Posted on 10/10/2002 6:45:58 AM PDT by areafiftyone
Carl McCalls sparsely furnished campaign office on Park Avenue South has been a pretty gloomy place recently. The candidate and his staff have been spending much of their time explaining to supporters and wary donors that all those negative press reports and depressed poll numbers arent really what they seem.
But in the next few days, a hardened political operative from Washington, D.C., will arrive at McCall headquarters to dispel the gloom and whip the campaign into shape: Harold Ickes. A centrally located ninth floor office has been prepared for his full-time occupancy. He has brought along his fund-raising Rolodex, and hes expected to help sharpen the campaigns fuzzy message.
Mr. Ickes, a longtime adviser to Mr. McCall and a close ally of Bill and Hillary Clinton, is a no-nonsense operative who is a veteran of many New York campaigns; he was a driving force behind the candidacies of Mayor David Dinkins and both Clintons.
The McCall campaign is asking him to do something that they havent yet managed to do on their own: reverse the direction of an electoral battle that is rapidly getting away from them.
"He understands better than anybody how this game works," said top McCall adviser Bill Lynch. "He did it for Bill Clinton in New York, and he did it for Hillary last time out. As a fund-raiser and as a general tactician, hes going to be very helpful."
The arrival of Mr. Ickes signals that the McCall campaign is bulking up for the closing stretch, but it also suggests that the campaign is in urgent need of outside help to jolt it out of its malaise. With only three weeks to go until Election Day, Mr. McCall is relying on an array of heavy-hitting surrogates like Mr. Ickes to wage a last-ditch, come-from-behind effort. Mr. Ickes and others, including the Clintons, Senator Chuck Schumer and Harlem Congressman Charles Rangel will play an increasingly visible role in ratcheting up fund-raising and to drawing new media attention to campaigning across the state. Mr. Clinton has been making phone calls himself to raise money and help put together big-ticket events, such as an upcoming evening affair hosted by businessman Ron Berkle and Magic Johnson.
Mr. McCall needs all the help he can get. He has struggled for more than a week to talk about something other than a series of referrals he wrote on the letterhead of the State Comptrollers office to the heads of companies that did business with the state, recommending jobs for a number of friends and relatives. The McCall letters have become a running subplot to the campaign, with the New York Posts Robert Hardt Jr. in the role of the ever-present Inspector Javert.
Even when given an opportunity to change the subject, the McCall campaign has at times been slow to respond. On Oct. 4, the Daily News ran a story about Governor Pataki moving 250 jobs from ailing downtown Manhattan to work in Harlem on a pet project of Rev. Calvin Butts, who both candidates have been courting. On the day the story appeared, Mr. McCall was holding a press conference on the steps of City Hall to talk about equal pay for women.
News reporter Joel Siegel, who had written the article, asked Mr. McCall to comment on the disappearing jobs downtown. It was Mr. McCalls cue.
The response: "Im not aware of that. I havent seen the report."
Mr. Siegel tried again, describing the story to the candidate.
"The idea is hes moving jobs from lower Manhattan to Harlem?" Mr. McCall asked. "Just before the election?" He paused. "I havent seen it."
That story died. The McCall letters kept coming.
Mr. McCall could learn from Hillary Clinton, whose campaign perfected the art of brushing aside or ignoring scandals. Stories about her embrace of Suha Arafat and her failure to tip an upstate waitress vanished amid her relentless focus on "the issues."
McCalls Best Hope
Mrs. Clinton, for her part, seems aware of the urgent need for Mr. McCall to duplicate her tactics. At an Oct. 7 appearance with Mr. McCall at his headquarters, she stood between the State Comptroller and Senator Joseph Lieberman, who had also come to praise Mr. McCall and denounce Mr. Pataki. Mrs. Clinton tried to draw a parallel between her race in 2000 and Mr. McCalls current effort.
"Joe Lieberman came in and campaigned for me [in 2000, when he ran for Vice President], and now hes campaigning for Carl," she said. "I think theres a connection. He came in and focused my race on the issues, and now hes going to do it for Carl."
In many ways, the parallel runs even deeper. Many of the people who played key roles in engineering Mrs. Clintons victory over Republican Congressman Rick Lazio are trying to do the same for Mr. McCall. In addition to Mr. Ickes, Mr. Lynch and former President Clinton, the campaign is studded with current and former Clinton staffers like senior advisor Eric Eve, fund-raiser Vivian Santora, adviser Sarah Kovner and operative Paul Elliott.
Its the Clintons themselves who represent perhaps the McCall campaigns best hope. Mr. McCall, a low-key public official running against a strong incumbent, has managed to raise only a minuscule fraction of the amount raked in by Mrs. Clinton, who at the time was a world-famous First Lady and who was running for an open Senate seat.
That fund-raising prowess can help Mr. McCall overcome his financial difficulties. The Clintons could easily raise millions of dollars between now and Election Day to add to the measly $1.1 million currently remaining in the campaigns coffers. (Mr. Pataki, as of the same filing, had $12.2 million on hand, enough to blanket the airwaves with ads until Nov. 5.) Mrs. Clinton has already made the maximum allowable contribution from her political action committee to the McCall campaign, has raised $1 million from her top supporters and will host an additional fundraiser for him in late October.
But there is no shortage of differences between the two campaigns. And Mrs. Clintons campaign operation was famously effective at using surrogates to vouch for her: Senator Chuck Schumer reassured Jewish voters worried about her positions on the Middle East, Congressman Charlie Rangel made her an honorary black woman, and her husband, in ways subtle and not so subtle, assured New Yorks voters would be lucky to have her.
The McCall campaign, by contrast, has thus far failed to leverage its high-profile surrogates effectively. The campaign gained some support during the Democratic primary election by touting an early endorsement from Mr. Schumer in a television ad. But they have yet to capitalize on the Clintons star power in New York. For now, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton have been asked by the campaign to help almost exclusively with the urgent task of raising money. Nor is the campaign likely to have the luxury anytime soon to concentrate on anything else: With the amount of money available as of the last filing, the campaign didnt even have enough money to do basic things like get-out-the-vote operations in heavily Democratic neighborhoods.
Asked about his financial disadvantage, Mr. McCall usually says, "We will have enough to be competitive." Standing with Mrs. Clinton at the Oct. 7 event, he suggested that the Governor had compiled his tremendous monetary advantage by pressuring donors or rewarding them with state contractssomething that state Democrats have accused the Governor of doing almost since he took office. And Mr. McCall predicted that his campaigns fund-raising would pick up sharply over the last month of the campaign. "I think youre going to find, in the coming days and weeks, that we are going to do very well," he said.
In the meantime, though, Mr. McCalls supporters are preparing to make do with what they have. At a recent meeting of the Council of Black Elected Democrats at the Langston Hughes library in Queens, Congressman Gregory Meeks brought attendees to attention with an emotionally plaintive speech about how Carl McCall, the first black Democratic candidate for Governor in New York, was going to have a paupers-field operation. Mr. Meeks said that it would be up to every official in the room, if they wanted to help Mr. McCall, to make up for the campaigns shortcomings by going out into the streets of minority neighborhoods by themselves, if necessary, to rouse support for their candidate. "Weve got to show that despite the money, we can win," Mr. Meeks said afterwards.
Other of Mr. McCalls supporters, ever hopeful, are still betting that they will. "I think the campaign is poised and ready to blow by Pataki," Mr. Lynch said. "Everythings going to kick in during the last three weeks. You never have enough money, and the bigger the race, the bigger the expectation. But this thing is going to get done out of folks passion and just wanting it to happen for Carl.
You may reach Josh Benson via email at: jbenson@observer.com.
Keep dreaming. Golisano has stolen alot of McCall's thunder. By being a spoiler he has officially ruined it for the Democreeps chances of taking the Governorship. But they keep blaming Pataki. HEH HEH! What goes around comes around.
Why is McCall in this race at all? Either he just doesn't have the political instincts to grab hold of a gift of an opening like that, or he's just plain stupid.
I almost feel bad for Andy Cuomo, who must be reading this kind of thing and wondering how the hell he managed to lose the primary to a guy with the IQ of string cheese.
I almost feel bad for Andy, that is ;)
(Leave The Left Behind) |
||
![]() |
FreeRepublic , LLC PO BOX 9771 FRESNO, CA 93794
|
|
|
OH I think we all know why Cuomo lost the primary don't we? I betcha he does too!
From your keyboard to God's ear! So, don't go blowing wishful thinking out here to us folks who don't keep up with local New York politics. I hate to be disappointed.
Imagine the Cuomo angst. If only he hadn't been so totally corrupt, he might have had the courage to expose McCall's corruption back before the primaries. I'm guessing Cuomo didn't want to open that can of worms for fear it would come back to bite him...and from other democrats! Ouch!
So the folks in the "D" primary pretty much had their choice of Carl the Dummy or Andy the Jerk - I didn't envy them much in their choice. They must surely be a little bit jealous of the Republicans, who have, in the form of Pataki, what the Dems desperately want - an electable Democrat ;)
Yes,they mean Helpful defined as Manipulative,mmm hmmm.You would've thought most N.Y. Voters would've awakened to these slimes by now.
This is not the time for NASTY Hard noses. Ickes is much like his father who played the NASTY guy for FDR. FDR was bright enough to know that nasty guys as politicicans don't do well in bad and dangerous times. So FDR delegated all the NASTY jobs to Ickes Sr.
Ickes is not a good campaign strategest. He is a contact man. He can get a candidate party offical support. He is not very effective as getting rank and file voters to the polls.
What McCall needs is voters... Ickes can't get much beyond the left wing base for him and if McCall does not have 100 percent of the left wing base he is toast.
You got that right.
It appears the NY Dems. aren't all that unhappy with Pataki. If they were, don't you think they would have run a candidate with more, shall we say, gravitas than McCall?
The election of Xillary convinced me that NY voters HAVE awakened to "these slimes". The sad truth is, IT DOESN'T MATTER. As long as they're liberals socialists, that is.
(Sniffle) Oh, that's so sweet (sob).....you're so (sniff) compassionate.
Hey, they don't call me "Mister Compassionate" for nothing, you know. ;)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.