Dotty Lynch and others were there as well. Looks like a good group. I admire Dean's ability to keep a sense of humor about the 04 race, and he never passes the buck at all.
http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060426/NEWS02/604260307/1007Dean reflects on his presidential race, role of media
Former Gov. Howard Dean said Tuesday his 2004 presidential campaign was derailed more by his inability to adjust to being a front-runner than with how he was treated by the media during his upstart bid for the White House.
"I was never able to successfully switch gears and be seen as someone who could be president of the United States," Dean said. "You have to do that to be president."
....."Dean, who has rarely discussed what went wrong with his once high-flying bid for the presidency, made the remarks at a University of Vermont symposium on the role of media in the making and breaking of political heroes.
..."Howard Wolfson, a past communications adviser to Sens. Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer, both New York Democrats, said the media no longer has "gatekeepers" like former CBS anchor Walter Cronkite to set standards for what passes for news.
There is a video clip at this site, and a couple of interesting quotes from Dean.
http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?s=4819097"One of the reasons there are so few heroes is because the willingness to succeed in politics by any means necessary has become an art form," said Dean.
..."Negative campaigning has been around since the days of Thomas Jefferson, but now it has a much broader reach.
"The problem is, it works. It appeals to the worst instincts of the American people so both sides use it. There's not much high mindedness in politics because you couldn't survive. If you did, someone would hire a private investigator to see if you had an affair 25 years ago," said Dean.
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean (left) laughs as fellow panelists Howard
Fineman, chief political correspondent for Newsweek magazine, and Dotty
Lynch, fellow at Harvard University's JFK School of Government and former
senior political editor of CBS News, divulge the names of their personal
heroes. The panel talked before a near capacity audience at the University
of Vermont's Ira Allen Chapel in Burlington on Tuesday.
ALISON REDLICH, Free Press