Nation & World News Kerry forges turnaround in nomination race The senator has secured 14 of 16 state party nominations for the 2004 democratic nomination By James Kuhnhenn Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) MADISON, Wis. — Last summer, John Kerry assembled his top advisors at his vacation home in Nantucket to hear their grievances. As his aides and counselors vented, Kerry sat anxious ly, his right hand pulling at his left fin gers, wringing his hands. He hated refereeing these disputes, he told one participant. They were keeping him from being an effective campaigner. Even then, six months before the first voting, Kerry knew his candidacy was in trouble. Over the next three months, Kerry's campaign went into a tailspin. Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean rose in the polls, raked in money and cap tured media attention. Kerry couldn't understand how the former governor of a small state was outdoing him and his three decades of public service But Kerry couldn't articulate his message, and the infighting in his camp contin ued to mount. Now, with 14 wins out of 16 state nominating contests, the Massachu setts senator is on the verge of winning his part/s nomination, and the revival of his candidacy is one of the more re markable resurrections in American politics. Kerry bet his political reputa tion, his campaign and $6.4 million that he borrowed against his house in Boston on his pollster's advice to con centrate his entire effort on Iowa. "In part," said a strategist close to the campaign, "it was a strategy bom out of desperation." Like other sources for this story, the operative spoke only on the condition of anonymity because it's a cardinal sin in politics to upstage the candidate. The low point of the campaign came on Nov. 10, a cold, rainy Mon day in Iowa. The night before, Kerry had fired his campaign manager, Jim Jordan, in a staff shakeup that only re inforced the notion that the wheels were coming off his campaign. Kerry planned a tour of Iowa with veterans to tout his decorated service in Vietnam and his national securi ty credentials. But no one paid atten tion to the busload of veterans Ker ry had in tow. Jordan's dismissal was the news. At the end of the day, prompted by the vets to recite a poem, Kerry offered a near perfect rendition of Rudyard Kipling's "Gunga Din," the story of an Indian water boy who died defending British soldiers. "Din! Din! Din!" Kerry intoned the last stanza as his bus pulled into Cedar Rapids. "You Lazarushian-leather Gunga Din! "Tho' I've belted you an' flayed you, "By the livin' Gawd that made you, "You're a better man than I am, Gunga Din." To some of those listening, "Din" was "Dean," and the last line was an acknowledgement of a bitter po litical truth. To replace Jordan, Kerry hired Mary Beth Cahill, a former chief of staff to fellow Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy. He also hired Stephanie Cutter, a Kennedy spokeswoman, and David Morehouse, an old campaign hand for Vice President A1 Gore, to ran the campaign's communications. "Mary Beth came in and put order in a place that was complete disor der," a top Kerry aide said. By the end of the week, a new Kerry began to emerge. First, he announced that he was going to join Dean and Bush in forgoing federal campaign funds and the spending limits that come with them. Second, the cam paign decided to show some muscle at the Iowa Democrats' annual Jack son-Jefferson dinner on Nov. 15. Kerry dusted off an old speech line that had been overruled when Jordan had pushed it during the earlier cam paign quarrels. If Bush wanted to make the election about national se curity, Kerry boomed: "Bring It On!" In New Hampshire, though, the polls showed Kerry still trailing Dean by more than 25 percentage points. Some staffers were uncertain that an Iowa-only campaign would turn his fortunes around, and fund-raisers were anxious. Cahill called a meeting on Dec. 10, and pollster Mark Mell man laid out his case. Mellman had studied past cam paigns, and he knew that 80 percent of the voters in New Hampshire pri maries made their decisions after Jan. 1, many of them in the final days of the campaign. Iowa's caucuses were on Jan. 19; the New Hampshire pri mary was Jan. 27. Mellman's polls in Iowa showed Kerry rising, tying Mis souri Rep. Dick Gephardt for second place and closing in on Dean. "The fire lit by (Iowa's) caucuses will have huge repercussions for our campaign," he wrote in a memo for the meeting. Dean had been endorsed by former Vice President A1 Gore, but he was get ting greater scrutiny as the front-run ner. Kerry attacked Dean for saying that Americans were no safer from ter rorist threats after Saddam Hussein's capture than they had been before. The campaign kept up a steady drum beat about Dean's lack of foreign pol icy experience. "This is not the time for untested leadership to step into the shoes of the leader of the free world and presi dency of the United States of Ameri ca," Kerry said. Then came The Ad. It was one thing to surround Kerry with fellow veter ans; it was another to showcase his stint as the decorated skipper of a Navy patrol boat in Vietnam's danger ous Mekong Delta. Kerry, however, 'was uncomfort able with talking about himself," said a senior aide. So the campaign clipped some footage of his crewmen reminiscing about their skipper. They chose Del Sandusky, the pilot of Ker ry's boat and a down-to-earth Kerry supporter. Sandusky's ad and the en tourage of veterans that followed helped connect Kerry, a man of privi lege and wealth, to average voters. "They softened his elitist roots," said the strategist close to the campaign. Undecided voters began to give Kerry another look. Questions about his vote in favor of using force in Iraq subsided. Passionate antiwar Democ rats were backing Dean, anyway. The rest of the registered Democrats seemed simply to want a way out of the war. Kerry's foreign policy experi ence appeared to reassure them. Linda Snyder, a 54-year-old family counselor from Council Bluffs, Iowa, offered a typical assessment. Dean, she said, was a "loose cannon." Of Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, she said she had "a concern about his grasp of foreign affairs." But of Kerry, she said, "I trust his record. I oust the things he's done." Kerry shortened his stump speech to a tight 10 to 15 minutes and, at every stop, he opened the floor to questions and urged voters to "grill" him. The sessions ran long as he tried to accommodate every query. It wrecked his schedule. Time and again he was forced to apologize for a late arrival. Then he'd stay and answer every question again. By the time Iowa caucus day ar rived on Jan. 19, Kerry was atop the polls by a slim margin. When the caucuses ended that night, he'd swept the state. Edwards was in sec ond place, Dean was far back in third, and Gephardt, in fourth, was forced to abandon the race. As Mellman had predicted, the ava lanche followed. Within days, Kerry had closed a double-digit gap with Dean in New Hampshire, and on pri mary night, he won by 12 points. From there on, states began falling like dominoes, with only Oklahoma, which went to retired Army Gen. Wes ley Clark, and South Carolina, which Edwards won, bucking the tide. The swiftness of Kerry's turnaround was stunning. "Everything that hap pened, happened really fast and really late," one strategist said. "Sure it was a risk," Kerry said last week, reflecting on the Iowa strategy. But in a bit of post-election bravado, he added: "I never worried." (c) 2004, Knight Ridder/ Tribune Information Services. CORRECTION "University postpones arena plans indefinitely" (ODE, Feb. 12) incorrect ly stated that University President Dave Frohnmayer made the announce ment on Monday to postpone plans for the arena. The announcement was actually made on Wednesday. The Emerald regrets the error. Join the Peer Health Ed. Program at the UO Health Center Learn about college health issues ^sexual health and contraception \j ’ food and nutrition tobacco and other drugs exercise and dealing with stress Work with staff and students in the Health Center Internship program Resume builder 8 upper division credits spring and fall terms Build skills ? ^ organize talks ' lead discussions publish health articles i create innovative projects Call 346-0562 for more information or check out http://heatthed.uoregon.edu O UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Health Center • 13th Ave. & Agate St. Missy Golurnbo. 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