The Hinterland
Rants from the hinterland. Denver writer and pretend anthropologist Dave Cullen's take on the world.

Sunday, September 21, 2003


Dean brings out the bat

If you're a Deaniac, you know exactly what that means. If not, it means it's time for an agressive money drive at the Dean blog. They're shooting for $5 million in ten days, to close out the quarter. Expectations are that they'll blow the other campaingns away again.

They'll be charting the progress all week on a baseball-bat-shaped donation-thermometer over at the Dean blog, and the troops tend to go into a frenzy inside the comment threads during this period, particularly as the period comes to a close.

Check it out some time this week. It's a lot of fun and can be enlightening. And it's a very bright group posting over there in the comment threads. You won't be dissappointed.


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Wesley Clark shoots right to the top of national poll

Well this certainly has to exceed Wesley Clark's wildest imagination. Just two days into the race, he's shot all the way into first among Dems in a Newsweek poll. He also comes to within 4 points of Bush in a head-to-head matchup. (That's terrible standing for an incumbent this far out.)

The Newsweek intro:

Retired Gen. Wesley Clark may have only entered the presidential race on Thursday, but he is already the Democratic frontrunner, according to a new NEWSWEEK poll.

CLARK WON SUPPORT from 14 percent registered Democrats and democratic leaners, outpacing former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean (12 percent), Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman (12 percent), Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry (10 percent) and Missouri Congressman Dick Gephardt (8 percent).

Looks like he really is going to shake up this race. Assuming he does a better job campaigning than the last two wobbly days.

And Dean has finally accomplished his long steady ris to the top of the rest of the pack, now tied with a fading Lieb. The Clark campaign is flush with media attention and sudden legitimacy, but still pretty untested. If he falters, Dean appears more and more inevitable.

It really is looking like it could become a two-man race between these two. That is just unbelievable. It's so damn rare to find a presidential politician I can really admire and be proud of--and they're usually grasping away at the bottom. To have two in the same election to choose from, and potentially have them turn out to be the two will will choose from . . .

That's a first in my lifetime. I'm ecstatic. And I think either one is going to beat the pants off of Shrub. Can't wait to be proud of my president again.


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