and I was really impressed. He talked about working for core ideals - a better America by addressing healthcare, poverty, education (for everyone). Then he talked about leadership - and I really was moved by what he said. He was very accessible and I liked that as well.
The next Sunday our County Party held a straw poll and Dodd won with 28%.
http://newsblogs. chicagotribune. com/news_ theswamp/ 2007/03/chris_ dodd_wins. html#more
Posted by David Lightman at 12: 27 p.m. CST
WASHINGTON-- Two days after he visited South Carolina, York County Democrats took a straw poll Sunday and Dodd won 28 percent of the approximately 100 people voting. Runnerup was Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois at 24 percent, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York at 18 percent; 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards at 11 percent and Delaware Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. at 5.5 percent. Former Vice President Al Gore, running as a write-in, got 8 percent.
Jim Watkins, York County chairman, had a simple explanation for Dodd's success: "He visited here," Watkins said.
But the chairman quickly added that the triumph should not be dismissed. Dodd campaigned in the county Friday, and Watkins thought it significant that activists returned for a meeting Sunday and gave Dodd their votes.
"As people got to know him, they liked him. That goes a long way," the chairman said. "He's a good storyteller with a good sense of humor, and people related to that."
The poll was conducted in Rock Hill, a Charlotte, N.C., suburb, as activists watched videos submitted by each candidate.
For Dodd, the win was a rare bit of good news in a campaign that has seen him at the bottom of poll after poll. Sunday, for instance, a Los Angeles Times survey of Democratic National Committee members found Dodd the first choice of 1 percent--and second choice of 1 percent, even though 78 percent of DNC members had a favorable impression of Dodd. Dodd was the party's general chairman in 1995 and 1996.
Dodd's staff and backers, though, have long maintained he is running a campaign far different from the hihg-octane efforts of Obama, Clinton and Edwards. "This is the tortoise versus the hare," said spokeswoman Beneva Schulte.
Dodd's strategy has been to campaign the old-fashioned way, meeting with small groups in the key early primary and caucus states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, while at the same time keeping up his fundraising.
The York County result is evidence the strategy is working, said Michelle Macrina, a Greenville, S.C. consultant serving as Dodd's state spokeswoman.
"This tells you that when Chris Dodd meets people," she said, "they're drawn to him."
in White House 2008