By The Prowler on 2.6.04 @ 12:07AM
Kerry grows his own questioners. Plus: Breaking with Howie. Scripting an anti-Bush Oscar night.
I'M GLAD YOU ASKED THAT
First it was former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean
seemingly planting sick people around him so he could appear to be
a healer while on the campaign trail. (Recall
that early in the campaign, Dean was often coincidentally close by
to aid people who had either fainted or fallen ill at his campaign
events.)
Now John Kerry's campaign is planting
volunteers at his appearances in order to make him appear tougher.
At a rally yesterday at which he accepted the endorsement of Maine
Gov. John Baldacci, Kerry faced down a heckler in
the Portland audience who called out, "Why don't you tell them
about your vote on the war and the Patriot Act?"
Kerry responded that he would -- but in time. "I never run away
from anything, especially George Bush," Kerry said.
The candidate seemed to be quick on his feet in the response,
and his retort garnered applause. Perhaps his quick thinking was
the result of knowing the jibe was coming.
According to a Kerry campaign source, the campaign has been
looking to plant local volunteers in crowds to mix it up, and to
make it appear their man is facing down tough questioning. "This
kind of confrontation pushes him up the line in news coverage,"
says the staffer. "Instead of facing a tough question from a
reporter, the news guys have this seeming give and take to report
on."
BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO
The meeting scheduled to take place yesterday between Howie Dean
and his union supporters has been put off until this weekend,
according to Dean campaign insiders. Instead of a meet in Michigan,
where Dean has essentially shut down his campaign, the unions and
Dean will gather in Burlington, perhaps as early as Saturday.
All indications are that AFSCME and SEIU leadership are prepared
to pull the plug on their endorsement of Dean and open up the
vetting process so that they can meet with John
Kerry and Sen. John Edwards in the coming
days.
"The expectation is that we will be throwing our support behind
Kerry by the middle of February," says an AFSCME staffer in
Washington. "We don't want to wait around. We want to have those
AFSCME signs waving behind a winner before March, when the
nomination will pretty much be in hand."
Already organized labor groups with past loyalties to Rep.
Dick Gephardt have been meeting with both Kerry
and Edwards, but not Dean.
OSCAR POINTERS
Earlier this week, the Democratic 527 soft money PAC known as
America Coming Together came together with some New York-based
left-wing groups such The Media Fund, founded by Hillary svengali
Harold Ickes, to sponsor an "Out With Bush" night
similar to the "Hate Bush" event held in Beverly Hills last
December. The gathering was held at the New York Society for
Ethical Culture.
One thing that came out of it, according to an attendee, was a
plan to provide talking points to all the agents and media advisers
of persons nominated for an Academy Award. The hope is that the
pointers will prove useful should any of these actors choose to
slam the president in their acceptance speeches before a live
national audience.
"It will just be a page of clever insults and shots at the Bush
Administration," says the attendee. "The idea came up when someone
said that she hoped Sean Penn would win for 'Best
Actor,' because she just knew that his speech would be nothing but
shots at Bush and bluster about Iraq. From there, someone suggested
giving other nominees lines and ideas to use. There is this school
of thought that if enough people do it, it will really hurt
Bush."
topics:
Iraq, Unions