By The Prowler on 5.4.04 @ 12:07AM
Look, Teresa, no hands!
Ask just about any reporter flying around the country with
Al Gore during the 2000 campaign, and he or she
will tell you that Gore was not a popular guy with his press
corps.
It wasn't that they despised him. It was just that he rarely
gave them good copy, and was seemingly physically unable to spend
quality "off the record" bonding time with the girls and boys on
the bus.
Now comes word that presumptive Democratic presidential
candidate Sen. John Kerry is keeping up the
tradition of ticking off his press. The difference between Kerry
and Gore is that Kerry and his staff aren't communicating with the
press about actual important stuff -- at least to the reporters
covering Kerry's every move.
For example, in just the past five days, Kerry's campaign failed
to tell the pool reporters about a doctor visit (to inspect Kerry's
bum shoulder), a secret meeting with Al Gore (perhaps to discuss
how to alienate the press corps?), a visit to Walter Reed Hospital
in Washington, apparently to visit injured U.S. military personnel,
though no one in Kerry's camp confirmed it, and a bicycle ride in
Concord, Massachusetts.
Things really did get weird for the press when Kerry and his
staff refused to discuss why the candidate was flying up to Boston
on Sunday, particularly after it later turned out that the only
reason was the ill-fated bike ride. "And the only reason we learned
about that was because Kerry fell and someone on staff felt like
they had to tell us," says a TV news producer based in
Washington.
Prior to the fall, on the way up to Boston, Kerry told some of
the reporters that it wasn't really their business what he was
going to do in Boston. "I've just got a bunch of stuff I've got to
do -- just never get home. There are some decisions that are more
important than being on the road."
And it's best to make them while on a ten-speed (no word yet
whether the bike is American-made or perhaps French or Italian).
Prior to "Bikegate," the Kerry campaign was happy to create the
illusion with some reporters that the supersecret Boston trip was
convention and vice-presidential-candidate-selection related. The
spill, in which Kerry was unhurt, was an embarrassing moment for
all involved, including the reporters who felt they had been
suckered.
"This isn't the easiest candidate to cover," says the producer.
"Let's leave it at that."
Kerry, by the way, was on Monday supposed to meet with his
search committee to discuss the vice-presidential vetting process.
Last week's candidate du jour was Rep. Dick
Gephardt. This week, it's Wesley Clark. Another name being
floated, seemingly out of nowhere, is Sen. Dianne
Feinstein of California, who has neither the swing state
nor the overly "moderate" label Kerry is said to be looking for
(unless compared to Babs Boxer). But using that
kind of logic, Gephardt should be ruled out as well.
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