http://www.western-star.com/featr/content/shared/news/nation/stories/08/03SCLC.htmlBIRMINGHAM, Ala. — National Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean told the Southern Christian Leadership Conference on Tuesday that he takes inspiration from the SCLC's efforts to dismantle segregation four decades ago as he tries to find core values for his party and reassert its national influence.
"The SCLC is an icon for people of my age," said Dean, 56, former Vermont governor and failed presidential candidate in 2004. "But our work is not done."
Dean's remarks come at a time when both the SCLC and the Democratic Party are trying to gain support. The SCLC — after years of dwindling membership, infighting and financial problems — is battling a perception that it is irrelevant to younger blacks. The Democratic Party, after losing two hard-fought presidential contests in 2000 and 2004, is the minority party in Congress, and does not have control of the House or Senate.
The luncheon was attended by about 400 people who gave Dean cheers and two standing ovations. SCLC President Charles Steele Jr., a former Democratic state senator from Tuscaloosa, brought many Alabama Democratic leaders to the event."
More on the conference:
http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/NEWSV5/storyV5dnc03w.htm"Portraying Democrats as the people of real moral values, Howard Dean addressed the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s civil rights organization Tuesday amid complaints his party has taken black voters for granted too long. "
"If the election had been held on moral values last time, the Democrats would have won. Why is that? Because more people agree with our moral values," he said.
"Dean repeatedly lavished praise on the SCLC, founded by King and two other pastors in 1957, and he met privately with leaders of the organization and black elected officials attending the group's annual meeting, which concludes today."
Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean, right, listens to civil rights activist J.L. Chestnut of Selma during the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's convention in Birmingham on Tuesday.
-- Charles Nesbitt AP/The Birmingham News
Dean and Mehlman will be in Atlanta tomorrow.
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/atlanta/0805/03convention.html