By Shawn Macomber on 12.30.03 @ 12:03AM
Our man in the Granite State wonders: Can John Kerry ketchup to Howard Dean? Plus: What makes Teresa Heinz Kerry the perfect political wife?
NEW HAMPSHIRE -- Leave it to John Kerry to wax poetic at a chili
feed.
Kerry has tried everything. He played the sensitive male to
Howie Dean's metrosexual last summer by shedding tears, on camera,
over a single parent's minimum wage struggles. He dropped in the
polls. He tried putting on the tough guy veneer, cussing out GWB in
the pages of Rolling Stone a few weeks ago. His campaign
went into flatline. Kerry now seems confused as to what exactly it
is going to take to have a respectable showing in a state
originally written off as a cakewalk for him.
On Saturday morning I opened the local paper to find a huge
picture of a smiling John Kerry, an apron festooned across the
chest once filled with medals, and a ladle of steaming chili held
out to me. The ad was an open invitation to be served a free dinner
with a sitting United States Senator. How could I resist?
I showed up at the Elks hall in Rochester about half an hour
before Kerry was scheduled to arrive. He was an hour late, so I got
to sit around and listen to Kerry volunteers argue over who was
going to stand next to the Senator while he served chili.
"What if you hold the bowl, and the Senator ladles the chili
in?" said one volunteer, clearly acting as a uniter, not a
divider.
"I'm not holding anything I'm not filling myself," the other
retorted. And thus another grand compromise was thwarted.
FINALLY KERRY STORMED into the room, indeed showing energy rare
thus far in his campaign appearances. He looked like a guy who knew
this was it: now or never. Teresa Heinz Kerry followed, looking as
if she wished now was never. She leaned back against a
giant "John Kerry: The Real Deal" banner, attempting to demur from
her role in the festivities before being persuaded to ladle some
chili. Shortly thereafter, she gave one of the most confusing
introductions I have ever heard.
"I have come from the colds of Iowa," she said, in a lilting
accent. "I have been with the great people of Iowa, and, now, I am
with the great people of New Hampshire."
I began to think this was an improvised monologue from
Dances with Wolves, but then she started talking about how
nice people were in Iowa, adding that many Iowans would share their
food and homes with her before announcing they were supporting
another candidate. "But they always had a good reason," she
added.
Looking at John Kerry, I admired the fortitude it must have
taken to keep that smile plastered on his face while his wife
announced that there were perfectly good reasons to vote against
him.
Kerry then took the mike, and I was ready for the fire. How else
could he counter Dean? In the opening moments of this "town hall
meeting" I thought I was going to get it.
"I want you to not hold back," Kerry told the audience. "I want
you to get in my gut. Get in my heart. I'm in fighting form and
ready to kick some you-know-what."
However, the weapon Kerry decided to wield against Dean was not
the sword, but the quill. Paraphrasing Frost, Kerry told potential
voters, "Two roads have diverged in the New Hampshire woods." One
of those roads, the Dean road, led to "retreat and confusion" and
abandons Democrats' "responsibility to talk straight to the
American people." Not surprisingly, the Kerry road is a bit more
pleasant. It leads to peace and security. It is, in fact, "the road
of answers and not just anger." Take that, Howie.
This isn't the first time Kerry has sought to combine poetry
with brawn. After discussing the ins and outs of hunting with a
Washington Post reporter, Kerry shared the following verse
he penned: "I had a talk with a deer today/we met upon the road
some way … between his frequent snorts/He asked me if I
sought his pelt/cause if I did he said he felt/quite out of
sorts!"
Although the crowd was not nearly as populous as those drawn by
Dr. Dean, there was a lot of love for Kerry in the room, save for a
couple union guys who took vocal, long-winded, nonsensical issue
with Kerry's support of free trade.
One woman launched into a three-minute tirade about how Bush
Administration policies were giving children asthma, before finally
saying, "But what I really want to know is what you'll do about the
deficit." It's no wonder Kerry's campaign is suffering from
schizophrenia -- his support base is, too.
PERHAPS THE MOST INTERESTING thing about the long event was Teresa
Heinz Kerry's inability to mask her boredom. While her husband was
talking she sauntered out back and stared off into the parking lot.
She slumped in a chair, head in hands, looking at the floor. She
whispered back and forth with Time magazine's Joe
Klein.
One of the last questions Kerry fielded was whether he would
take month-long vacations while president, as George W. Bush has
done. Kerry answered a plain "no," and looked confused when the
audience broke out into raucous laughter. Teresa had come to life,
and was nodding crazily, "yes, yes, yes." Kerry lost his smile for
the first time in three hours.
"No, really, the answer is no," he said. But Teresa just kept
bobbing, and the audience kept laughing, and John Kerry frowned, as
if he couldn't decide whether to draw his sword or his quill.
Then the poet cowboy got on the Real Deal Express and rode off
into the fading twilight.
topics:
Trade, NATO, Energy