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The Democratic contenders have picked up their game. On display last week in Iowa have been candidates at the top of their form, with the intermittent exception of Howard Dean, who at times has seemed to buckle under the pressure of his disappearing lead. Yet even Dean continues to demonstrate the ability to inspire a passionate following — as have Gephardt and, increasingly, Sens. John F. Kerry and John Edwards.
Each of the major contenders has found a distinctive message and appeal that separates them from the others; it is as if they are running down lanes that only rarely intersect.
Though Dean in the final days has sometimes sought to strike a more positive tone, he is still mostly offering his combustible mixture of empowerment and revenge. He tells voters that they are joining not just a campaign but a cause, an argument so resonant with so many Democrats that Kerry and Edwards have copied it almost verbatim.
But Dean still draws most of his energy from his attacks on President Bush and the "Washington Democrats" he accuses of bowing to him. Listening to Dean rouse a crowd against the Democratic leadership, it's easy to imagine what the Visigoths sounded like when they exhorted their hordes to sack Rome: He promises the satisfaction of retribution.
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http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-outlook19jan19,0,4856721.column?coll=la-headlines-politics----
And we wonder why Kerry and Edwards are doing better in the polls. I believe it was TS Eliot who said the greatest form of flattery was imitation.
Edit for inflammatory title.