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Democratic Presidential Candidates Scramble for Votes Ahead of Iowa Caucuses
Jim Malone
Des Moines, Iowa
The Democratic presidential candidates are focused on a furious last day of
campaigning in Iowa before Monday's first important test of the 2004 primary
season, the Iowa presidential caucuses. The polls indicate the race is too close
to call among four of the eight Democratic contenders who are vying to challenge
President Bush in November.
A new poll by the Des Moines Register newspaper indicates a tight race among
the Democrats, with late surges by Massachusetts Senator John Kerry and North
Carolina Senator John Edwards.
The other two candidates in contention are longtime Democratic front-runner
and former Vermont Governor Howard Dean and Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt.
Two other candidates, retired General Wesley Clark and Connecticut Senator
Joseph Lieberman, are focusing on later contests. The Democratic field is rounded
out by Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich and civil rights activist Al Sharpton,
who are trailing far behind.
No candidate has gained more ground here this past week than Massachusetts
Senator John Kerry. "I am not talking about my opponents, I am talking
about the target. The target is George Bush and Democrats want the most effective
candidate to run against and beat George Bush. I am that candidate," he
said on ABC's This Week program.
The other candidate on the rise here is North Carolina Senator John Edwards.
He urged on his supporters at a rally in Davenport, Iowa, "I need you.
I need you at the caucuses. I cannot change this country alone. But you and
I can do it together."
Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean is counting on a strong local organization
to turnout his Iowa supporters on Monday. Mr. Dean attended church Sunday with
Jimmy Carter in the former president's home state of Georgia. Afterward, Mr.
Carter praised Howard Dean's opposition to the Iraq war, though his warm words
fell short of an official endorsement.
But the meeting came at an opportune time for Mr. Dean, whose lead in the polls
has been slipping of late. "I particularly want to thank President Jimmy
Carter. One, for getting me into politics and two, for providing a moral example
for all Americans. Because what we need is to restore the honor and the dignity
and the morality in the White House in foreign leadership and domestic leadership
so that ordinary Americans can have their country back," he said.
Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt may have the most to lose in Iowa if
he has a poor showing in the Monday vote. Congressman Gephardt spent much of
Sunday rallying trade union supporters. "You have the power to go out of
this room today and to find the number of people that we need who will actually
show up at that caucus so that we get more votes than our opponents and we win,"
he said.
Virtually all the attention here is on the Democratic race for president. Republicans
will also turn out in local meetings on Monday to support President Bush. The
president has no Republican opposition and is assured of re-nomination.
National Republican Party Chairman Ed Gillespie says the president is in strong
shape for re-election no matter who his Democratic opponent is. "The Republican
Party is as united today as I have seen it since Ronald Reagan. And we are going
to [win over] a whole lot more Democrats than they are going to be able to pick
off Republicans," he said on ABC television.
After the Iowa vote Monday, the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination
shifts to New Hampshire and its primary on January 27.
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