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Sunday, June 22, 2008
Salena Zito :: Townhall.com Columnist
Howard Dean, Winner
by Salena Zito
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When Howard Dean crashed the party in the summer of 2003, his quixotic approach to trying to win the Democrat nomination for president was so outside the box that no one really knew what to make of him.

Five years, one failed presidential campaign, one party chairmanship and one very huge win over the GOP in the 2006 midterm elections later, Dean stands on the precipice of delivering the presidency to Democrats.

Who knew?

Dean's one-time fierce rival for the 2004 nomination, John Kerry, did. Kerry’s evaluation of Dean began when Kerry won the party’s presidential mantle.

“People forget," Kerry says, "this was a guy who could've picked up his toys and gone home in 2004. Instead, he threw himself into my campaign and worked his butt off.”

Kerry said Dean’s tireless campaigning meant a lot to him: “He was a man of his word and he was a hell of a good soldier. I still remember sitting in the motorcade with Howard, headed to his endorsement speech at George Washington (University). He told me he'd do anything, be anywhere, and say anything that'd help us.

“A lot of people speak those words. Howard backed them up with action. He really did. And he didn't stop there.”

Kerry’s former top adviser, Pittsburgh native David Morehouse, recalls Dean’s impact coming out of Iowa, where Dean led in the polls. “I remember seeing those guys in their bright orange hats and, at first, basically being fearful -- they had so many more people doing much more work than we did.”

Morehouse said his fear abated when he saw the “orange hats” up close: “They really did not fit into Iowa.”

While Dean lost Iowa and the nomination, Morehouse said that without Dean, there would be no Barack Obama. “What Dean did effectively was create an environment by showing that you can be a non-establishment candidate and out-raise the establishment candidate through the Internet.”

“He also changed the calculus in presidential politics by showing that one-issue candidates can be effective,” says GOP strategist David Carney.

Carney, from neighboring New Hampshire, had his first experience with Dr. Dean as the business-friendly, 100-percent-NRA-rated governor of Vermont who was still skittish about signing the state’s civil union legislation.

His nominee persona was quite different, according to Carney. “Dean burst on the national scene as this Harold Stassen-type candidate for president who ran against the war specifically.”

Carney said that Dean ran a very good grassroots campaign that veered hugely to the left, with a very solid message that resonated with new voters in the Democrat primaries and with traditional liberals.

“He was so effective in his messaging that, by the end, all of the other candidates had adopted it,” he said. Continued...

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About The Author
Salena Zito is a political analyst, reporter and columnist.
 
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Subject: Dean made Obama the nominee
If Dean hadn't removed Florida and Michigan from the contest anyone actually think Obama would be the nominee right now?

Obama, the new politician made the old fashion way (the Chicago Daley machine and back room deals).

Only in Politics...
Can a person implode their Presidential Campaign, alienate millions of voters in Florida and Michigan, and put the DNC in the position of financial bankrupcy (unable to afford their upcoming convention) - yet be called a "winner".

I guess that's the democrat way? Little League baseball without keeping score, High School students graded on "effort and creativity", Political leaders called "winners" because the appropriate title of "whiner" might hurt his feelings.
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