By David Hogberg on 11.17.03 @ 12:04AM
No need to guess who came to the Jefferson-Jackson dinner.
DES MOINES -- Yes, I know a report on the Iowa Jefferson-Jackson
dinner should be all about Hillary Clinton. But there was plenty
else going on, so let's save her for dessert.
• John Kerry's campaign had the feel of a campaign that
was, well, once the frontrunner. His supporters had T-shirts on
touting him as "The Real Deal." Written in yellow chalk on the
sidewalk outside the Veterans Memorial Auditorium were the words
"Date Dean. Marry Kerry." Just inside the doors of the Vet were big
blown-up black and white photographs of Kerry with a shotgun (for
hunting, not weddings), Kerry in his Navy whites, Kerry with police
officers behind him, Kerry with John McCain, Kerry with Bill
Clinton, etc. His pre-event rally featured a group of very talented
high school drummers. In the hotel atrium, however, the noise was
deafening. Later in the rally, five gentlemen took to the stage and
peeled off their T-shirts to reveal a blue letter on each of their
torsos. They, of course, spelled out K-E-R-R-Y. Guess he's sewn up
the Seinfeld-Hockey vote.
• Somewhat spooky moment: At the Kerry rally, Iowa
Congressman Leonard Boswell said, "This country's foreign relations
are the worst they've been in my lifetime." That's remarkable,
given that he's nearly 70.
• Very spooky moment: During her speech, a former Senator
from Illinois said, "We're gonna show the American people that
George Orwell wrote fiction, not prophecy. And we will get our
civil liberties back. We will repeal the Patriot Act. We will make
certain that you have privacy in your home, you will have privacy
with what you read, you will be able to think again." Welcome to
planet Moseley Braun!
• Surreal moment: To help Iowa Democrats raise money,
Leonard Boswell auctioned off Senator Tom Harkin's necktie. It went
for $600. Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack was the buyer.
• Freudian slip of the campaign: Governor Vilsack ended his
speech by sounding the "the right-wing is questioning our
patriotism" note. He urged everyone to stand for the Pledge of
Allegiance, pointed to the flag and said, "They're not gonna take
it away from us!" He then recited the Pledge and left out the word
"indivisible."
• Howard Dean is the indisputable frontrunner, and Saturday
night erased whatever trifle of doubt anyone might have. He managed
to upstage all the other candidates twice. C-Span viewers would
have seen his act when the candidates were introduced. Rather than
head toward the stage, Dean stood in the upper-deck of the Vet. As
attention focused up toward Dean, he played it for all it was
worth, thrusting his index fingers into the air as if to say, "I'm
numero uno! I'm on the top looking down!" It was the highlight of
the evening.
Earlier there was Dean's entrance into the Vet. Just inside the
auditorium doors a crowd of Dean supporters stood on the right side
chanting, "We Want Dean!" A crowd of Richard Gephardt supporters
stood on the left side chanting, "Go Dick Go!" Dean then entered
the Vet on the Gephardt side. Hi supporters quickly
overwhelmed the Gephardt ones. Intent or accident? Your call.
• Near the sidewalk I encountered a draft Hillary activist
named Bob Kunst, who runs Hillary Now. Kunst clearly is a weathered
veteran of the left who has spent many years in the political
trenches. Hailing from Florida, Kunst ran for Governor last year as
an independent on the "stolen election" issue and received 42,000
votes. Indeed, Kunst says: "The stolen election issue is one the
resonates voters wherever I've been, and could be a big one in this
campaign." Yet if he is going to run a campaign to draft a Clinton,
he needs to be a bit more careful with his campaign paraphernalia.
One of his buttons had "oral history" printed on it.
• On the steps of the Vet, I met Adam Parkhomenko, an
18-year-old college student who is head of another such effort,
this one called Draft Hillary. Why he couldn't get together with
Kunst's effort wasn't entirely clear; Parkhomenko said Kunst didn't
want to, Kunst dismissed Parkhomenko as inexperienced. However,
Draft Hillary is the "official" draft Hillary organization because,
unlike Kunst, Parkhomenko has filed papers with the Federal
Elections Commission. He thought that the most likely scenario is
that none of the candidates will get enough delegates to sew up the
nomination. With a deadlocked convention, the pressure to draft
Hillary would mount. "She's said she won't run," Parkhomenko
stated, "but she never said she wouldn't accept being drafted." No
letter to Colonel Holmes in her background.
A few moments of Hillary's speech did seem like a speech a
candidate gives when she is about to enter the race: "We make a
very specific critique of this administration…But we have to
do more than criticize. We have to stand for the best values of the
Democratic Party. We have to have a vision for where we want to
lead this country. And I believe that if we do that, we will lay
the groundwork for the people of this great nation to elect a
Democrat."
However, in other parts, she did everything to avoid upstaging
the Democratic candidates, speaking glowingly of all of them: "I
think everybody here knows that tonight marks the beginning of a
campaign that leads one of our best Democrats that we've produced
in years to the White House." She rarely mentioned her husband's
administration, and then only to denigrate the Bush presidency and
to point out how much better a Democratic one would be.
There also seemed to be genuine joy that Hillary had come to
Iowa. With one exception, none of the Democrats I talked to off the
record expressed even the slightest concern that she was upstaging
the announced candidates. Rather they expressed sentiments similar
to what the official press spokespeople did:
Laura Capps, spokeswoman for John Kerry: "She's a great asset
who helps brings more national attention to Democrats."
Kim Ruby, spokeswoman for John Edwards: "Her purpose here is
helping Iowa Democrats raise money."
Donald Kaniewski, political director for the Laborers'
International Union, and a Gephardt supporter: "Hillary adds star
power and builds excitement for us."
So what, exactly, was Hillary doing? Well, clearly Hillary did
bring much attention to the Iowa Jefferson-Jackson dinner, and no
doubt the Iowa Democrats raised far more money Saturday night than
if Hillary had not shown up. She was gracious and supportive of all
the candidates. In so doing she has likely won the gratitude of
Iowa Democrats. What better way to set herself up as the
frontrunner for the Iowa Caucuses -- of 2008?
By making the Iowa Jefferson Jackson dinner her entry into the
2008 campaign, she may be transforming presidential campaigns, much
like her husband did. In the 1990s, campaigns for the next
presidential election began almost literally on the day after the
last election. Now it seems that the presidential campaign for the
next election begins before the next election.
topics:
John McCain, Hillary Clinton, NATO