Contributors
Hugh Hewitt - Principal Contributor
Mr.
Hewitt is senior member of the CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial
board. [go to Hewitt index]
The
Dean Campaign
A "movement" in its own mind...
[Hugh Hewitt]
12/10/03
The
breathless tone of Samantha M. Shapiro's New York Times
Magazine cover
story on the Dean
Campaign, "The Dean Swarm," suggests that Ms. Shapiro
hasn't covered many presidential campaigns. Either that, or
the arrogance of the Dean Campaign is equal to the arrogance
of its candidate.
Every presidential
campaign of each party draws a huge host of true believers
from a variety of walks
of life. They join
up, often for odd reasons, and form intense attachments because
presidential campaigns are intense adventures, especially
if the volunteers are young. For most of them, it will be their
first dive into the passions of electoral politics. As in
every
other campaign before this one, they will believe they have
stumbled on a new, strikingly unique group energy. Over at
Bush-Cheney HQ, the young staff and volunteers think the same
thing.
The
Dean Campaign is the Ford Campaign with e-mail, instant messaging
and cell phones. That so many of its volunteers don't
know it underscores why it is a doomed campaign: It lacks
seriousness about politics and the realities of politics. My
favorite line: "Many
Dean supporters objected not just to the war in Iraq itself,
but also to the Bush administration's failure to even maintain
the appearance of listening to the massive protests and U.N.
resolutions."
Put aside
that there were no resolutions other than 1441 to "not
listen to," and focus on the idea that "massive protests" of
a few ten thousands are not really massive protests at all,
and that A.N.S.W.E.R. is a splinter off a very small branch
of American public opinion. Can an entire campaign have megalomania?
It appears so.
The Dean
folk brag on their Internet-fueled fund-raising: "Dean
has raised $25 million through small checks – the average
donation is $77 – and those checks have placed Dean at
the top of the Democratic fund-raising pack." President
Bush topped $115 million this past week, raising it in a third
the time that Dean banked his $25 million.
If the Dean
people think these funds are all coming from millionaires,
or in $2,000
increments, they are kidding themselves again.
The rank-and-file that will walk and talk and, yes, text-message
and blog for Bush are vastly greater in number than those
at work for Dean. No one seems to be aware of this in the Dean
effort, which is great for Republicans.
Dean isn't
very original and neither is his campaign. Dean's a mixture
of Henry Wallace
and George McGovern – a radical
with big pipes and what appears to his followers to be momentum.
But as my pal Charlie said to me at a party last night: "Look
at the campuses. There aren't any protests. Nobody's falling
for this stuff."
Charlie's
right. The Dean people are too young to know what a real "movement" looks like. This
is a nice campaign, one likely to capture the nomination and
get swept aside in
a landslide for an incumbent president backed by a booming economy,
significant legislative achievements, and a serious commitment
to national security.
At the close
of business in November, these warriors of December 2003 will
look at each other with
blank or dazed expressions.
They never saw it coming. Because they never read a book on
campaigns past.
CaliforniaRepublic.org
Principal Contributor Hugh Hewitt is an author, television
commentator
and syndicated talk-show host of the Salem Radio Network's Hugh
Hewitt Show, heard in over 40 markets around the country.
He blogs regularly at HughHewitt.com and he frequently contributes opinion pieces to the Weekly
Standard.

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