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Home Front: Politix
Dean touts his strategy for DNC
2004-12-13
Former presidential candidate Howard Dean yesterday made a national pitch to head the Democratic Party, saying he will create a 50-state strategy to win new voters.
"We're gonna win New Hampshire! An' we're gonna win Texas! An' we're gonna win Saskatchewan! An' we're gonna win...!"
"I really believe we have to stand up for being Democrats," Mr. Dean said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
"Otherwise, what are we? The Reform Party? Look what happened to them! Yeeeeargh!"
"We have a message to sell. I frankly think it's a better message than the Republicans'; we've just got to figure out how to get it out there."
"Maybe if we all holler together, real loud..."
"Get the net, Terry!"
Mr. Dean was the only one of eight candidates for Democratic National Committee chairman to appear on the Sunday talk shows. Other candidates are: former Rep. Martin Frost of Texas; former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk; former Denver Mayor Wellington Webb; former Clinton administration chief of staff Harold Ickes; former Michigan Gov. James Blanchard; New Democratic Network President Simon Rosenberg; and South Carolina political strategist Donald Fowler.
That's a very distinguished list of has-beens and never-beens...
The former Vermont governor said the Democratic Party has to "look at what the Republicans do well" and establish a grass-roots base of office holders.
What they do well is beat Democrats...
On Saturday, Mr. Dean told party leaders, "I want to do what the Republican National Committee does; they're better organized than we are."
"More articulate, too! Yeeeeargh!"
All of the candidates addressed the Association of State Democratic Chairs on Saturday in Orlando, Fla., although Mr. Dean said yesterday he has not decided whether he will seek the vote in February to replace outgoing party chief Terry McAuliffe. "I am going to run if I think that I can win, if I think they really want me," Mr. Dean said.
"But only if they like me, they really, really like me!"
Sen. Richard J. Durbin, Illinois Democrat and assistant minority leader, declined to endorse Mr. Dean on ABC's "This Week."
"Nope. Nope. Ain't gonna do it. And despite my name, I do not lead a gang of train robbers, so you can just drop that!"
"I'm not going to be endorsing Howard or any particular candidate. I hope we find the right person," Mr. Durbin said. "Howard Dean made an ass of himself a great contribution to the American political scene. I want him as part of the leadership of the Democratic National Committee, even if he's not the chairman."
"I was thinking maybe he could be the court jester to Harold Ickey..."
Former Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, who served on the September 11 commission, said last week that Mr. Dean would do a good job as chairman but "he's going to have some 'splainin' to do, as Ricky Ricardo used to say."
"Lucyyyyyy!"
"Which Howard Dean are we talking about?" Mr. Kerrey asked. "If we're talking about the Howard Dean who was governor of Vermont, I would say, fine. But if it's the presidential candidate Dean, I would say, probably, no." The New Republic published an editorial opposing Mr. Dean, saying, "The liberal base is simply not large enough to win a national election."
Posted by:tipper

#11  LOL Tu!
Posted by: Shipman   2004-12-13 5:25:24 PM  

#10  Dean touts his strategy for DNC

"Insanity... let's give it a shot!"
Posted by: tu3031   2004-12-13 4:25:59 PM  

#9  Is it too early to form a Republicans for Dean 2008? Maybe if we are nice Hillary will pick him for a running mate?
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2004-12-13 4:21:30 PM  

#8  "We have a message to sell. I frankly think it’s a better message than the Republicans’"

We wait with bated breath to hear that message, Mr. Dean. But based on this last election, we're fear there isn't one, excepting always, "Vote for us. We're not Republican."
Posted by: trailing wife   2004-12-13 2:28:46 PM  

#7  dominate the political center.

And never, ever win an election.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-12-13 2:00:01 PM  

#6  "I’m not going to be endorsing Howard or any particular candidate..."

Until it becomes obvious who the frontrunner is.
Posted by: Raj   2004-12-13 1:26:16 PM  

#5  With any luck he'll be rebuffed by the Dems' elites, he'll scream (as it were) and cry and take the MoveOn and Kos idiotarians with him into a new leftie party. Which would force normal, sane, moderate, hawkish Dems no choice but to try to form a new party that would peel off sensible, liberatarian-inclined non-religious RINOs like Giuliani-Arnold-McCain and dominate the political center.
Posted by: lex   2004-12-13 1:01:54 PM  

#4  If Dean was smart he'd get on the Howard Stern show while Howard is still on FM, and still ticked at the Republicans. If that doesn't generate a buzz he might as well forget it because he's yesterday's news.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2004-12-13 12:51:47 PM  

#3  Is Dean a moderate pretending to be a nut, or a nut pretending to be a moderate? Either way, good riddance
Posted by: lex   2004-12-13 11:33:29 AM  

#2  Go, Dean, go!

Howard might have recieved a briefing on Earnhardt. Unlikely, but possible. Better to ask, "What number is most associated with Dale Earnhardt?" Acceptable answers would be "#1" or "3".
Posted by: gromky   2004-12-13 10:51:10 AM  

#1  Pop quiz, Howard: who is Dale Earnhardt?
Posted by: Matt   2004-12-13 10:43:42 AM  

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