By The Prowler on 8.10.04 @ 12:08AM
Tenderfoot Kerry's shopping spree. Plus: Bushwhackers in Lawrence. Also: Happy to remain Unfit.
TENDERFOOT KERRY
Just who wears the pants -- and carries the cash -- in the Kerry
family became embarrassingly clear over the weekend, when, while
shopping in Albuquerque, John Kerry had to let
wife Teresa cover the cost of jewelry he wanted to buy for her.
Terry Kerry pulled out the $125 necessary for
her hubby to buy her a turquoise necklace. While the Senator seemed
perturbed at the situation, the missus acted like this was business
as usual, chirpily thanking the mature woman behind the counter in
Spanish: "Muchas gracias, abuelita." ("Thank you very
much, grandmother.") The candidate, on the other hand, gave a
half-hearted wave and walked out of the shop.
Kerry's whole New Mexico trip was a bit of disaster. For part of
the day, in an attempt to play "regular guy," the Massachusetts
senator wore new cowboy boots procured for him by Gov. Bill
Richardson. "But they made his feet sore, and we had to
get them off," says a campaign staffer.
Kerry also went shopping for a cowboy hat, but apparently some
staffers were able to cut him off at the cash register before
another embarrassing photo op could develop.
BUSHWHACKERS
So much for Sen. John Edwards' "Two Americas."
Over the weekend, Edwards, who's "Two Americas" stump speech was
said to have enticed the Kerry campaign to put the North Carolinian
on the bottom of the ticket, apparently dumped the stumper and
ripped off Democratic hottie Barack Obama's
convention speech.
At rally in Lawrence, Kansas, Edwards told the audience: "There
is no red state, there is no blue state -- there is only one United
States of America and we're going to serve this entire
country."
Edwards' appearance in Lawrence resulted after the train he and
Sen. John Kerry were on sped past a scheduled stop
in the town a day earlier. The Kerry campaign was criticized
mercilessly in the local press for passing up a throng of
supporters waiting to greet the Democratic ticket at the train
stop, so advance staffers organized a quickie pep rally.
So what happened to "Two Americas"?
"There is a segment of the campaign, and it's growing by the
day, that doesn't think that speech is working very well," says a
Kerry adviser. "In fact, we'd like it ditched. The problem is
Edwards loves it. Kerry loves it. And the media really buys into it
and promotes it for us. We just don't think the voters buy it."
Edwards, according to the source, liked Obama's speech and has
been using the line in smaller venues, where he doesn't believe the
national press will pick up his appearances.
COMMAND CONFIDENCE
According to a Kerry campaign source, senior campaign advisers
tasked two Washington-based campaign staffers to vet the recently
published Unfit for Command.
"The purpose was to compare what that book had with what we had
on file from Senator Kerry," says the campaign source, who said
that the research project developed more than 75 instances where
Kerry's recollections, previous remarks, or writings conflicted
with the book's reporting.
"We took some of the most glaring examples, like the Christmas
in Cambodia story, and presented them to senior staff, and we
assume that those things were put in front of Senator Kerry," says
the source. "We haven't heard a word about it. All we were told is
that it was being taken care of."
The campaign source said that the book was not considered a
"serious" problem for the campaign, because, "the media wouldn't
have the nerve to come at us with this kind of stuff," says the
source. "The senior staff believes the media is committed to seeing
us win this thing, and that the convention inoculated us from these
kinds of stories. The senior guys really think we don't have a
problem here."
topics:
Barack Obama, Business, Law, NATO