The Dean administration has long been opposed to public financing, if not always in words then in actions. In the 2000 elections, Dean had promised to run a clean campaign, but as soon as the spending caps were struck down by the courts, Dean reverted to his old ways. He raised the most money in Vermont gubernatorial history, by promising the health industry, among others, his support. Now he is attacking the existence of public financing for any candidate. He has threatened to raid the public financing fund and hand this state over to corporations who have no allegiance to it.
Tell Dean that you want citizens of Vermont controlling our elections, not his corporate buddies.
http://rutlandherald.com/Archive/Articles/Article/41007
Dean made headlines in March for vowing to attack any candidate that didn't commit to public financing like he was.
http://timesargus.nybor.com/Local/Story/61946.htmlThen he made headlines in August for backing off his pledge:
http://www.beaufortgazette.com/24hour/politics/story/969954p-6802617c.htmlA big deal? I didn't think so. Dean just miscalculated by claiming the moral high ground in the first place. But then I found out it wasn't the first time he backtracked on such a pledge, he'd done so in an earlier governor's race.
http://www.rutlandherald.com/News/Story/70402.htmlAnd going even farther, he tried to remove funding for Vermont's public financing system altogether.
Governor Dean's Plan to Remove Funding
Early on in the 2002 legislative session, Democratic Governor Howard Dean targeted the public financing provision of the law for elimination. VPIRG led the effort to preserve funding for public financing of qualifying candidates. The Governor claimed that the law was not working and therefore should not be funded until a final court decision has been reached. Working with Republicans, Progressives and Democrats, VPIRG was able to keep public financing alive (although hundreds of thousands of dollars were taken for other unrelated uses). http://www.vpirg.org/campaigns/financeReform/cfr_page111.html
So not only has Dean back out of a public financing pledge before, his zeal to balance budgets whatever the social cost led him to seek to defund Vermont's Public Finance Fund indefinately.
In contrast, although John Kerry did take the gloves off to battle Weld, he has never taken PAC money for his Senate campaigns.
Some might argue that perhaps he should have let Weld win. Perhaps.