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<...> Still, the untested Clark has "succeeded in putting himself in the position of the last unopened Christmas present," said Peter Hoe Burling, the Democratic leader of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, who is supporting Representative Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri.
"After a while, after we've all run the new trucks and toys around the floor," Burling said, "we all want to see what's in that last box."
What's best known about Clark are his statements on foreign policy: He has blasted the Bush administration for alienating allies and fixating on Iraq at the expense of other trouble spots. Administration leaders have struck back, saying Clark and other retired-military critics are jeopardizing soldiers' morale. Clark makes no apologies: "I've been outspoken, but I've been moderate in what I've said . . . I've just called it like I've seen it."
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His social views run liberal: He supports abortion rights, affirmative action, and Vermont-style civil unions for gay couples. On questions about health care and education issues, he points to his career in the military, where "we treat people well and we look after them as individuals."
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It is a perspective many Draft Clark leaders seem to share. They often speak of Clark with longing and an air of wish-fulfillment. This is, after all, a Rhodes Scholar who finished first in his West Point class, a man whose NATO title was supreme commander, and whose background of heroics can seem too good to be true. The time he helped clinch a state high school championship by swimming the first and last legs of the relay. The time he rappelled down a mountain outside Sarajevo, in a territory riddled with Serbian snipers, to try to rescue colleagues who crashed in an armored personnel carrier.<...> http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2003/09/02/draft_clark_contingent_hopes_candidacy_is_near/DTH
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