Poor Dick Gephardt. Just when it appeared he
was gaining some traction in Iowa and with his labor endorsements,
former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean has to come around
and spoil everything. Some polls show Dean burying Gephardt in
Iowa, while Dean also appears to gaining in popularity in organized
labor homes there. As reported in the Prowler, he has been gaining
some personal endorsements from Iowa labor leaders, and in the past
week, Dean won a vote of more than 1,500 Service Employees
International Union members, who gathered to hear most of the
Democrats spout off for their endorsement.
In the end, Gephardt didn’t rate as one of the top two in the
SEIU balloting, and union head Andrew Stern pulled
the plug on the endorsement. “When Dean won,” says and AFL-CIO
lobbyist, who was tracking the SEIU conference, “Stern held a board
meeting and suggested that an endorsement be put off until later in
the year. Dean’s people were pushing hard for an announcement, but
Gephardt’s people were more successful in having the endorsement
announcement delayed.”
Over the next few weeks, Gephardt is going to be scrambling to
show organized labor it won’t be wasting its support on a man who
can’t win. Meanwhile, Dean is feeling cocky about where his
campaign is going. After the SEIU vote, in which Sen. John
Edwards finished a surprising second, Dean made a point of
taking Edwards on during candidate forums and on the stump.
“He feels right now no one can touch him,” says a Dean staffer.
“He’s pulling in money like there is no tomorrow. He’s winning
every poll out there. Everyone is running against him. It’s pretty
neat.”
Meanwhile, the Stern and the SEIU is trying to figure out how
best to handle the Dean situation. Many believed Stern, who would
one day like to head the overall AFL-CIO, wanted an early
endorsement so that he could play kingmaker among labor’s fractious
membership. Touting Dean now might have done just that. But Stern,
like just about every other labor leader, is trying to gauge just
how strong Dean can be leading into the winter months.
“Everyone is waiting to see if Kerry and Edwards and even
Gephardt can get a second wind,” says the AFL-CIO lobbyist. There
is still lots of time, and while Stern would like to have his guy,
he’s not willing to go that far out on a limb, unless Dean makes
some remarkable promises to him. And Dean isn’t in a position to do
that … yet.”