Posted on 09/18/2004 5:34:59 PM PDT by MadIvan
DEMOCRAT challenger John Kerrys election campaign is in turmoil. The presidential hopeful is in trouble and is running out of time, while President George W Bush presses ahead in the polls.
In a desperate attempt to claw back the slide, Kerry decided to revamp his team by bringing in veteran Clinton operatives such as Joe Lockhart, John Sasso, Michael Whouley and Mike McCurry to oversee key parts of the campaign.
But the move has caused more division and chaos in the campaign and the arrival of the Clinton team means Kerrys original campaign strategist, Bob Shrum, has seen his influence diminished.
In Democrat circles they are beginning to talk about "the Curse of Shrum". The veteran strategist, who played a similar role for Al Gore and has lost all seven presidential campaigns he has worked on, is rapidly emerging as the fall guy for the Kerry campaigns lacklustre August.
Shrum was blamed for Kerrys failure to respond decisively to the attacks on his Vietnam record by the so-called "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth". As well as the inability to project a clear and consistent message, the group is widely seen to have damaged Kerrys standing with the electorate.
"Lockharts approach is very different," said one campaign official. "He realises the only thing the American people hate more than a bully is somebody who wont fight back."
The situation has deteriorated so much, however, that Kerry was asked: "Who is running this campaign?" on the popular Don Imus radio show on Wednesday morning. That the question could even be asked testified to the muddle and confusion that has characterised the Democratic campaign.
One problem is that Kerry likes listening to everyones opinions, infuriating officials who want snappy decisions made before events spin out of the campaigns control.
Although Kerry insisted to Imus that "Mary Beth Cahill is running this campaign and shes doing a spectacular job", insiders say that the real power in the camp belongs to the new arrivals such as Lockhart and, in particular, Sasso whom some campaign officials are calling the campaigns "quarterback".
Other campaign sources told the Washington Post that Sasso is the "über adult" on the campaign trail and the candidates "best buddy".
The divides in the Kerry camp are symptomatic of a wider divide within the Democratic party: between the party of Teddy Kennedy and the party of Bill Clinton. Shrum, who has worked with Kennedy for more than 20 years, was frozen out during the Clinton years, playing no part in either the 1992 and 1996 elections but was brought back into the fold by Kerry.
The new arrivals are all Clintonistas, however, who believe that Kerry needs to be sharper and quicker to react against Republican attacks than he has been so far. Some leading Democrats fret that simply reorganising the campaign structure will not be enough.
According to Tony Coelho, who chaired Gores campaign four years ago: "There is a sense of disarray on that campaign that everyone is talking about. You have a great deal of creative talent coming in and a great deal of experience, but no leader of the campaign."
And, he warns darkly: "If Kerry tries to be that leader, theyre in trouble.
"There is nobody in charge and you have these two teams that are generally not talking to each other."
Clintons former pollster Dick Morris, now a sharp critic of Democrats, goes further: "Lockhart and McCurry face the same problem that Shrum encountered before them: They have a candidate who cant figure out why hes running. Kerry doesnt have a strategy because he doesnt have an agenda or even clear issue positions."
Ultimately, however, Kerrys inability to produce a coherent message on his position vis-a-vis the war has consistently got in the way of his attempts to change the subject to the state of the economy or other domestic issues.
"The president is winning the debate over Iraq, despite the conditions on the ground," says Ivo Daalder, a former National Security Council aide in the Clinton administration. "You have to go at the heart of the argument Bush is making: that Iraq is part of the war on terror. You have to make clear it has undermined our ability to fight the war on terror."
"We have to separate [Iraq] from the overall war on terror and make the case that this diverted resources to something that did not contribute to the war on terror," argues Lockhart from his post as Kerrys new senior communications adviser.
Earlier this month a Gallup poll found that the percentage of Americans who considered the war a mistake had fallen from 54% in July to just 38% in early September.
Despite the recent escalation of serious violence in Iraq the administration plans to use next weeks visit by the Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi to remind voters that Saddams departure was something that was long overdue as well as using the visit to highlight moves towards election scheduled for Iraq next month.
As the election nears, so the stakes increase. Mistakes now cannot easily be recovered. Although last weeks Gallup poll that gave Bush a 14-point lead is considered a rogue poll, an average of previous national polls suggests Bush has a four to five point lead. More significant, however, are the state by state polls. These too suggest that Kerry has ground to make up and that crucial swing states such as Ohio and Wisconsin are now slipping from his grasp.
Just as troubling for the challenger, he only enjoys a 49-45% lead in reliably Democrat Illinois and New Jersey according to the most recent surveys.
Any resources he must commit to shore up his position there are necessarily resources unavailable to him in swing states. This in turn means that Kerry must win both Florida and Pennsylvania if he is to have a realistic chance of victory. The latter, won by Gore in 2000, is currently a toss up while Bush has a two point lead in Florida.
The Kerry campaign retains a stoic countenance in public, but it is playing defence while the Republicans continue to press forward on the attack.
Ping!
And the Clintonistas want to make sure it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I would feel better watching this campaign implode were it closer to election day.
He is doomed and rightly so. He cannot run an effective campaign and similarly he couldn't run an effective presidency. He cannot even make up his mind on fundamental questions. This long campaign has proven valuable because it's exposed this man for the fraud and poseur that he is.
Too many (bad) cooks ruin the broth.
I think the curse could be spread around a bit,,,it's not just Shrum (who?)...
Between the egotistical blabbermouths,,
The rich bi&&&h wife
The pampered, half-dead, flip-flopping Dem candidate,
and the morbid, scorched earth policy of the Dem machine,,
I'd say there's lots of reasons why the Dems won't win.
I feel bad about the soldiers,,their image does NOT deserve the tarnished stain the DEMS are putting on it. Other than that,,,I am enjoying watching them twist in the wind.

It takes a true putz to advise Kerry to snap off a salute during the most important speech of his life.
Here you see a prime example of media bias. Considered by whom? What proof or examples exist that can back up this assertion? It's his way of saying, "Well, that poll may put Bush ahead, but we REALLY know he's not, don't we?"
Clarifying, I am enjoying watching the DEMS twist in the wind,,not the soldiers.
I deeply respect our military,,all branches at all levels.
The RNC should use Kerry's inability to exert any leadership ability and and his inability to delegate decision making authority as an indicator of how he will run an administration. He certainly is a one-dimensional thinker, barely able to walk and chew chewing gum at the same time.
Homework assignment for someone who knows how and has the resources: How is Kerry's Senate office managed. Are it and its staff in as much disarray as his campaign?
Take the 11 best football quarterbacks and put them on a team. They wouldn't win a game. That's what Kerry has done with the "best" democratic campaign operatives. There is no unified message coming out of his mouth.
Exactly. Keep bashing Bush -- the more vicious the attacks, the better.
Who knows? They don't do jack-sh** because their boss doesn't do jack-sh**.
Kerry has never proposed or been co-sponsor of a single piece of significant legislation.
Now, there's no one who believes that Shrum rivals a slug trail any more than I do........but he's getting a bum rap here.
How do you respond to the truth ....the TRUTH....... when your candidate has built a career on lies? A faux "hero"? When Kerry himself can't and won't answer the Swifties for one simple reason: he knows in his soul of souls (assuming he has one) that the Swifties are dead-on right; they were there.
No, it isn't Shrum this time. It's the candidate, pure and simple. The Dems had one horrific field of candidates, and they wound up with damaged goods. Shrum isn't a magician.
People in a position in the campaign "to know" information like this, actually use phrases like "uber adult" and "best buddy"?
It's the freaking Ronald McDonald campaign.
Original phrase:
Although last weeks Gallup poll that gave Bush a 14-point lead is considered a rogue poll
Edited phrase:
Although the liberal elite consider last weeks Gallup poll that gave Bush a 14-point lead a rogue poll
Et voila!
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