By The Prowler on 12.3.04 @ 12:09AM
Prospective DNC chairmen to gather in Florida -- and a Texas Democrat emerges as dark favorite. Plus: New Clinton deficit.
DNC SHOWTIME
It is expected that most if not all of the nine identified
candidates vying for DNC chairperson will travel to Orlando later
this month for a dog and pony show set up by the Association of
State Democratic Chairmen.
That group represents about a quarter of the 447 or so DNC votes
the eight would-be DNC leaders are wooing right now. As well, some
of the other non-ASDC committee members attend the conference, so
the ASDC appears to be the first major DNC event where serious
internal politicking can take place.
As it stands, former Vermont Gov. Howie Dean,
New Democrat Network president Simon Rosenberg,
former Wes Clark and John Kerry political adviser Donnie
Fowler, and telecom executive Leo Hindery
are scheduled to speak at the Orlando event in a group setting
where some questions will also be answered. Beyond those four,
defeated Texas Rep. Martin Frost, former New
Hampshire Gov. Jeanne Shaheen, former Denver mayor
Wellington Webb, former White House deputy chief
of staff Harold Ickes, and former Dallas mayor
Ron Kirk have been invited, but have yet to
accept.
Frost was expected to attend, if only because his is the latest
hat thrown in the ring, and it is known that he has been making
phone calls to jump-start his candidacy. Ickes, perhaps the best
known of the group, may take a pass, according to an adviser.
The Orlando event is probably the first of what will be a series
of events for the DNC chairmanship. In the past couple of weeks the
committee voters have been inundated with lobbying calls from
various candidates and their supporters.
Some of those supporters are interesting. John
Kerry's top pick, Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack,
pulled out of the competition less than a week after Kerry had
lobbied both Sen. Harry Reid and Rep.
Nancy Pelosi to back him. Kerry is now believed to
be supporting Shaheen, who worked for Kerry's campaign both
nationally and in New Hampshire.
Pelosi is believed to be backing Dean, and working hard against
her former congressional rival Frost, who is quickly emerging as
more than a dark horse for the DNC seat.
Frost has proven fundraising skills and has built up huge caches
of goodwill in Democratic fundraising and political circles from
his years in House leadership. He is thought to be the closest to
the policy/politics/fundraising mix the party is looking for.
One person definitely taking a hands-off approach is Sen.
Hillary Clinton. Already tainted by her and hubby
Bill's support of outgoing DNC chair Terry
McAuliffe, she is not openly backing her longtime friend,
adviser and fundraiser Ickes, though their relationship is
endorsement enough.
"Right now, being a Clinton guy isn't necessarily the best thing
to be," says a DNC staffer. "McAuliffe raised buckets of money, but
we have nothing to show for it. In fact we have lost ground under
his leadership. He was there because and only because the Clintons
wanted him there. People are looking skeptically at anyone with
ties to the Clintons this time out."
But it isn't like the Clintons care. They are operating from a
position of knowing that regardless of who is sitting in the DNC
chair, that person will need the Clintons more than they will need
him.
LIEBARY SLEEPOVERS
According to a longtime Clinton fundraiser, the recent weeklong
celebration for the opening of the Clinton library that was
supposed to actually make money for the Little Rock landmark lost
more than a million dollars.
Lack of high-end hotel rooms that scared off prospective
visitors, too many complimentary airline and hotel packages doled
out to friends at full cost, and poor turnout by the public are
blamed for the losses.
At one point, former longtime Clinton White House aides put up
in hotel rooms in Little Rock for the event (some actually showed
up to help run the week's events) found themselves without rooms
after the library gave the downtown slots to Hollywood and
Washington high-rollers there for the ribbon-cutting.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, Hollywood