By George Neumayr on 1.30.04 @ 12:15AM
Compared to the rest of a dead field, Johnnie Kerry almost passed for presidential in last night’s Greenville "debate." Meanwhile, Joe Trippi wept and Al Sharpton almost made John Edwards bawl.
Thursday's Democratic presidential debate in South Carolina was
as dead as Howard Dean's campaign. Not even intending to run ads in
South Carolina, Dean put in a passive performance. A few times he
fielded questions from moderator Tom Brokaw with his hands casually
in his pockets. Dean's one attempt to challenge John Kerry
backfired. Bragging about his record as governor of Vermont, Dean
said Kerry as a do-nothing senator lacked the accomplishments to be
president. Kerry replied that presidents benefit from knowledge of
the workings of Congress and the crowd applauded. Kerry is a
senatorial stuffed shirt, but next to Dean, who looks like a cocky
JV wrestling coach, Kerry seems presidential.
More interesting than Dean's performance in the debate was
Deborah Norville's interview with sacked Dean campaign manager Joe
Trippi after it. She caught up with Trippi via cell phone in his
car on his way home. She reduced Trippi to tears as she rehashed
his sacking. She described Dean's move as a " sucker punch." Then a
GQ writer came on to laud Trippi's dedication, and
speculate on whether Dean " deserved" him.
Al Sharpton appeared on MSNBC after the debate too. The scroll
at the bottom of the screen informed viewers that " Johnnie Cochran
was doing radio ads" for Sharpton in South Carolina and that
Sharpton had said of recently incarcerated musician James Brown: "
He'll be out in time to vote for me."
Sharpton's performance in the debate was worthy of Johnnie
Cochran. Sharpton came up with a novel way to out-demagogue John
Edwards when Edwards waxed on about his hardscrabble Carolina
roots. Edwards had said he was the " son of a mill worker."
Sharpton trumped him, saying " I am the son of a father who
couldn't be a mill worker." Sharpton also needled Brokaw, who
seemed to botch a question about Islamic nations which came out
like a question about the Nation of Islam. (Brokaw, wandering
around the stage usually without notes, perhaps to show off a grasp
of the material, kept getting corrected by the candidates for his
askew questions.)
Perhaps Sharpton didn't take kindly to Brokaw's comment in a NBC
interview before the debate on the black vote in South
Carolina:
"Everyone in South Carolina says that the black vote here is not
like a black urban vote, for example. These are church-going people
who in many instances have the same moral values as members of the
Christian Coalition in terms of their faith and their values and
what they want out of life. It's a much more conservative black
population in terms of values."
Edwards must not have heard the news. In response to a question
about his reluctance to embrace homosexual marriage, Edwards
defensively noted his support for homosexual " adoption rights,"
casting the homosexual issue as a civil rights issue. Church-going
black voters in South Carolina might disagree.
Wesley Clark's one offering on cultural issues was to recall the
horror of scriptural reading and prayer at his childhood public
school in Little Rock, Arkansas. Only now, said Clark, does he
realize the suffering that must have caused his nonreligious
classmates.(Sharpton, earlier in the debate, chipped in that "we
shouldn't act like our religion is better than anyone else's,"
though that didn't stop him from condemning fundamentalist
Christians.)
Lieberman had little to say in the debate, except to note
several times that he is an "experienced centrist." He took great
hope in an endorsement from the Arizona Republic. But
perhaps no one was more hopeful than Dennis Kucinich, who prefaced
his answers with, "What I intend to do as President of the United
States" and "My first act in office."
These exaggerating pols were all very disturbed by the
"exaggerations" of the Bush administration. Dean said that Dick
Cheney had "berated" CIA officials in an attempt to get them to
exaggerate their findings on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
"Berated" sounds like an exaggeration, perhaps something Howard
Dean would do. But Dick Cheney?
Dean reserved his harshest words not for John Kerry but the
"right wing." He usually says that he wants to take the flag away
from Rush Limbaugh. But this time he added to his Al Franken-style
inventory of insults a comment about the Constitution not belonging
to " members of the Federalist Society."
Someone needs to inform Dean that he is not running against the
right wing, and now that his campaign has collapsed, he never
will.
topics:
Religion, Islam, Constitution, Iraq, NATO