By The Prowler on 6.8.04 @ 12:09AM
Seeding the states with Clinton-Gore goons. Plus: Democrats discover Reagan. Also: Al Gore’s latest crazy act.
STATE YOUR BUSINESS
Over the weekend, presumptive Democratic presidential candidate
Sen. John Kerry hired his campaign's state
political and campaign directors, who will be critical to his
having the remotest hope of winning election in the fall. Kerry
brought on board twelve seasoned political veterans, most of them
with close ties to the Clinton and Gore campaigns of 1996 and
2000.
Perhaps the biggest surprise was Kerry's decision to bypass the
recommendations of supposed close allies and go with some
surprising picks. For example, both Pennsylvania Gov. Ed
Rendell and New Mexico Gov. Bill
Richardson had submitted a list of names of trusted
political bagmen to the Kerry campaign for their state political
jobs. In both cases, Kerry went with comparative outsiders:
Tony Podesta, brother of former Clinton chief of
staff John Podesta, for Pennsylvania, and
Moses Mercado, a former key adviser to Rep.
Dick Gephardt in the House.
"No slight to the recommendations," says a Kerry adviser in
Washington. "The boss just wanted to go with someone he trusted on
his own. The people he picked came highly recommended or were known
to him before the campaign."
Perhaps most surprising were the number of Clinton loyalists
brought into the campaign. With the exception of Donnie
Fowler, who served as Al Gore's national field director in
2000, and who will work Michigan for Kerry, virtually all of the
swing-state political directors -- Wisconsin, Illinois, Arkansas,
Missouri, and Oregon -- are Clinton hands.
"Who else can we draw on?" asks the Kerry adviser. "These are
the folks with the campaign background. It isn't like we have been
able to develop a Kerry farm team over the past couple of years.
These folks will do just fine by us. They want to win."
No one in the Kerry campaign is reading anything more into the
state director hirings than that. "It probably has little to do
with veep politics, if that's what you're thinking," says the
adviser.
OPTIMIST CLODS
On a conference call on Sunday morning with political staff and
senior Democrats involved in Kerry's message team, Kerry senior
advisers told all surrogates that when asked to speak about
President Ronald Reagan, to make sure their
soundbites used the words "optimist" and "optimistic" often.
"This is the new Kerry theme and message, that he's an
optimist," says a Kerry campaign staffer in New York, who was on
the call. "There is little that Kerry can grasp of Reagan's legacy
or aura. The optimistic message is one of the few, but even that
would be a stretch."
Still, sure enough everyone from Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton to Rep. Steny Hoyer was out there
pushing the optimist line for their presidential candidate, as was
Kerry himself, when he told a high school graduating class on
Sunday, "Yesterday, we lost one of our greatest optimists.
President Reagan's belief in America was infectious."
AL POLITICS IS LOCO
Al Gore was going further around the bend over the
weekend. For an article in Sunday's Miami Herald, he was
asked about his relationship with Miami-Dade Mayor and Democratic
Senate hopeful Alex Penelas.
Penelas served as a key political ally to Gore in 2000, but not
before annoying Clinton-Gore backers during the Elian
Gonzalez debacle, when he defiantly criticized
Janet Reno for her handling of the Cuban boy's
case. But all was forgiven by Gore, mostly because Penelas is
Cuban-American with close ties to that community in south
Florida.
In fact, Gore and his campaign finance people went out of their
way in September 2000 to raise enough money for Penelas to ensure
that he wasn't caught up in a primary or general election battle
for his mayoral seat. By clearing the deck for Penelas, it allowed
him to work almost full-time for Gore.
Problem is, Penelas apparently didn't do a very good job. Gore
lost the bulk of the Cuban vote to George W. Bush. So when Gore was
recently asked about his Cuban-American amigo in Miami his only
comment, through a spokesman, was, "Alex Penelas was the single
most treacherous and dishonest person I dealt with" during the
contested 2000 presidential campaign."
Gore, according to former campaign advisers, was extremely
annoyed at Penelas's lack of effort on his behalf during the
general election, but grew even more irate when Penelas failed to
muster any support for Gore during the recount battle.
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