ST. LOUIS -- Howard Dean keeps fidgeting onstage. He is spending his Saturday in Salon D of a crummy airport Hilton, joined by six other candidates for chairman of the Democratic National Committee. They are competing for the love of a few dozen DNC members in the audience. There is much noise and raucousness in the air. Great excitement, passion and a palpable sense of mission!
Unfortunately, it's emanating from next door...
...
The audience is rapt only when Dean speaks. Slimmer and more rested-looking than you remember him, Dean is the former rock star in a field of "American Idol" barely-heard-of's. His rhetoric follows closely on the "You have the power" theme that marked his presidential campaign. "I'm not much of a Zen person," Dean says, "but I've learned that the best way to gain power is to give it away."
He comes well known to this race -- and with baggage. He would make a disastrous party chairman, many Democrats believe, for the same reasons he would have been a disastrous nominee for president last year. He is too liberal, too blunt and too unpredictable to be the chief spokesman of the party. The same things that won Dean such a fervent following as a presidential candidate could also violate the on-message orthodoxy that is traditionally demanded of party chairmen. Better to elect a more sober, centrist, non-lightning rod of a chairman -- like former representative Martin Frost of Texas, who is sitting three seats to the left of Dean.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16532-2005Jan17.html?nav=rss_politicsThis reporter wants us to know one thing for sure:
While his opponents speak, Dean periodically holds his hands together over his nose and contorts his face....
Dean keeps grimacing. He has a bad back. But it's hard not to wonder if he isn't slightly bored, too....
...He walks with a slight limp from the back problem. He wades into another crowd and poses for a photo, his smile evincing the joy of a man who is back in a comfortable habitat, campaigning for something. And also maybe a hint of pain.