Republicans Rejoice as Democrats 'Gouge' Dean
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2003
WASHINGTON Infighting between Howard Dean and some of his
rivals for the Democrats' presidential nomination has gotten so
nasty of late that Dean called on party chairman Terry McAuliffe to
step in and tone things down. In the process, Dean managed to
insult McAuliffe.
Republican strategists, meanwhile, are watching it all with
barely contained glee.
"They are beginning to really gouge this guy," Republican
pollster Bill McInturff said about Dean, chuckling. "Look at
Howard Dean and, as a Republican, think about the advertising we're
going to run."
McInturff said Republicans could use Sen. John Kerry's quotes about
Dean wanting to tax the middle class, or the "wonderful attack"
from Wesley Clark about Dean's draft status or the "terrific
comments" from Sen. Joe Lieberman about Dean's stance on the capture of Saddam Hussein.
Draft Dodger Able to Ski Despite 'Back Injury'
Kerry has criticized Dean's plan to roll back all of President
Bush's tax cuts, including those for the middle class. Clark has
assailed Dean for heading to the ski slopes after getting a medical
deferment to avoid military service in Vietnam. Lieberman has
ridiculed Dean's assertion that Saddam's capture did not make
Americans safer.
For now, Republicans don't have to worry about beating up on
Dean, who is ahead of his fellow Democrats in the polls nationally
and in states with early nominating contests. His Democrat rivals
are taking care of the job.
In complaining over the weekend about the attacks, Dean wound up
criticizing McAuliffe when he said a strong party leader would
intervene to keep him from getting beat up. Criticism of Dean has
intensified as he has risen in the polls and as he continues to
make statements he later has to clarify.
"If we had strong leadership in the Democratic Party, it would
be calling the other candidates and saying somebody has to win
here," Dean said Sunday. "If [former Democratic National
Committee head] Ron Brown were chairman, this wouldn't be
happening."
Debra DeShong, a spokeswoman for Democratic National
Committee, dismissed Dean's complaints and said what he was going
through was not unusual.
"Democratic primaries over the last 20 years have been just as
tough and just as vigorous," she said.
George H.W. Bush, father of the current president, gave
Democrats one of their best attack lines against Ronald Reagan in
1980 when he derided Reagan's monetary policies as "voodoo
economics," said Anita Dunn, a veteran Democrat strategist.
Bill Clinton was under siege in 1992 on everything from charges
of philandering to draft dodging.
Reagan and Clinton won their elections anyway.
'Engaged' and Enraged
"Back in August, people were complaining the Democratic
campaign was not engaged," Dunn said. "This is what an engaged
campaign looks like."
As engaged as Lieberman, Kerry, Dick Gephardt and others have
been against Dean, so were they on Monday in response to his
complaints.
Lieberman: 'Dean Will Melt in a Minute'
Lieberman said that if Dean thinks things are tough now, he
should see Bush's campaign team in action.
"Dean will melt in a minute once Republicans start going after
him," Lieberman said.
Dean Attacks Democrat 'Prostitutes'
Lieberman said he was surprised by Dean's sensitivity and noted
that the former Vermont governor fired the first volleys with a
negative ad about his rivals, called members of Congress
"cockroaches" and party leaders "prostitutes," and referred to
the centrist Democratic Leadership Council as "the Republican wing
of the Democratic Party."
Dean warned Sunday that hundreds of thousands of his
supporters would be unlikely to back anyone else in November if he
is not the Democrats' nominee.
'Divisive and Threatening'
Kerry called the comment "divisive and threatening" and said
it fit with Dean's pattern.
"He was the first candidate to attack in this campaign and the
first to run negative ads, and he has been attacking Democrats and
their accomplishments during the Clinton years from day one of this
race," Kerry said.
Gephardt accused Dean of now wanting to change the rules of the
game "as he makes a series of embarrassing gaffes that underscore
the fact that he is not well-equipped to challenge George Bush."
Dunn, who has seen plenty of tough primaries, says this year is
a bit different in that there is more than the usual one or two
credible candidates attacking the front-runner.
Democrat 'Volume Is Louder'
"Now you have five," said Dunn, who advised former Sen. Bill
Bradley in the 2000 primary contest against former Vice President
Al Gore. "The intensity is higher, and the volume is louder."
Dean's campaign had its usual feisty reaction to the reaction
over his complaints.
"May we remind Mr. Lieberman that the reason more than half a
million Americans are behind Howard Dean is because he alone stood
up to George Bush?" said spokeswoman Tricia Enright. "It seems
like the Washington candidates have figured out the only state they
can run in: desperation."
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Get NewsMax’s special report on Howard Dean – Click here now
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
DNC