Posted on 08/17/2003 8:46:54 AM PDT by NutmegGuy
I have mixed emotions about him running. I hope he wins the nomination and gets his ass handed to him but it ticks me off to hear his BS given wide coverage by the media who makes him look like Robin Hood.
One of his Vermont media suck-ups, Sam Hemingway, has gone on the Dean Trail and I was pleasantly surprised to read one of Hemingway's pieces in the local Gannett Gazette today. See below and pass it on to your farm communities:
Dean adjusts stance on farms to center
By Sam Hemingway
Free Press Staff Writer
Howard Dean's stance on farm and rural issues, released in a speech in Iowa last week, developed the same way his campaign has: It started out leaning left, then shifted to the middle.
According to Vermont Farm Bureau President Clark Hinsdale III, a draft of the speech only a week ago included language more radical than he believed most farmers could stomach.
Dean's presidential campaign staff in South Burlington said Hinsdale was one of those given drafts of the speech to review during its formulation because of his longtime friendship with Dean.
"I told them then that this was a bad speech, that it was essentially peppered with mantras from the far left," Hinsdale said. "I said this was not the Howard Dean I knew when he was governor of Vermont."
Hinsdale said he ultimately called Dean at home to register his complaint and later wrote Dean a lengthy memo with his objections. Hinsdale has been president of the Vermont Farm Bureau chapter since 1993.
"I know we worked a number of (Hinsdale's) suggestions into the speech," Andrew Baumann, Dean's policy researcher on agriculture issues, acknowledged late last week.
Areas where Dean moderated his stances, according to Hinsdale, were ones involving Dean's call for a fair-trade policy, his discussion on the dangers of corporate farming and his proposal to help farmers expand their business through market diversification, rather than bail-outs.
"We need to take aggressive action to protect our family farmers," Dean said in his speech, delivered Wednesday in Grundy County in northeast Iowa. "Farmers want to make their living from the market, not from farm programs."
Hinsdale said earlier versions of the speech called for saving the family farm, but lacked the market diversification reference. Dean's speech also supported development of renewable energy projects in rural areas, a country-of-origin labeling bill and a ban on meatpackers owning the farms that produce the livestock they process.
Hinsdale said the speech Dean delivered Wednesday sounded much more like the Dean he "knows and loves."
NOTE: Hinsdale is a millionaire and more of a land owner than farmer.
He said Dean deserves credit for his work on behalf of Vermont farmers, and cited Dean's support of the Northeast dairy compact and land preservation as examples. The compact, now defunct, provided payments to farmers when the federally set price for milk dropped below a certain level.
"My experience was that Howard Dean was a good, solid governor for agricultural interests," Hinsdale said. "The door was always open when you needed to see him on a farm issue."
Ron Allbee, agriculture commissioner for former Democratic Gov. Madeleine Kunin between 1987-1991 and now an agriculture business consultant in Burlington, was less effusive in praising Dean.
"Howard focused on two things," Allbee said, referring to the compact and land conservation. "In terms of diversification and a couple of other issues, he wasn't as strong."
Allbee described the amount of agricultural marketing money Dean put in his budgets as "minuscule."
State Rep. Ruth Towne, R-Berlin, chairwoman of the House Agriculture Committee, described Dean's attitude toward agriculture as "benign neglect."
"But that's not all bad," she said. "Sometimes you get too many non-farm people trying to influence agricultural policy that's not always in the best interests of farmers."
Contact Sam Hemingway at 660-1850 or shemingway@bfp.burlingtonfreepress.com.
Could they control their own party while mounting a bid for the White House.
There is a fundermental theorem of cybernetics which states that the controlling system has to have at least the same complexity/intelligence as the system being controlled. ....I just don't see that the dems could handle it.
Looks like addiing shrillary to the mix of nine will cause the rats to go critical (in the nuclear sense) and split apart.
Right now they are having a tough time controlling their own water; and don't look like they are going to ever get anything under control.
Could they control their own party while mounting a bid for the White House.
All polls of likely Dem voters show Hitlery in the lead IF she was in the race.....they would 'fall in line' to beat Bush....remember how they closed ranks to save Bubba's A$$?
Rats want political power....they hate Bush...they will unite behind the party nominee....her admirers are like a cult...those who have freeped her book signings report that they 'cry & faint' at her sight....some women will go gaga over the thought of her as prez.
The good news is that the VRWC will go throught fire & walk on broken glass to get out the vote against her!
She has the lesbian and angry white male vote locked up ....but the others........sounds like a recipie for disaster.
I guess the war chest of Dubbya/GOP going into the elections will double to $350M if shrillary throws her pointy hat in the ring.
Should guarentee a fairly big "coat-tail" effect for the GOP
Only one time in the last 100 years has a politcal party failed to hold the White House for at least 2 terms. In up times and down times only once have the people changed parties after just 4 years in office. It happened to Jimmy Carter in 1980. It took 20 percent inflation, 12 percent unemployment, 18 percent interest rates, and Iran holding our hostages for Ronald Reagan to manage to get 50.75 percent of the votes to defeat incumbent Jimmy Carter. Think about how good a candidate Reagan was. Think about what a bad president Carter was... Yet the democrats had only held the presidency for 4 years. It is measure of how good Reagan is, that he won over Carter.
But far more times than not, a party in power for 8 years does not get 12 years in power. Gore did not win to make it 12. In the last half of the last century only Reagan started a 12 year run.
Hillary knows that her best shot is for 2008. The office will be open. There will be no incumbent advantage. She can announce in 2006 and have two years of media exposure where all that she need do is be a critic of Dubya. She and Bill can spend 2006 and 2007 raising 400 million dollars so that when other candidates try to challenge her in 2007 and 2008 they will find the money well dry. They can dole out money to state candidates who will be party official delegates to the 2008 convention. She can start the primary season with 20 percent of the Delegates in her hip pocket. Dick Gephardt has the party officials sewed up for 2004. The media is all going for dean but Gephardt is the only one with committed delegates before a single primary is taken.
All Hillary and Bill need to do is insure a loser gets the Democratic nomination in 2004. It is hard to imagine a loser not getting the 2004 nomination.
But by 2008 the Democrats will have tried Gore and one more.. and they both lost. It will be time for the Democrats to return to the mainstream after its disasterous shift to the left with the 9 dwarfs. Yes Hillary the centrist will run for the presidency in 2008. By 2008 the public will have forgotten she is a leftist. Dean will be the quentessential leftist with a mcGovern type legacy. Hillary intends to be the Democrats Richard Nixon returning from the successful past to regain the glory years of Bill and Hill.
She will only hop in the 2004 race if it looks like Bush is a sure loser. The odds of that being the case are slim and none.
But 2008... that is different matter.
If Hilary! is going to get in, she has to get in at the start of the primary season. She has to win primaries; she has to go to the convention with delegates to retain any power. But does she dare? Does she dare campaign publicly in uncontrolled settings? Does she dare to participate in the inevitable debates? Or, equally, does she dare to run a remote control, New-York-senate-race campaign, avoiding any contact with real voters? Her opponents could then level devastating and very possibly decisive criticism at her for 'ducking the voters'.
She must decide, because if Dean (or another) goes to the convention with a majority of the primary delegates, the nomination is his and the Clintons are bystanders with no way to get in. They must be sweating bullets.
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