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Edited on Mon Jan-05-04 05:07 PM by flpoljunkie
TIM RUSSERT: David Yepsen, you had said that John Kerry was coming up handsomely, I think was your word. David Broder, you said that you were out with John Kerry yesterday. What has caused him to gain some new traction inIowa, if in fact that's what you're observing?
DAVID BRODER: Oh, well, I think a couple of things have happened with him. One, there's been a change in the top command of the campaign. And I think he is now delivering his message in language that is understandable to voters instead of talking constantly in "Senatespeak."
For a long time, John Kerry could not utter a simple declarative sentence without the words "amendment" or "provision" in it. And as soon as you use either of those words, you've lost much of the audience. He stopped doing that now. And I think he's communicating much better. Secondly, he knows he is in a fight for his life, politically, now. And I think the blood is up. And there's a lot more passion in what Kerry is doing now.
I was out with Senator Kerry yesterday afternoon and my sense--this is purely anecdotal--is that there's still a number of Democrats who are shopping these candidates. They're looking around, trying to figure out who has the best chance to defeat President Bush because that is an important goal for them. But I'm not quite so sure that this is a locked-down situation as maybe some of us back East had thought.
From the The Hotline:
San Jose Mercury News' Kuhnhenn reports, "After stumbling for months," John Kerry's campaign "is starting to hit its stride" in IA. Both polls and interviews "suggest" some IA Dems "are giving Kerry a second look"; others, "only now becoming engaged" in WH '04, "say they are attracted to his foreign-policy message, his environmental record and, yes, his emergence as an anti-Dean candidate" (12/27). Meanwhile,Omaha World-Herald's Cordes reports, Kerry on 12/31 showed "talk that he is gaining momentum in Iowa is more than just talk." Over 300 people attended a Kerry event at a Council Bluffs community center; "several caucus watchers called the turnout one of the biggest in the Bluffs during this caucus campaign." Kerry: "People are beginning to look and say, 'Who can really be president?' We need to not just nominate somebody. We need to beat George Bush" (1/1). Kerry on 1/3 will return to IA four a four-day swing through the state (release, 1/2).
The New John Kerry Los Angeles Times' Barabak reports, "It was never supposed to be this hard" for Kerry in his "backyard" of NH -- until Dean "outflanked Kerry with his opposition to the war in Iraq" and "out-hustled" Kerry "by practically moving to New Hampshire two years ago and campaigning nonstop." Now, Kerry "narrowed his political orbit to just" IA and NH. A second-place IA finish "would probably be enough to keep Kerry's hopes alive"; "a strong third might even do." However, in NH, "nothing short of victory is likely to suffice." Dean's NH lead "lends a particular urgency to Kerry's headlong, 14-hour days as he fights to whittle Dean's sizable lead in polls." Over the weekend, Kerry "escalated his assault on Dean with a stinging speech that blasted" Dean "as dangerously naive on defense and foreign policy and a likely disaster" if he is the Dem nominee (12/30). Kerry "delivered a withering attack" on Dean, saying NH voters face a choice between Dean's "confusion and contradition" and Kerry's "steady and consistent hand" (Halbfinger, New YorkTimes, 12/28). However, "the biggest difference is Kerry's transformation as a campaigner. He chases votes with a hunger absent those many months ago when his campaign seemed swollen with expectation and a sense of entitlement. ... Gone is much of the high-flown Senate-speak. He vilifies Bush. He knocks Dean. He stabs a long, bony finger in the air to make a point. He invites questions." In 2000, "facing a surprise threat from" Bill Bradley, Al Gore "rallied by staging a series of marathon town hall meetings, sticking around to answer questions even after the janitors had finished cleaning up. Kerry was at Gore's side" in NH, "and apparently learned something" (12/30).
Remember to watch Senator Kerry and his wife Teresa on CNN's Paula Zahn Now, tonight at 8:00 EST.
(Edited to shorten a too long post. Ads can be found on website.)
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