CLARK DID WHAT?!
Senior staff to Wesley Clark rose in objection on
Wednesday evening and Thursday morning on news from their former
candidate that he intended to endorse Sen. John
Kerry for the Democratic nomination.
Clark told his senior staff that he had talked to Kerry and that
he intended to back his former competitor. Clark never spoke to
other Democratic hopefuls Sen. John Edwards and
former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean.
Perhaps the most stung by Clark’s decision was his senior
adviser Chris Lehane, who prior to joining Clark’s
staff had briefly advised Kerry’s campaign.
Lehane is now the focus of a media whirlwind over negative
stories about Kerry he is said to have spun to reporters over the
past few weeks.
Clark’s staff was made up of a number former Bill
Clinton adviser and campaign employees, many of whom were
led to believe that Clark would stay in the race through Super
Tuesday. “It was obvious he wasn’t going to win the nomination, but
we were given every indication that he was going to stay in this.
The timing is just surprising, that’s all,” says a now former Clark
staffer.
Lehane was vocal in his opposition to Clark’s endorsement of
Kerry, says the former Clark staffer. And some believed that the
rumors about alleged Kerry extracurricular activity that hit the
Internet on Thursday came from angry Clark staffers seeking to
scuttle the endorsement.
In reality, though, stories about Kerry’s behavior behind closed
doors appear to be coming off of Capitol Hill, where Kerry is
probably known best.
“Everyone up here talks, and in the case of the stories that are
now developing, we’ve known about this stuff for years. It was only
a matter of time,” says one staffer for a Democratic Senator from a
mid-Atlantic state. “Reporters have been feeding off this stuff for
months up here.”
THEY STARTED IT
While the Senate sergeant of arms looks into Democratic charges
that Republican staffers on the Senate Judiciary Committee
unethically accessed open Democratic staff computer files and
printed out internal staff memos, perhaps he could also look into
how Democratic Judiciary Committee staffers did similar things to
Republicans. For example, according to a former Democratic
committee staffer, they had used interns in the summer of 2002 and
2003 to check up on Republican strategy, sifting through recycle
and shredding bins for documents that might give them insight into
GOP planning.