New York's Democratic voters go to the polls today, with many less intent on casting a ballot for Senator John Kerry or Senator John Edwards than in lodging a first vote against President George W. Bush, political analysts, pollsters and ordinary voters said.
"You know what people are talking about," said Sarah Kovner, a longtime political activist who served eight years in the Clinton administration. "People have jumped to beating Bush. They have jumped to the next stage."
It has become a cliché this primary season to say that Democrats are looking for anyone who can beat Mr. Bush. But many, in fact, say they are, and polls show that they are turning to Mr. Kerry.
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That attitude - anybody but Mr. Bush - is believed to have tempered the political climate here. When Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards left Wisconsin two weeks ago, it appeared that the New York primary would develop into a sharp contest. For Mr. Kerry, it offered a chance - with its second largest bounty of delegates in the nation - to lock up the nomination. For Mr. Edwards, the senator from North Carolina, a robust showing could keep the two-man race alive.
While that calculus never changed, the battle never really materialized.
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http://nytimes.com/2004/03/02/politics/campaign/02campaign.html