Phone interview conducted before visit to town:
http://www.oregonlive.com/metro/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/117513153152210.xml&coll=7 On John Kerry's map of the United States, Portland is marked with a big red heart.
Kerry loves Portland. He can't stop talking about it. He praises its "coordinated, visionary thinking" about global warming in his new book about the environment. When he's asked what he remembers about an Aug. 13, 2004, campaign rally that attracted an estimated 50,000 people to Tom McCall Waterfront Park, he answers before the question is finished...
..."I remember everything that I ever did in Portland," Kerry said. "I remember riding my bike on the bike paths by the river. I remember the bus tour that came in and the rally we had at the waterfront. I remember the (earlier) rally at (Pioneer Courthouse Square) with the people hanging out of the windows. There's a great energy there that is really wonderful. It really is one of the nicest cities in the country."
The admiration is mutual. Kerry won 72 percent of the vote in Multnomah County in the 2004 presidential election and beat George W. Bush in the county by more than 161,000 votes. Al Gore has won an Oscar and written two best-selling environmental books, but Kerry got 71,144 more votes in Multnomah County in 2004 than Gore did in 2000...
...Kerry said he did not think the 2008 presidential campaign is more intense at this point than it was in 2004. He said it was "very possible" he would endorse a Democrat before the 2008 primaries begin. "I haven't made up my mind," he said. "I'm reserving that right and paying close attention to what they say. I'm still very invested in the process, as you might imagine."