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I believe Wesley Clark's candidacy would constitute the perfect storm of primary support. Whereas most other candidates are trying to appeal to their own specific camp (especially Dean), Clark would draw supporters from literally every major camp. Here is my scenario:
Alright, "Undecided" is consistently at the very top, or near the top, of almost all primary polls. So, why are people undecided? It can't be because there isn't a liberal enough candidate (Kucinich), or an anti-war candidate (Dean, Kucinich, etc.). Nearly every Democratic viewpoint is represented in these 9 candidates. So it must be that most of these undecided's reasons for indecision are not a matter of ideology, since there's already a massive spectrum of ideology in the race, but electability. They're still waiting for the candidate that they think can beat Bush. That said, Wesley Clark will be a rock star with these people. If they're looking for electability from a candidate outside the current nine, Clark is their one, solitary choice.
In addition, Clark will siphon votes from most other candidates as well:
Dean- The vast majority of Dean's supporters are there because of his tough, anti-war attitude. His political experience and/or domestic policies are secondary. If Dean didn't hadn't had that anti-war persona, his domestic strength would have only been enough to send him into Kucinich territory. However, no other candidate has a tough, anti-war stance, so Dean's candidacy forms one giant umbrella over all of these voters. Now, enter Wesley Clark. He has the same tough anti-war stance, but with massive credibility to go along with it, in addition to being more electable and telegenic. Dean supporters there for his anti-war policy now must make a decision between two anti-war candidates. Clark's charm, electability, and credibility would definitely draw a large group of former Dean supporters to his camp.
Also, Dean does have a loyal base, but not as loyal as some are trying to suggest. The latest primary poll I saw that addressed this question showed Dean in about 2nd or 3rd in terms of solid support. About 35% of Dean supporters described their support of Dean as absolute. This was good compared to most other candidates, but not spectacular. Gephardt had the most solid support, probably because he appeals to an exclusive worker/labor crowd.
Kerry- A much more simple scenario. He's running on the national security, electability ticket. Clark bests him in both these categories.
Lieberman- Running as a centrist. Clark's military background gives him automatic centrist appeal, even though he really isn't one.
Gephardt- Clark probably takes the least amount of supporters from Gephardt. People support Gephardt for his political and domestic experience, which is Clark's weakest point.
Edwards- Edwards supporters like him because he's a good looking, charming southerner who could beat Bush. So is Wesley Clark. Only he actually has a chance of winning the nomination.
Graham- Same scenario as Kerry.
I'm not saying Clark will assault the support of all of these candidates, I'm just saying that he will easily siphon some support from each of them. Say it's only 2-3 percent, on average. And say he attracts 2/3 of undecideds. He's still automatically in the 20+% range.
And none of this takes into account the two final pieces of the storm- media coverage and grassroots support.
The media will have a fit when he enters the race. They have very little to work with given the current crop. Clark will be the only good looking candidate in the race. And he has a very, very dramatic biography. War commander, 4-Star General, Rhodes Scholar, etc. etc.
Second is grassroots support. We currently have a little less than 1/10th of Dean's grassroots support. But here are some stats that color this fact in a different light-
First, look at the Alexa rating (Alexa tracks the amount of web traffic to a specific site) of DraftWesleyClark.com and DeanforAmerica. They are virtually even. And yet, Dean has a much larger amount of internet supporters. What this tells me is that an enormous amount of core Democrats are interested in Clark, but he hasn't announced his candidacy yet, or even his party, so they are not yet willing to throw in their support. Visitors to DeanforAmerica are showing interest in an extremely established, declared candidate. So they either show their support or they don't. But when Clark enters the race, all of those visitors that have been eyeing the draft movement and hesitating (plus a huge amount more, given the surge in media coverage) will make their commitment. Second, Clark hasn't spent one day or one penny campaigning, and yet he has already achieved 10% of what Dean has. An argument could be made that the draft movement has been working on his behalf. However, here is a stat that negates that argument- DraftWesleyClark has spent one half of one percent as much money as Howard Dean has. Getting 10% as much support while only spending 0.5% as much money is a huge bang for your buck. Think what Clark will be able to do once the millions start coming.
I am of the opinion that these scenarios are not outlandish, but based on very real scenarios. And when you bring them all together, you have a hugely popular candidate.
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