Kerry campaign aides threw a hissy fit at headquarters over the
turnout that greeted their boy in Milwaukee on Monday. “We failed
in advancing the event, we let our candidate down. That’s all there
is to it, nothing more. We still win Wisconsin,” says a traveling
staffer on the Kerry campaign.
At a time when President Bush was drawing 11,000 screaming fans
to an indoor facility in Milwaukee, just blocks away John
Kerry drew an estimated 1,100 for an outdoor rally in cold
and rainy weather. The Kerry camp had failed to factor in an indoor
venue in case of bad weather. Jon Bon Jovi, no
Springsteen he, opened for Kerry to a modicum of enthusiasm.
While the Kerry folks can poo-poo the Wisconsin event, there is
additional anecdotal evidence that the Democrats have had growing
trouble creating enthusiasm on the road for their man.
In most Kerry rally sites, fans have been forced to wait up to
two hours for their candidate to arrive. Whereas Bush generally
arrives on time, Kerry has consistently run late. Given that many
of these political rallies require that you show up at least two
hours ahead of time, that is a four-hour wait for a fellow many
Democrats have little affection for.
In Minnesota several weeks ago, Kerry showed up more than two
hours late to an outdoor rally near the Metrodome, and watched as
his supporters walked out on him half way through his usual stump
speech.
p>Lack-o-Kerry-mania has been spreading across the country the
past few weeks. Word out of Wisconsin — where Kerry may still eke
out a victory thanks to a preponderance of youth voter fraud — the
80,000 showing for the
Bruce Springsteen
rally in
Madison was largely due to a college crowd and bused-in supporters.
Within two hours of the event’s conclusion, there was barely a
whiff of pro-Kerry sentiment in town.
br>
/p>