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FROM SALON.COM
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2003/07/25/dean/index.html
July 25, 2003 | WASHINGTON -- George McGovern may be a gravel-voiced
80-year-old summering in the Rockies, but the retired South Dakota
senator and 1972 Democratic presidential nominee can still see a
few things about the upcoming battle for the 2004 Democratic crown.
The first is that the campaign of Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio,
is "not going anywhere." The second is that Sen. Joe Lieberman,
D-Conn., is unlikely to "excite many of the kind of people
who attend caucuses or vote in primaries." The third is that
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., "seemed to be promising early"
but has since faded off the scene.
But the most important thing McGovern can see about the upcoming
presidential contest of 2004 is that it is not taking place in 1972,
and that he is not running in it. Certainly, McGovern can see some
resemblance between himself and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean.
They're both from sparsely populated, rural states. They both entered
their respective races early, and became heavily reliant on volunteers
and grass-roots mobilizing. That aside, though, "I think it's
difficult to draw a close comparison," says McGovern.
"There's no transcendent issue now that he's identified with,"
says McGovern, who met Dean and some of the other Democratic presidential
aspirants at a May conference on rural issues in Lake Placid, N.Y.
"There's no Vietnam War, no Great Depression ... I don't see
any single issue that has mobilized especially the young people
and women like 1972 did. There was something about the Vietnam involvement
that did create a divide in the Democratic Party probably surpassed
only by the period of the Civil War, which had a shattering impact
on the Democratic coalition. I don't think there's anything quite
as divisive culturally or politically today.
"Another difference," continues McGovern somewhat wistfully,
"is that he has a large sum of money in the race more than
a year ahead of the election and I was never but one step ahead
of the bill collectors ... I never had the millions that he has."
There are plenty of other differences, too -- such as the rise
of the Internet and a front- loaded primary schedule next year that
could provide a clear winner as early as March 3, whereas McGovern's
state-by-state slog for the nomination lasted through and then into
a convention so divisive that California's delegation was challenged
all the way to the Supreme Court and four of McGovern's vice-presidential
picks turned him down publicly before he finally won over former
Peace Corps director Sargent Shriver.
But to hear Howard Dean's critics in the conservative wing of the
Democratic Party, he is nothing less than the second coming of McGovern,
doomed to lead the party into the same electoral inferno if he wins
its nomination next year. According to Al From, CEO and founder
of the center-right Democratic Leadership Council, and Bruce Reed,
DLC president and President Bill Clinton's former domestic policy
guru, Dean must be stopped before he steers the party back to the
McGovern era of bell-bottoms and muttonchops -- and back to political
oblivion.
"I would never wish the '70s on anybody," Reed wrote
in a June 30 column in the DLC's Blueprint magazine. And yet for
the past two-and-half months, he's done his level best to drag the
debate about how to beat Bush in 2004 all the way back to 1972,
the year his colleague and Progressive Policy Institute head Will
Marshall recalled, in a sentimental Blueprint story, that he'd "wound
up casting my first presidential ballot, with scant enthusiasm,
for McGovern," and the same year From was directing a Senate
subcommittee headed by losing Democratic presidential aspirant Ed
Muskie, D-Maine. The history lessons started with a May 15 broadside
by From and Reed, "The Real Soul of the Democratic Party,"
that called out Dean by name. "What activists like Dean call
the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party is an aberration: the
McGovern-Mondale wing, defined principally by weakness abroad and
elitist, interest-group liberalism at home," they wrote. "That's
the wing that lost 49 states in two elections, and transformed Democrats
from a strong national party into a much weaker regional one."
Soon a full-scale media barrage against creeping Deanism was launched,
with From-Reed Op-Eds in the Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles
Times, and another Dean takedown by Lawrence Kaplan, the New Republic's
neoconservative senior editor. Kaplan was joined by his New Republic
colleague Jonathan Chait, who offered a novel twist on the anti-Dean
theme, comparing him not to McGovern, but to another notorious loser,
former Republican presidential aspirant Steve Forbes.
Confronted with these comparisons, Dean for America campaign manager
Joe Trippi just sighs. "How come it's always us who's gotta
be somebody else?"he asks. "The truth is that our name
is Howard Dean. Howard Dean is Howard Dean. He's not anybody else,
and that's why people support him."
So far, From and Reed's warnings to the Democratic Party, to the
extent that they've reached the rank and file at all, appear to
have had no impact on Dean's campaign, which has surged in fundraising,
volunteer support and national and state polls. If anything, the
DLC's attacks have increased support for the Dean campaign, which
sees its fundraising spike each time it comes under attack from
the Washington insiders, says Trippi. That's because rather than
running as McGovern, Dean seems to be running according to the campaign
playbook outlined by none other than From and Reed in their very
smart Feb. 11 memo, "What It Takes to Win the White House."
"Your most formidable opponent," the duo wrote, "isn't
President Bush or your fellow contestants for the nomination. Your
real enemy is the ghost of Democrats past.
"[P]arty perceptions are a wonderful foil for an insurgent
candidate looking to define himself," they continued, urging
the candidates to refuse "to be subtle about defying the Democratic
stereotype." Added Bernard L. Schwartz and Daniel Yankelovich
in the same issue of Blueprint magazine: "The worst mistake
Democrats can make is to continue to work within a Republican framework.
This is how Democrats were snookered in the 2002 election."
What From and Reed did not realize is that their DLC would become
the Democratic ghost against which an insurgent Dean would run.
Rather than running against the Democratic Party of 1972, Dean
is running against the DLC-dominated (in image, if not in fact)
Democratic Party that lost the House in 1994, the White House in
2000, and the Senate in 2000 and again in 2002. This, too, is just
as From and Reed advised, though they seem to have forgotten that.
"The real front-runner, fresh off its triumph in the midterms,
is the Democratic Party's losing image," they wrote in February.
"If you want to win the presidency in 2004, you have to redefine
the Democratic Party in 2003. By all means, capture your party's
imagination -- but do it on your terms, not theirs."
That is exactly what Dean is doing -- by directly challenging the
party's support for the president's war in Iraq, the USA PATRIOT
Act, and such losing or poorly funded pieces of legislation as the
Patient's Bill of Rights and the No Child Left Behind Act. "Don't
look for the false unity that comes from shying away from every
controversial issue, and reject the consultant consensus that stacking
constituency upon constituency will add up to a majority,"
wrote From and Reed. "Now more than ever, the one reason to
seek the presidency, and the only way to win it, is to unite people
behind a cause that is larger than your candidacy."
And so Dean's presidential announcement speech on June 23 reached
for the broadest themes possible: "This campaign is about more
than issue differences on health care or tax policy, national security,
jobs, the environment, our economy ... It's about who we are as
Americans," Dean told the 30,000 people across the country
who followed his speech. "I ask all Americans, regardless of
party, to meet with me across the nation -- to come together in
common cause to forge a new American century. Help us in this quest
to return greatness and return high moral purpose to the United
States of America."
Now that Dean is capturing the party's imagination on his own terms,
the DLC is crying foul. And From and Reed are using every available
opportunity to whack the former governor of Vermont. By their statements
over the past two months, From and Reed have shown that the few
years their group has spent in the electoral wilderness since the
Clinton administration have intensified a process that had already
begun in the late '90s: turning the DLC into just another interest
group clamoring to have its agenda considered uppermost and its
favorite sons promoted, irrespective of any concerns about winning
elections.
The group is losing sight of the larger narrative, and assisting
its real opposition by attacking Dean. Already, the McGovern-peacenik-Democratic-weakness
charge is spreading from DLC articles into the mouths of Republican
critics, except the DLC charge is creating a blowback that will
damage all Democrats -- including those who voted for the president's
war resolution -- on matters of foreign policy. "The Dems are
still the party of George McGovern, and for them it's still 1968,"
wrote Jed Babbin, deputy undersecretary of defense in the first
Bush administration on National Review Online July 23, in the first
of what will no doubt be many such articles to come. But Babbin
wasn't talking about Dean, whom he didn't even mention, or the pre-war
debate over Iraq. No, what inspired this broadside was the quest
all nine Democratic candidates share: to get to the bottom of the
Niger-uranium claim in Bush's State of the Union speech. Wrote Babbin:
"The McGoverniks and their pals in the press have been working
feverishly to turn the 'Niger uranium' sentence in the State of
the Union address into the same sort of fraud they attribute to
the reports that led Congress to pass the Tonkin Gulf resolution."
Then there's the DLC's backing of Joe Lieberman. While there's
something admirably loyal about the group sticking with an old friend
and ally, it also shows an apparent resistance to an honest assessment
of the facts on the ground. While spending over $4 million in the
first half of this year, the Lieberman campaign has watched its
candidate -- leading with 21 to 27 percent of the Democratic vote
in January, depending on the poll -- drop to between 16 and 21 percent.
Lieberman began the year with every possible advantage in terms
of name recognition and institutional support -- advantages that
Dean lacked -- and yet, today, Democratic and Republican strategists
alike say they find it extremely difficult to see a way clear to
the nomination for Lieberman. The stiffness of the competition,
the nature of the primary electorate, and the primary calendar all
work against him. Meanwhile, some seasoned political observers now
believe Dean has a shot at winning not just New Hampshire, but Iowa
-- a combination no non-incumbent Democratic candidate has won since
1976.
Likewise, the John Edwards campaign -- which Reed has advised on
education and economic policy -- has spent $3.8 million and watched
its national standing decline from 12 or 14 percent in January,
depending on the poll, to 6 or 4 percent. Neither campaign is positioned
to win Iowa or New Hampshire, and Edwards remains in the single
digits even in South Carolina, where he was born.
In contrast, Dean has spent $3.99 million and gone from 3-4 percent
to 10-12 percent in national polls, and from nowhere to second or
tied for first, depending on the poll, in New Hampshire and Iowa.
And now comes news that California, too, is trending his way.
Though it is still early in the Democratic contest, by any measure
it's already clear that either the DLC candidates are campaigning
less effectively than the ex-governor of Vermont, or that their
messages simply do not have the same appeal as Dean's. Notes McGovern:
"I think some of the people who are so concerned about where
they are going to be positioned in November may lose sight of the
fact that you won't win in November if you can't even get through
March."
The only serious threat to Dean's campaign comes from Massachusetts
Sen. John Kerry, who has spent $4.88 million to basically stay in
place in New Hampshire and move up a bit in Iowa over the past six
months. Dean critics portray Kerry as a less exciting, but more
electable candidate. "The Democrats would be much better off
with a blander, more faceless, less exciting candidate -- Kerry,
Gephardt or even Lieberman (perhaps with Edwards, Florida Sen. Bob
Graham, or retired Gen. Wesley Clark as running mate) -- than they
would be with a fiery, controversial Dean," wrote John Judis
in Salon. This analysis is especially unfair to Kerry. Kerry is
not the leader in New Hampshire because he is the bland, unexciting,
unobjectionable party favorite. Kerry is leading because he is running
an aggressive, smart campaign that was first out of the gate in
January with a strong operation, has spent wisely, and has expanded
ahead of the rest of the pack into multiple states. Kerry has proven
himself a surprisingly personable and adept one-on-one campaigner,
and his campaign has shown flexibility in responding to the challenge
Dean has posed. Meanwhile Gephardt has tried to ratchet up his rhetoric
to compete with Kerry and Dean and to avoid the fate that befell
him in 1988, when he learned that "bland and tepid won't cut
it," according to Jim VandeHei of the Washington Post.
Worth noting too is that Dean, as abrasive as he is, manages to
get away with things no other candidate can. If you prick a straw
man, does he not bleed? Well, no. As long ago as 1995, the Vermont
press found itself confounded by "Dean's Teflon characteristics."
The governor was able to alienate virtually the entire state at
one point or another and yet win reelection four times. In May,
critics said he wasn't being held to the same standards as the other
candidates. Since then, he has been. And he's survived a poor debate
performance in South Carolina, the "mean Dean" meme, public
spats with Kerry and Graham, apologizing for those spats, his son's
arrest, a controversial "Meet the Press" appearance, ongoing
comparisons to McGovern, and a travel schedule that has him out
on the road 26 days out of 30. Instead of being hindered by any
of the criticisms or stresses he faces, though, Dean has kept going
and continued to draw new supporters, increase fundraising, and
get his message out. But like all Teflon people -- such George W.
Bush, Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan -- he drives his critics crazy.
The Dean campaign may yet stall out of its own accord -- if, for
example, it mistakes the candidate's ability to maneuver past problems
for the absence of any need to fix them, or if, as time passes,
his supporters no longer find his bluntness as refreshing, or if,
come January, they find his policy proposals wanting. And meanwhile,
the DLC attacks of this spring and summer will work their evil magic,
you may be certain. They will weaken the eventual Democratic nominee
-- whether it is Dean, Kerry, Gephardt, Edwards or some other candidate
and increase the chances that the nominee will lose to Bush.
But in the end, victory might well go to the boldest candidate,
despite the carping of the cautious and centrist. "Americans
don't vote for someone who has positioned himself in the center,"
says Curtis Gans, former director of the nonpartisan Committee for
the Study of the American Electorate. "They vote for a human
being who they trust to help them solve their problems."
* * * * *
Garance Franke-Ruta is a senior editor at the American Prospect.
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