By The Prowler on 1.12.04 @ 12:03AM
He mistrusts the Gephardt union label. Plus: O’Neill knows nothing.
UNION CRACKDOWN
First former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean didn't like
that other Democratic presidential hopefuls were attacking him, and
called on Democratic National Committee chairman Terry
McAuliffe to get them off his back.
Now Dean is calling on the AFL-CIO to get organized labor groups
that have endorsed other candidates and are working for them --
especially Rep. Dick Gephardt -- in Iowa and New
Hampshire out of the races.
"It isn't good enough that Dean has AFSCME and SEIU working for
him, now he wants all the other unions to stop working for their
candidates," says an AFL-CIO Washington lobbyist, who notes Dean
has called AFL-CIO President John Sweeney to
complain about union activities against him in Iowa.
According to a Gephardt staffer on the ground in Des Moines,
Dean is most piqued about union members who are organizing Iowa
caucus voters for Gephardt and thus making life miserable for
AFSCME and SEIU members doing similar work for Dean across the
state.
The tension between the two camps is heightened because while
Dean has the big union backing, Gephardt has a larger percentage of
AFL-CIO member unions in his camp, and the overall AFL-CIO
endorsement will go to the candidate with the majority of member
union support.
"For all the talk of Dean in Iowa, Gephardt still can challenge
him for the AFL-CIO endorsement, which would go a long way to
helping him win the nomination," says the Gephardt staffer. "Dean's
people can try to bully the unions, but we've had a much longer
relationship with them, and they aren't just going to bend to
Dean's demands that easily."
Meanwhile, the Dean team celebrated the endorsement they
received from Sen. Tom Harkin on Friday afternoon.
"It ended a really lousy week on a good note," says a Dean
staffer.
The endorsement also came at the end of week that may see some
changes to the Dean operations. Already, Dean campaign manager
Joe Trippi is installing senior management in
Vermont headquarters to better manage a growing campaign team, and
take the pressure off staffers traveling with the candidate. Should
Dean win Iowa and New Hampshire, expect additional changes and
expansion of the campaign staff.
OLD NEWS
What former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and
other Bush administration blabbermouths failed to mention when
leaking NSC documents and the like for the forthcoming book O'Neill
worked on, is that the Clinton administration had many of the same
documents prepared laying out plans for a Iraq post-invasion
Iraq.
"We had the same stuff," says a former senior Clinton
Administration aide who worked at the Pentagon. "It would have been
irresponsible not to have such planning. We had all kinds of
briefing material ready should the president have decided to move
on Iraq. In fact, a lot of the material we had prepared was
material that the previous Bush administration had left for us. It
just isn't that big a deal. Or shouldn't be."
topics:
Iraq, Unions