems with other people attacking me. There have never been any fights. So, I'm not sure exactly what the …

Diane Sawyer: You don't remember if you blew?

Howard Dean: I don't remember any, uh, blowing up, no.

Diane Sawyer: Because … I looked as far back as what (?), St. George boarding school …

Howard Dean: Uh-huh.

Diane Sawyer: And, I'm looking at something you wrote about yourself at St. George boarding school. And, you said, if you want to get to know me, you should be the curious type who can put up with a temper.

Howard Dean: I think if you have a temper when you're 16, that's not saying anything about (Inaudible) when you're 50.

Diane Sawyer: And, you wouldn't consider a person who then (?) has had a lifelong, uh, what expression of temper?

Howard Dean: Well, let's look at what you're saying. You're talking about a hockey game that may or may not have uh, happened. You're talking about a tape in which I was exuberant. And, what else are you talking about?

Diane Sawyer: (Sighs)

Howard Dean: I mean, you're making the case …

Diane Sawyer: Well, no let me ask you …

Howard Dean: And I'm saying, you know, have I ever blown up? Yes. Did I blow up once at a staff member in 12 years? Not ever. So, I mean, I understand your desire to make the case, as … as the all the other campaigns would like to, but the fact is, that it's what always happened. It's a small modicum of truth, and then it gets … grown (?)


It's frustrating to read, but I think it comes across better in the actual video. It's good that Sawyer is rehashing all the idiotic accusations of temper - including dredging up his St. George's statement - because now it's been dealt with, and shown to be without merit.

 

video: Judy and Howard on Primetime with Diane Sawyer http://www.deanforamerica.com/judyandhoward

posted by Aziz at Friday, January 23, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
012204_diane_sawyer.jpg
The Diane Sawyer Interview
Low / Med / High : RealPlayer
Low / Med / High : WindowsMedia
Low / Med / High : QuickTime

Thursday, January 22, 2004

 

Debate open thread

posted by annatopia at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The floor is yours.

 

Turning a negative into a positive http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1484529/20040122/aphex_twin.jhtml?headlines=true

posted by annatopia at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
By now everyone's had the chance to have some fun at our expense thanks to the Governor's rockin' post-caucus speech. But I think it's pretty cool that the grassroots have taken that moment and turned it into something fun and positive. MTVNews covers the Dean remix phenomena and provides links to some of the remixes as well as an actual video clip of the moment. Watch the clip and you can plainly see Dean isn't angry, especially when he laughs heartily at the end.
As Aziz suggested, I've mirrored the remixes on my web server, and you can grab them all here. Have fun with this; some of the mixes are great, especially the one called "dean2", which IMO should be played at the beginning of every Dean rally from here on out.
Enjoy!

And don't forget we've got a trifecta on television tonight. The debate begins at 8pm eastern on FAUX, then Drs Howard and Judy Dean will appear on ABC for a sit-down interview with Diane Sawyer at 10pm eastern, and finally, our candidate makes an appearance on Letterman tonight at 10:30pm 11:30pm eastern. We have three opportunities to make our case to the American public tonight, and I'm hoping we take full advantage of all of them.

 

GOP Thieves in Congress http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/01/22/infiltration_of_files_seen_as_extensive/

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The Boston Globe's shocking story exposes a GOP plan that dwarfs the significance of Watergate:

Republican staff members of the US Senate Judiciary Commitee infiltrated opposition computer files for a year, monitoring secret strategy memos and periodically passing on copies to the media, Senate officials told The Globe.

From the spring of 2002 until at least April 2003, members of the GOP committee staff exploited a computer glitch that allowed them to access restricted Democratic communications without a password. Trolling through hundreds of memos, they were able to read talking points and accounts of private meetings discussing which judicial nominees Democrats would fight -- and with what tactics.
[...]
With the help of forensic computer experts from General Dynamics and the US Secret Service, his office has interviewed about 120 people to date and seized more than half a dozen computers -- including four Judiciary servers, one server from the office of Senate majority leader Bill Frist of Tennessee, and several desktop hard drives.


Josh Marshall is already all over this one. Dean needs to be on the case with this story. It's powerful ammunition. IT's exactly what the voters need to hear, and the debate is likely the only way to inject teh story into the media spotlight. I castigated Dean for not following through on the Plame affair and remain disappointed. I hope that he runs wit this new ball more efectively - and doing so will prove to NH voters that he is serious about exposing the President and the GOP for what they are.

 

Where Clinton's campaign stood in January 1992 http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1996/candidates/democrat/clinton/campaign.92.shtml

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
worth reading for much-needed perspective. Also note that Clinton lost both Iowa and New Hampshire!

Note that Howard and Judy are doing an interview with Diana Sawyer on Primetime tonight (ABC)...

 

What Dean needs to say tonight http://www.hughhewitt.com/index.htm#postid228

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Hugh Hewitt imagines the perfect introductory speech to tonight's debate by Dean.

"On Monday night I spent 15 seconds trying to fire up my volunteers who had a disappointing night --congratulations John and John, but overconfidence is a dangerous thing, as I've learned-- I spent 15 seconds pointing at signs and recognizing people from faraway states who'd driven thousands of miles in some cases to stand on corners in sub-zero temps, and I fire them up and try to show that I am not down for the count because they're not down for the count, and television, radio, Matt Drudge and Rush Limbaugh and your network, Brit, try to turn me into a deranged psycho. Fred Barnes called me cracked, for goodness sake. I've been a medical doctor treating crisis cases in emergency rooms for twenty years, and a governor making life and death decisions for ten years, and the American media, threatened by my message that big corporate interests are out of control--and there is no bigger corporate interest than Fox-- decides to marginalize me using a quarter minute of tape."

"Now this process of Karl Rove orchestrated, media-led destruction of the loyal opposition has been going on for months now, but it is going to end here in New Hampshire. The voters of New Hampshire have been around the block a few times, and they know what's going on, and crucially, they know what's at stake. If the media knocks me off, then it will be John Kerry's turn and we will hear endlessly about his protests of the Vietnam War and his quote "French tastes" close quotes, but we won't hear about John's genuine and moving heroism in the face of brutal fire. We'll hear about John Edwards being a plaintiff's attorney fueled by plaintiff's attorneys all over the country as though serving the severely injured is a bad thing, We'll hear about General Clark's anonymous enemies in the Pentagon and we'll overlook his leadership in halting genocide. All of this and more, because all of us threaten the money, Brit, we all threaten the money. This president has made it very lucrative to be Republican, Brit, and those of us who get wind in our sails come under fire, and its not fair."


That's the right attitude - and note how Hewitt draws a circle around Dean that explictly includes the other candidates. The question is, does teh campaign read blogs like this anymore, or has their own attention to the net-roots been too dominated by their own shiny echo chamber?

 

The Debate http://www.liberaloasis.com/archives/011804.htm#012204

posted by Amanda at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Been awhile since I've posted -- the post-Iowa roller coaster and the ensuing increased pressure for our Mass for Dean GOTV efforts in nextdoor NH, coupled with all of life's other pressures, has been a tad wild.

I'd like to do an Iowa recap post, just to offer my perspective on what we saw on the ground there, what we experienced, especially at the caucus we attended in downtown Des Moines, and at the Monday rally. Oh and getting to meet Anna too! :-)

But right now, there are more important fish to fry. The debate tonight is critical, obviously. All manner of advice is flying around the Net and no doubt the staff at DFA are feeling a bit overwhelmed. But heeding this advice is really important, in my opinion. Per usual, Liberal Oasis offers some really great tips to all the big four candidates (Clark, Dean, Edward, and Kerry).

Here's LO's advice to Dean:

Ahh, the speech.

Dean had the right idea with his post-caucus speech, showing confidence and determination.

But of course, it was not exactly executed right.

There were concerns that he wasn’t presidential and likeable enough, and he walked right into them. The resulting spin has been brutal.

What to do then?

First, he should take a page from Reagan.

In the first debate with Walter Mondale in 1984, Reagan’s performance was so shaky, doubts grew about his old age and his faculties.

His 26 point lead in the polls was cut in half. Mondale was back in it.

But in the next debate, when Reagan was asked about his age, he was ready. With perfect comedic timing, he said:

I want you to know that I will not make age an issue of this campaign.

I am not going to exploit for political purposes my opponent’s youth and inexperience.

Not only did the crowd roar in laughter, the joke reversed the doubts that he was losing it, because he put himself in command of the room.

(Mondale later said he pretty much knew it was over at that moment.)

A great joke about the “Iowa Yell” could do the same for Dean.

He once was the most likeable candidate, the one best connecting with the people.

Showing he can skillfully laugh at himself would put to rest notions that he’s lost it, and remind voters about his likeable traits.

Of course, the joke has to be great, and has to be delivered great.

A failed joke is painful to watch. That’s why jokes are risky.

But that’s also why they pay off so well when they work.

After that, Dean needs to simply be presidential.

He’s been low-key the last two days, but a low-key debate performance would be the worst thing he can do.

It would be akin to Al Gore’s post-sigh debate against Dubya. He would look weak and defeated.

Dean at his best has a novel charisma. It needs to shine tonight.

 

video: The Iowa Caucus speech - a reason for PRIDE rtsp://video.c-span.org/project/c04/c04011904_dean.rm

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Remember something. For a month now the media has been full-bore against Dean, willingly receptive to smear stories fed to it by the RNC. But we were able to stand astride that onslaught, because we believed in what Dean actually said, as opposed to what was reported. We believed in what Dean actually stood for, as opposed to what was inferred by the pundits. We believed in Dean's actual record, as opposed to the hyperbolic spin from enemies across the political spectrum.

One loss in Iowa doesn't change any of that. What it did so was perhaps shake our confidence a bit, as it should. But in that moment of weakness, we probably let the media's continued onslaught penetrate past our defenses. But we have to remember, that the media coverage is as blatantly opposed to Dean as it ever was, and the rush to judgement about Dean's post-Iowa caucus rally speech has been the crown jewel of their efforts.

So watch the thing yourself. Dean starts to speak at 6 minutes in. And be armed with the truth again.

 Howard Dean Reaction to Iowa Caucus Results

Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean reacts to the results of the Iowa caucuses.
1/19/2004: DES MOINES, IA: 20 min.


That's a video that the official blog should be putting front and center, instead of trying to wish it away. There should be PRIDE about this video, especially in light of Joe Trippi's own words:

I’ve been around campaigns for a long time. On most campaigns, if you come in third in Iowa with 18% and you go to the after party, you’re lucky to find 4 people there. Most every one by the time it’s over has left to find another party and another campaign.

But on Monday night Howard Dean walked in to the ballroom in Des Moines and there were 3500 people there. And the energy was higher than most victory parties I’ve been to.

The Governor looked out at the room and saw 3500 people who had come from all across the country because they believed in changing their country and he wanted them to know how proud he was of them and their efforts. And he wanted them to know that we’re going on no matter what.

He wasn’t thinking about the cameras. It was the people right in front of him who had done so much because they believe in a better America that he was speaking to.


It's all about US, remember. And that's the energy we have to carry through into New Hampshire.

 

open thread: what we want at tonight's debate

posted by Aziz at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The debate tonight is where Dean will win, or lose, New Hampshire. It's a fair assessment to say that the campaign went off-message in Iowa - instead of issues, leadership, and optimism, it was about crappy ads, aggressive volunteers, inexperienced caucusgoers, and negative campaigning.

What Dean needs to do tonight is present his State of the Campaign - to take personal charge, to show to all the soft-support out there (which in New Hampsire, has switched to Kerry) that there is more to Dean than the Yeeeeagh! which is so easily caricatured.

The campaign publicly says it intends to change, but I don't think making Dean into a boring wonk is the right answer. What do YOU want? Its clear that the campaign needs to listen to us more - but first we need to actually say what we think.

 

Humility is a Virtue http://www.boston.com/news/politics/president/articles/2004/01/22/for_dean_humility_can_refuel_campaign/

posted by Christopher at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
This is a great column in today's Boston Globe - whether you believe that Dean's speech was over the top, or not (or the media spin of Dean as "angry") - it's clear that voters would like some reassurance about the man's temperament. Dean would be well served in his remarks tonight to not only talk about his plans for the country, but to make it clear that he is aware enough, and confident enough to let NH voters (and the rest of the country) that he understands these concerns, put his past remarks in proper context (but not "excuse" them), and finally maybe even give the concession speech he should have given in Iowa. A brief explanation and a few graceful remarks congratulating Sen. Kerry and Sen. Edwards on their victory, for keeping the discussion positive, and that "all the Democrats up here on stage care greatly for the future of this country - we are joined in the pursuit of a real alternative to the current administration, etc." would demonstrate the self-awareness and humility that can buoy Dean in the last few days before the vote.

I also happen to think that it cannot hurt Dean to note that a lot of the discussion about his candidacy has shifted from substance to style, and to re-emphasize (as he's been doing effectively the last couple of days) that he's in this race to balance the federal budget, provide health care, and reinitiate a multilateral foreign policy. The debate shouldn't be about how many internet supporters there are, or how much money is raised, or how big (or charged up) a rally is - this debate should be about our kids and the debt their being saddled with, the air and water they'll inherit, and their relative safety in the world. It's high time to get back to the substance of this campaign and continue working for Dean's vision.

Let me be clear - this is not encouraging Dean or any of his supporters to concede anything, nor is it a somber occasion. I think Dean should smile tonight, relax, the pressure is off. He should just be himself, acknowledge the concerns about his temperament, focus on moving the campaign and his platform forward. If these things come together, I believe Dean can still capture New Hampshire and shock the establishment.

How about others? What's your take on tonight's debate and how it might be handled?

 

Daily Review

posted by barb at Thursday, January 22, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Dean Supporters, Don't Give Up

Letters

Can He Come Back?

Dean's Campaign Alters Approach

Democrats Woo New Hampshire as Race Heats Up

Dems gear up in New Hampshire


Wednesday, January 21, 2004

 

Boston Herald: Kerry Takes Strong Lead http://news.bostonherald.com/national/national.bg?articleid=596

posted by Editor at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
The Boston Herald is reporting that Sen. Kerry has lunged forward with a commanding ten point lead over Gov. Dean.
Sen. John F. Kerry has catapulted into a 10-point New Hampshire lead six days before the nation's first primary, bouncing out of Iowa and over longtime frontrunner Howard Dean, according to a new Boston Herald poll.

The Massachusetts senator leads Dean 31 percent to 21 percent, with a slipping Wesley K. Clark at 16 percent after skipping the Iowa caucuses.

 

DFA Conference Call From Tonight: Please Come To New Hampshire Now.

posted by Heath at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
A conference call was held tonight to rally supporters to get to New Hampshire and answer questions about the direction the campaign is going in.

US Senator Patrick Leahy, DFA National Finance Chairman Terry Learman and Vermont Chair Dashiell Flynn hosted the call.

Eager supporters immediately clamored about what they think needs to change after the results in Iowa and asked what they could do to help in New Hampshire.

"Dean should put on a jacket again and look more presidential," said one concerned caller.

"Dean has to start taking credit for setting the stage and driving the debate for all these other bozos," said another. "We have to talk about why Bush and Rove are afraid of Dean!"

Many others wanted to advise Dean handlers to immediately get the Governor out on the Comedy circuit to take advantage of the buzz about his Iowa exit speech.

When DFA Finance Committee Chairman Terry Learman joined the call he said in his 56 years he had "never seen a better campaign office--life charged situation" than the one he is seeing from Manchester headquarters from where he called.

"But it takes a lot of fuel to run the engine," said Learman. "besides money--we need people to swarm to New Hampshire right now."

In the question and answer session, Learman responded that, since Iowa, "the internet alone has raised over $1 million. Fundraising has not dropped at all, and that number doesn't include the checks being mailed in."

Learman said that in one day this week $280,000 was raised.

"What's even more impressive is that we have more donors out there than ALL of the campaigns combined with an average of about $75 per donation," said Learman. "Howard Dean IS campaign finance reform."

When asked what specifically needed to change after Iowa, Learman said that "we may have gotten off message. Dean got caught up in a perfect political storm with a withering display of attacks--the likes that I've never seen before. We're coming out with new ads (in NH) and will emphasize our positive message."

Senator Leahy had called in from Washington, D.C. and asked callers to join him on a bus leaving from Burlington for New Hampshire, or simply to follow him and others to get out to New Hampshire and fight for Howard the same way he's been fighting for all Americans.

"We have 6 days before the New Hampshire primary," said Leahy. "Vermonters know Howard best and the people in New Hampshire need to hear from their neighbors and others across the country about what a great guy he is."

Crossposted at DeanTV.org


 

The "Positive Candidates"

posted by Brian at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
John Edwards

John Kerry

Welcome to the spotlight, guys.

 

Taking my country back: the New Hampshire experience

posted by Jason at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
Since I first became aware of Howard Dean's candidacy, I knew he was the guy who could beat Bush in November. He's a passionate, sincere, experienced executive who tells the truth. In my mind, his message resonates.

That's why, on Friday, I'm hopping on a plane from Oakland to Boston, getting a ride up to New Hampshire, and volunteering for the Dean campaign until Primary Day. I'm taking a few days off from my job at the California League of Conservation Voters (as a phone canvasser and web designer, at this point) to put my money, and my time, and my effort, where my mouth is.

Though I have donated to Dean, and posted a link or two to this site and the campaign site from my own website [beware amusing Flash intro], and told my friends and family about Dean, I felt I needed to do more. This election year is a critical turning point--four more years of Bush means four more years of Orwellian lies and policies designed to benefit only the bottom line of his corporate cronies, with no regard for the health or economic prosperity of the vast majority of Americans. (The fact that so many people don't grasp that truth blows my mind.)

Last Thursday night, it hit me. If this election is so important to me, I'd better do as much as I can to help turn it in my direction. Sure, I'm already doing a lot, getting new people involved in an influential California environmental group every day, electing the best environmental leaders to Sacramento, keeping them accountable, and doing what we can to beat Bush in 2004. (See the Presidential Environmental Forum in L.A., where I got to shake Dr. Dean's hand and tell him I voted for him on MoveOn.org.) Suddenly, though, it didn't seem like enough. I realized that I need to make an immediate impact where I'm needed most. (I also want to see what a presidential campaign is like at the ground level.) It was too late to go to Iowa--tickets were too expensive, I had missed a lot of events, I hadn't taken time off work, etc. However, I found a cheap ticket to Boston, emailed my boss (who was very encouraging, of course), and on Friday my itinerary was set: Arrive Friday evening, January 23rd; leave Wednesday morning, January 28th, knowing who won New Hampshire.

I actually hope to walk precincts in the sub-freezing New England air. Having grown up in Wisconsin and field canvassed for a non-profit in Minneapolis in the dead of winter, I am both well-prepared and perversely nostalgic for that kind of brutal self-punishment. (If I end up on the phones, that's okay, too.)

If all goes well, I'll post daily updates from New Hampshire about my volunteer experience. Thanks to Aziz--my college hall-mate 10 years ago--for giving me the opportunity to make a guest appearance on this blog.

Go Dean! We will win in New Hampshire!

 

Introducing the DeanWiki http://www.seedwiki.com/page.cfm?wikiid=4228&doc=HowardDean

posted by Aziz at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
You may have noticed a new link at the bottom footer of each individual post, that reads "Wiki" - this is a link to a new collaborative tool I have setup to act as a kind of mega-commenting system. Rather than indexing comments to a specific post, it's more free form. I encourage you to click the Wiki link and take a look around. And start adding your own content!

 

ONE DOWN, SIX TO GO

posted by annatopia at Wednesday, January 21, 2004 permalink 0 comments View blog reactions
I'm going to keep repeating this mantra until it sinks in to the rattled Dean supporters out there. Think about this. Gephardt was supposed to win Iowa - he HAD to win Iowa - in order to stay in the race. It shouldn't matter to us whether Kerry & Edwards went 1-2. What matters was that we knocked Gephardt out of the race. On the gro