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Which means it is time for Clark supporters to pull out all of the stops. Of course I conceed that Gore endorsing Dean is a big plus for Dean. While I can second guess forever why Gore did it, and why now, it is Gore's right to endorse anyone he wants to anytime he wants to. And it is our right to be angry that he is openly pushing to wrap up the nomination process weeks before the first primary ballot is cast with 9 candidates still in the race and none drawing the support of more than a quarter of the Democrats who at this early stage have an opinion.
There is a silver lining to this development for Clark, though the overall cloud is gray. Clark should be hurt less by the Gore endorsement than any of the other Democratic candidates. Whether or not Gore still is a Democratic Party Establishment figure, he is perceived that way by the public. He worked with Lieberman, Kerry, Gephardt, Edwards, and Kucinich in Congress, and he found them all wanting. In an odd and diluted kind of way, Gore is a "Hugh Shelton" to the entire bunch of Washington "insiders". Gore will not support any one of them. The fact that Gore so quickly threw his support to a relative outsider like Dean, is a slap in their collective faces.
Other than Clark, the whole bunch have been hard at campaigning for over a year, and in Gore's eyes none of them can get the job done, he's not even waiting for the first votes to come in to "bury them". Of course, Gore rejected Clark also, but Clark was never a direct Colleague of Gore's, they didn't serve in the Senate together. Also, unlike the others, Clark hasn't had adaquate time campaigning to allow anyone to definatively state that he "hasn't caught on". After less than three months Clark is solidly in second place in most national polls. Clark is raising money at a much faster clip than anyone but Dean. Clark has generated an enthusiastic grass roots following. A case might be made that Clark entered too late, with too little organization, but a case can't be made that his campaign spent a year spinning its wheels with only single digit numbers to show for it.
Along with Dean, (and in fairness also a few of the third tier candidates) Clark is an insurgent candidate, an outsider. I know a few DU pundits think of Clark as some type of A) Republican trojan horse or B) Clinton stalking horse, but neither I nor the public is buying it. Clark is received as a breath of nicely seasoned but very fresh air. So now, suddenly, the campaigns of the other perceived insider candidates have taken Gore's heavey blow when they all can least afford it. None of them has generated much widespread excitement. But they all thought they could be the anti Dean, wrapped in a reassuring blanket of "I can get elected" respectability, and Gore said, "No, you can't."
That means Clark has a real chance right now to make this into a two man race. Clark still has some real momentum, and he has the resources he needs to put up a fight. Many Democrats, rightly or wrongly, are not yet comfortable with Dean. At least through the primaries following one week after NH, there will be a scramble to identify who out there might still be able to compete with and defeat Dean for the nomination. No one will believe any more that this will be a long drawn out fight running deep into the primary schedule with several candidates retaining a reasonable chance. Either one strong alternative will emerge soon, or Gore will have accomplished what he set out to do in designating Dean as the nominee apparent. And I honestly can't see many rank and file Democrats, or Party Super Delegates, thinking after having spent a whole year falling ever further behind Dean that any of the traditional candidates will now miraculously rally to defeat Deat. In my opinion it will be Clark or no one, and I don't think that will only be my opinion. Support will likely now start peeling away from most of the candidates and Clark stands to benefit by that.
So back to the header for my message. It's a sprint now Clarkies, not a marathon. It'n now or never. Clark has to seize this moment to break out of the pack. He has to be the only Candidate other than Dean whose fundraising, support base, and polling numbers are heading up. That means we have to pour it on now. Start writing letters for Clark, emailing everyone we know, show conficence in our man, and give as much money as we can scrape together, even if it will take 9 months to pay off the credit cards. If we can pull off this sprint, even take time off to travel to NH to campaigne for Clark if somehow that can be arranged, or do whatever else we possible can, NOW, Clark will break out, and in the process break through to attract new supporters who will carry him forward with a new wave of fundraising etc. So, what are your plans for this coming week?
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