Posted on 12/22/2003 3:05:20 AM PST by NYS_Eric
The Dean dilemma
Robert Novak (archive)
December 22, 2003 | Print | Send
WASHINGTON -- Before a single vote has been cast anywhere, thoughtful Democrats across the country are reaching a melancholy conclusion. Howard Dean is close to clinching the nomination. The question is not merely whether he can be stopped but also whether he should be stopped.
This poses a dilemma that was discussed during a small, private dinner party last week attended by people actively engaged in politics for much of the last half-century. They viewed Dean's increasingly probable nomination with loathing and fear that it benefits George W. Bush. But to try and stop him now, they agreed, may open a bloody split in the Democratic Party not seen since the great divide of 1972.
This situation is made possible by Democratic reforms following the tumult of 1968. In 1972, at least, the party establishment fought to the bitter end attempting to block the nomination of George McGovern, because his loss of 49 states was widely anticipated. The final touch to the reforms has been added in this cycle by Democratic National Chairman Terry McAuliffe, whose front-loading of primaries was designed to pick an early nominee.
The Dean dilemma was spelled out to me by a sage Democratic practitioner whose views I have sought since 1968. He has felt for months that the former Vermont governor faces horrendous defeat against President Bush. Last week, this party loyalist told me he felt Dean will be nominated unless an act of intervention stops him. He added that he is sure Dean can be stopped but at the cost of unacceptable carnage. Implicitly and reluctantly, therefore, he is swallowing Dean.
The hope inside the Democratic establishment has been that once Dean perceived himself on the road to the nomination, he would pivot sharply toward the center. He may be unable to perform or even attempt this maneuver. He is no ideologue, but he has not outgrown being the smart-aleck kid from Park Avenue with a hard edge. The Democratic savants I have contacted can only shake their heads over his stubborn insistence that Saddam Hussein's capture has not made the country safer.
This discomfort was behind the Democratic group that last week put on television a tough ad depicting Dean as unable to cope with terror or "compete with George Bush on foreign policy." Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi immediately sent out an open letter to the party's other presidential candidates assailing this relatively restrained TV spot as "the kind of fear-mongering attack we've come to expect from Republicans." The ad was pulled off the air, suggesting limits to how far Democrats will go in confronting Dean. If nominated, he can expect much worse from the Republicans.
Most Americans and, indeed, most Democrats are hardly aware of Howard Dean's existence. The national polls that have propelled him well ahead of any other candidate still give him support from only one of four Democrats (slipping slightly after Hussein's capture). He runs far behind Bush in any one-on-one poll. However, the McAuliffe-shortened primary campaign is all in Dean's favor.
If Dean is the clear winner in Iowa and New Hampshire, he would seem assured of the nomination. Even if he is upset in Iowa by Rep. Richard Gephardt, it is hard to imagine Gephardt with enough money in the bank to battle Dean down the long primary election trail. Sen. John Kerry is seen as the only Democrat with the potential wherewithal to contest the money-heavy Dean, but Kerry's performance has been one of the year's great political disappointments.
As the economic outlook brightens, Democrats depend on the situation in Iraq to defeat Bush. That only deepens the party's dilemma. Surveys taken after Saddam Hussein's capture for the CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll show just 37 percent of Democrats think Iraq was worth going to war. But among all other voters, such support reached 70 percent (amounting to 61 percent nationally if Democrats are included).
Joe Trippi last week said the anti-Dean ad on foreign policy "panders to the worst in voters." Actually, the Democrats and Dean are out of step on the issue they think will move the nation. That makes it even more difficult to stop Howard Dean.
©2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Dean is Dukakis, without the charm.
<);^)
Wilson never worked for the CIA, but his wife, Valerie Plame, is an Agency operative on weapons of mass destruction. Two senior administration officials told me Wilson's wife suggested sending him to Niger to investigate the Italian report. The CIA says its counter-proliferation officials selected Wilson and asked his wife to contact him. "I will not answer any question about my wife," Wilson told me.So, if she was an analyst and not an operative at the time, Novak used the wrong term foolishly - which has been his explanation.
Either way, it seems foolish to name any non-appointee that works at CIA. He also fumbles answering why or how Wilson was chosen.
Treason? Hardly. Did he "out" her? I don't think it was in the public record at the time that Valerie Plame worked at the CIA, so in a sense, yes. Did he "out" a CIA operative? Well, the CIA and DOJ are investigating that given the media circus surrounding the issue.
My hope is that the FBI puts a ton of pressure on the journalists that stoked this fire and supposedly know who leaked, and supposedly shopped around, this information.
Campaign "finance reform" threatens to evicerate the parties, anyway.
Which is not a qualification to do anything other than practice medicine (and in Dean's case it's still questionable) much less be Pres. of the U.S..
Interestingly, the Democrat party average donation was in the thousands of dollars, while the Republican party average donation was only a couple hundred. That seems to conform to left coast and wealthy white liberals' support of the Democrat party. Campaign finance reform for that reason may hurt Dems more than Repubs for that reason.
Regards.
And Soros will be out a half-billion dollars. More good news!
Ah, always a bridesmaid, never a bride!
Nope, even the Deanie-weenies are smart enough to see that a guy who couldn't win his own state in his own run for the Presidency is not going to help them one bit. Since it would be suicide to appoint Hillary, even if Howard the Coward could stand her, he's going to have to go with a "bold stroke". I look for him to nominate the first black VP candidate, someone who is going to use the wreckage of the SS Dean to cling to for political survival much the same way Rose did in Titanic. I can't see anyone else wanting to book passage on this doomed ship.
Good. IMHO Clark would be an even worse disaster for the 'Rats than Dean. They're both nuts and say dumb things. Dean may be meaner, but Wesley's flip-floped more dramatically. The big plus with Wesley is the "crazy/creepy eyes" thing. Once he starts getting real scrutiny during the general, it'd be one "Ross Perot moment" after another.
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