Today will be perhaps John Kerry’s biggest day
thus far as the Democrats’ presumptive nominee for president.
Apparently refreshed from his week in the snow, Kerry returns to
Washington for a spate of meetings and rallies that should have him
front and center in the news cycle both today and tomorrow.
Kerry and his senior staff are expected to meet with Democratic
National Committee members Thursday morning to lay out their plans
for the coming months of campaigning and to indicate how they
expect the DNC to help.
“We’ve been talking off and on, but this will be the first in a
series of meetings where Kerry really does take control of the
party leading into the convention,” says a DNC fundraiser. “He and
[DNC Chairman Terry] McAuliffe
will have to present a united front, but Kerry’s people are going
to have a much larger say.
Expected at the DNC meeting is American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees boss Gerald
McEntee, who will be shadowing Kerry for much of the day.
McEntee, whose union will endorse Kerry later in the day, has been
demanding a front and center role in the Kerry campaign, and had
held up AFSCME’s endorsement until he and his union got
satisfaction on their demands. McEntee is expected to have a hand
in Kerry campaign policy development and will be key to organizing
grassroots coordination for labor.
Kerry is also expected to formally receive the endorsement of
former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean. The Kerry campaign
has that rally occurring on the campus of George Washington
University, to ensure a young and loud crowd.
“It’s perfect to draw some of the Deaniacs into our campaign,”
says a Kerry advance staffer. “We have the posters and everything
ready to go. The Deaniacs are going to become the Kerryacs,
now.”
Finally, Kerry will gather with President Bill
Clinton and Vice President Al Gore,
President Jimmy Carter and almost all of his 2004
primary rivals at a Democratic unity dinner at the National
Building Museum. Kerry and Clinton are expected to meet privately
before the event.
The site of the dinner, which should feature almost constant
attacks on President Bush, came as a disappointment to former
President Clinton. According to a DNC event planner, Clinton’s
staff in New York had asked that Clinton be given a suite at the
hotel where the fundraiser was to be held, this despite the fact
that Clinton owns a home less than four miles from the building
museum. “It’s apparently a standard request for them,” says the DNC
planner. “But it’s not in a hotel. I guess he’s got to go
home.”
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