To: Miss Marple
This is the column from Iowa's leading political columnist in this morning's Des Moines Register:
Yepsen: Without Gore, Iowa is anybody's race
By DAVID YEPSEN
Register Political Columnist
12/16/2002
Former Vice President Al Gore's decision not to run for president turns the 2004 Iowa caucuses into a political jump-ball with former House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt the most likely beneficiary of the freshly scrambled contest in Iowa.
But party insiders say that's no prediction of a Gephardt win if he runs in the 2004 Iowa caucuses, only a recognition that he's probably the best-known candidate among Iowa Democrats. With more than a year until the Jan. 19, 2004, caucus meetings, there's plenty of time for other candidates to make up ground on Gephardt, who won the 1988 Iowa contest but whose presidential campaign faltered later that year.
Gore's announcement Sunday night "makes the 2004 Iowa caucuses really big," said Sheila McGuire Riggs, a former state party head.
Gore led in early polls of Democrats for his party's 2004 nomination. With his departure Sunday, the Iowa contest becomes much more like the 1988 race, when Iowa Democrats had to choose among several lesser-known candidates. Now, as then, little-known candidates need to use Iowa to break from the pack as the presidential nominating contest heads into subsequent events, such as the New Hampshire primary.
The shape of the new race is best indicated by a poll of likely caucus-goers taken Dec. 3-9 by the National Journal's Political Hotline. The survey asked respondents whom they would be for if Gore was out of the race. In that match-up, Gephardt shot to the front of the pack in Iowa. He won 26 percent of the vote, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry had 18 percent and Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman received 16 percent. South Dakota Sen. Tom Daschle was at 12 percent, North Carolina Sen. John Edwards had 4 percent and Vermont Gov. Howard Dean got 1 percent. There were 23 percent of the respondents who were undecided or didn't know who they'd favor. The poll had a 5.8 percent margin of error.
If political history is any guide, a contender needs to finish in one of the top three places to remain viable. Throughout the history of the Iowa caucuses, no candidate who finished worse than third has gone on to win a party's nomination. That fact is the reason most political experts believe the function of the Iowa caucuses is to "winnow the field," as former Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker once put it.
Presuming all these people run - a big presumption - an early handicap of the race in Iowa looks like this:
* Gephardt: While he's the initial beneficiary in Iowa, he's also got the most to lose. The political community will expect him to win Iowa, and he might not be able to. By 2004, it will be 16 years since he won Iowa in 1988, and the question will be: Can he get the old band back together again in the Hawkeye State? Lots of younger activists aren't that familiar with him.
"I don't see anyone who is in a better position in Iowa than Gephardt," said Chuck Gifford, a former union leader in Iowa and a close friend of Gephardt's.
* Kerry: He's just getting started in Iowa, but all he really needs out of the state is to finish in one of those top three positions. According to the Hotline's poll, he's in second place among the candidates, and that's just about what he needs as he heads into the New Hampshire primary, where his neighboring-state roots make him the leader in a Hotline poll of Democrats there. A victory in Iowa would make him difficult to defeat for the nomination. After all, he's already in second place in the state without having done much campaigning here.
* Lieberman: The Connecticut senator is pretty hawkish for dovish Iowa Democrats. But with other candidates carving up the liberals, Lieberman might be able to rally centrist Democrats and make a good showing.
* Daschle: As a neighboring-state lawmaker, the expectations for Daschle will be high in Iowa. But he's just getting started in Iowa and will compete with Gephardt for Midwestern "home court" support.
* Edwards: He's one of the freshest faces in the race. He's an articulate politician who knows how to campaign to rural audiences and has excited some Iowa Democrats who are looking for a newcomer to be the party's standard bearer. But he's quite unknown and could have difficulty making the cut into third place in a field like this. He could also be squeezed by the Midwesterners in Iowa and the New Englanders in New Hampshire before he gets a shot at a more hospitable electorate in South Carolina.
* Dean: He's already spent a lot of time in Iowa and is picking up support from some of Bill Bradley's and Jimmy Carter's old backers. He's a fresh face, too. Dean leaves the governorship at the end of this month, and that will give him more time to campaign than the others - who all have day jobs in Washington.
Perhaps the most important statistic in that poll is the one showing close to a fourth of Iowa's Democrats are up in the air. That's enough uncertainty here to give any credible contender a chance to do well in the state.
I know it's long. Sorry for that. There is already a lot of "attempted organizing". In related article, Iowa's D Governor implied that Iowa is ready for a fresh candidate. I'll go fetch the article and post it to you.
To: Iowa Granny
Thank you so much for the information! Interesting comment about Dean...although I am not certain picking up Jimmy Carter's backers would be of much help!
To: Miss Marple
Here's this mornings top news story from the Des Moines Register:
Leaders say the former vice president did his party a favor.
By THOMAS BEAUMONT
Register Staff Writer
12/16/2002
Al Gore's decision to stay out of the 2004 presidential election was the best thing for the Democratic Party's future and throws open the door to the Iowa caucuses, Gov. Tom Vilsack and other prominent Iowa Democrats said Sunday.
"He's correct that people might have had a tendency to look at him as a candidate in 2004, as a candidate of the past," Vilsack said. "I think he's done a service to the country and to the party by doing this."
Except for Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman, Vilsack declined to say which of the half-dozen Democrats mentioned as potential contenders Gore's move favors. Lieberman, Gore's running mate in 2000, has said he is interested, but pledged not to run against Gore in 2004.
Other Iowa party leaders say Democrats from neighboring states have a slight advantage looking ahead to the caucuses, which start the nominating process in 13 months. Outgoing Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota, who will decide in the coming weeks whether he'll run, emphasized his familiarity with Iowa on Saturday in a visit to Bettendorf.
Dick Gephardt will be the likely front-runner in Iowa if the outgoing House minority leader from Missouri decides to run, said Rob Tully, former chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party.
Gephardt ran in 1988 and won the caucuses, but failed to win the nomination. He could organize quickly in Iowa drawing on longtime connections, Iowa insiders say.
But Tully said Gephardt and Daschle might be hurt by their association with Democrats' losses in the midterm elections last month. Democrats lost control of the Senate and lost seats in the House, where Republicans held a slim majority.
Tully has thrown his early support to U.S. Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina. Edwards, a first-term senator, is relatively unknown and would benefit from Gore's decision, Tully said.
"I think it helps the lesser-known candidates," he said. "The focus and the cameras would have been on Gore, no matter what anyone did in the campaign. Now it's open to anyone instead of being about Gore versus everyone."
Other lesser-known prospects include U.S. Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts and outgoing Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, both of whom have formed exploratory committees.
Vilsack, who has been mentioned as having potential as a national Democrat, repeated Sunday that he has no plans to run for president in 2004.
Des Moines Democrat Paulee Lipsman said Gore was right to acknowledge that voters would see his candidacy as focused on revenge rather than issues.
"In that sense it's a good thing," said Lipsman, a former member of the Democratic National Committee. "But I feel bad. For a lot of us, Al Gore won the election and deserved to be president."
With Gore's announcement, the 2004 Democratic field might resemble 1988, said University of Iowa political scientist Peverill Squire.
That year, a field crowded with U.S. senators, including Joseph Biden, Gary Hart and Paul Simon, produced Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis as its nominee.
"There are similarities, even some of the same players," Squire said, referring to Gephardt. "The action on the ground in Iowa is really going to pick up, and I don't think there's going to be a natural front-runner for some time."
To: Iowa Granny
re. your no. 8 on the Iowa Cuacuses
That Des Moines Register article gives a mighty good show for why primaries are stupid. I hope the Democrats keep it up.
165 posted on
12/16/2002 7:12:24 PM PST by
nicollo
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