Howard Dean, who crashed out of last year's race for the White House with his now infamous "I have a scream" speech, was poised yesterday for a political comeback as chairman of the Democratic national committee. Just months after being reduced to a running joke on cable television and a codicil to the Democrats' defeat, Mr Dean has emerged as the man charged with ensuring the party's future after the last of his six rivals bowed out of the leadership race on Monday.
Balloting of the DNC's 447 members for a successor to the current party chairman, Terry McAuliffe, takes place on Saturday. Mr Dean blazed across the political map in 2003 before his spectacular flameout in the first Democratic primary, and his rise to the chair of the DNC represents a victory not only for his personal powers of reinvention, but for the Democratic grassroots over the party establishment.
"Many of the DNC members feel that once the election of the chair is concluded they are cut out of process. Their support of Dean is a signal to the Washington DNC apparatus that they want a little bit more democracy and a little bit more consultation," Harold Ickes, a key aide to Senator Hillary Clinton and a Dean supporter, told the Guardian.
Mr Dean's imminent victory was also seen as a victory for the more liberal wing of the Democratic party. "It's a signal that the progressive agenda of the Democratic party will be at the forefront, which suggests there is going to be a battle over social security and other aspects of the conservative agenda," said Robert Shapiro, a politics professor at Columbia University. The former governor of Vermont owes his comeback to his prowess as a fundraiser, and to his ability to mobilise the Democratic base. However, the very passion that swayed his supporters nearly blocked his rise to the DNC chairmanship.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1408792,00.html