Faced with evidence that Howard Dean is strengthening his standing in New Hampshire and Iowa, several Democratic presidential candidates are turning their attention to the burst of contests the Tuesday after New Hampshire. Many Democratic strategists now expect the voting on Feb. 3 to transform the race from a crowded fracas into an unencumbered two-way competition with Dr. Dean.
Aides to three Democrats, Wesley K. Clark, Joseph I. Lieberman and John Edwards, said they now viewed that day, Feb. 3, as perhaps their final chance to stop Dr. Dean, and to seize the mantle of being the second person in a two-person competition. Accordingly, they have invested significant time and money in Feb. 3 states like South Carolina, Arizona, Oklahoma and New Mexico, even as Dr. Dean, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts and Representative Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri have encamped in Iowa and New Hampshire.
"The day after that, we will have a two-person race," said Nick Baldick, the campaign manager for Mr. Edwards, an assertion that was echoed almost word-for-word by senior advisers to General Clark and Mr. Lieberman.
Even as they sought to put the best face on it, aides to Dr. Dean's rivals described what they were doing as a strategy of necessity, and acknowledged that it would be difficult to pull off. It is the latest indication of the extent to which Dr. Dean, once considered a long shot, has upended the battle for the nomination.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/07/politics/campaigns/07DEMS.html