By The Prowler on 7.28.04 @ 12:08AM
John’s lens lease. Blue suit blues. Edwards follows suit. A drive-by photo-op. Plus: Aping Bush.
HE SHALL RETURN
Word circulating late Tuesday around the Fleet Center was that,
hoping to emulate the dramatic entrance President Bill
Clinton made to Staples Center in Los Angeles four years
ago, Sen. John Kerry was planning a bofo entrance
in Boston.
According to a Kerry campaign source, staffers have arranged for
Kerry and his so-called "Vietnam Brothers in Arms" to meet up at
Logan Airport upon his arrival there, and to then ride across the
Boston Harbor to the Charlestown Navy Yard, where supporters will
meet him.
"We want him and his buddies on the prow of a boat, just
cruising into Boston. It will look awesome," says a staffer. "After
Clinton in L.A., you can't just have a guy arrive in town, there
has to be something else added."
NOTHING SIMILAR OCCURRED when Sen. John Edwards
flew into Boston on Tuesday, though prior to his arrival, Edwards
and his handlers did allow still photographers to take pictures of
Edwards "working" on his convention speech.
Prior to letting pool photographers into the room, an Edwards
staffer pulled the speech out of a folder and spread the pages out
on a desk. "Edwards has been looking at it, but it's basically
done. He hasn't put a pen to it in two or three days," says a Kerry
campaign staffer.
As for Kerry's speech, uberadviser Bob Shrum is
said to be working on a final draft before Kerry makes a final
read. "Word is that Kerry is high on the speech, loves it, calls it
soaring and inspirational," says a Kerry adviser in Boston. "But
that may just be buzz. Kerry doesn't do 'inspiring' very well."
NOT FOR LACK OF trying. According to a Kerry advance staffer on the
way back from Florida, where Kerry spent part of Monday, the
candidate saw a Brevard County Sheriff deputy, who was part of his
security motorcade, crash his motorcycle.
The motorcade continued past. But according to the advance
staffer, Kerry wanted to turn around. According to the staffer,
Kerry asked handlers if there were news cameras around. And
insisted that if there were, they had to go back to check on the
officer so they didn't look uncaring.
Kerry's motorcade did stop and, in front of several cameras, the
candidate did check to see if Sgt. Eric Daddow of
the Brevard County Sheriff's Office was okay. But the candidate
didn't hang around to find out if the officer was badly injured. He
was, with a broken shoulder and serious scrapes all over his body
from hitting the roadway.
In any case, that photo op was lost, due to Kerry's decision to
wear a sky blue "clean room" suit while visiting the Kennedy Space
Center in Cape Canaveral.
Kerry, according to the advance staffer balked at wearing the
suit, but when he saw his fellow senators, Florida Democrats
Bill Nelson and Bob Graham, as
well as former astronaut Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, getting into
them, he couldn't avoid ending up in the now infamous photos.
THE BIGGEST BUZZ OUT of Boston on Tuesday, though, wasn't Kerry's
blue suit, but the interview Andrew Stern,
president of the Service Employees International Union, gave to
Washington Post political reporter David
Broder.
Stern told Broder that a Kerry loss to Bush in 2004 might not be
the worst thing that could happen to the Democratic Party in the
long term.
Stern, who backed Howard Dean, and was even an
early booster of Wesley Clark, is not considered
part of Kerry's inner circle, though his union is perhaps one of
the most influential within the broader AFL-CIO, in part, because
it is one of the few unions with a growing membership.
According to an AFL-CIO lobbyist hanging out in the Sheraton
Boston Hotel, AFL-CIO boss John Sweeney got an
angry call from a "senior" Kerry official who was angry about
Stern's comments. "Sweeney called Stern and read him the riot act,
which may not have been the best thing for Sweeney to do," says the
lobbyist. "There is more going on here than just Stern not being
particularly in love with Kerry. Stern is doing a lot for
Democrats, and doesn't feel they are doing enough for SEIU. This
was just a reminder that they are out there."
LEADERSHIP BY THEFT
After John Kerry's busy Monday in Florida, Kerry
flew on a small charter jet to Norfolk, Virginia. (His campaign 757
was experiencing mechanical problems.) In Norfolk Tuesday morning
Kerry called on the president to expedite intelligence and security
recommendations made by the 9 /11 Commission.
Kerry also called for an extension of the 9/11 Commission for an
additional 18 months, to serve as a kind of overseer of the
implementation of their recommendations. Kerry was able to make the
extension request, according to some in his campaign, due to back
channel conversations between 9/11 Commission staffers and the
campaign. What's more, Kerry's call for the Bush administration to
expedite commission recommendations came when Kerry staffers were
aware of high level inner agency meetings in the White House and
around Washington over the past 4 days to lay out implementation
plans for at least a full third of the commission's recommended
changes in American intelligence gathering and evaluation.
"The Bush team isn't touting how much they're actually doing, so
we might as well try to take credit for it," says a Kerry adviser
in Washington. "Bush will make the changes and Kerry can now take
credit by claiming it was his calls that forced Bush's hand."
topics:
NATO, Unions