Iowa caucus results not eye opening
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Alicia Robinson
If you ask local Democrats, Monday’s Iowa caucus didn’t go far toward
determining who will get their party’s nomination to face President
Bush in the November election.
“I was quite surprised that [Massachusetts Sen. John] Kerry did as
well as he did,” said Carl Mariz, who is running for the 70th
Assembly District seat now held by John Campbell.
Mariz said he expected former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean to finish
at least second in Iowa. After weeks as the front-runner, Dean fell
to third place behind Kerry, who finished first, and North Carolina
Sen. John Edwards,who placed second.
Eleanor Klein, president of the Democratic Club of West Orange
County, said she was a Dean supporter and would probably stay one,
but she was favorably impressed by Edwards, who vowed to avoid
negative campaigning.
“He had a very upbeat message,” said Klein, a Costa Mesa resident.
“He just tends to stress the hopeful and the optimistic, and I think
that really resonates with people right now.”
Mariz said he has given financial support to Reps. Dick Gephardt
and Dennis Kucinich.
“At this point, I’m for [Wesley] Clark,” Mariz said. “I really
like Kucinich, but it looks like he can’t get any traction.”
In the undecided camp are Katrina Foley, a Costa Mesa planning
commissioner; Costa Mesa attorney Jim Toledano, a former chair of the
Orange County Democratic Party; and attorney Richard Taylor, who ran
unsuccessfully for Newport Beach City Council in 2002.
“I remain woefully unimpressed by the whole lot,” Taylor said of
the candidates. “It’s kind of like watching a slow-motion car
accident.”
The caucus was valuable in that it put the candidates under some
stress and that voters got to see how they held up, Toledano said.
“It was interesting to see [that] Dean’s attraction seemed to have
diminished over the course of his getting greater and greater
exposure,” he said.
Foley said she thinks Iowa was important because it led Gephardt,
previously a major contender, to drop out of the race on Tuesday.
“What I was most impressed by with the Iowa caucus was the record
numbers of voters that turned out,” said Foley, who watched C-SPAN’s
broadcast of the caucus.
“I think it sends a very strong message that the Democrats that
are voting are taking this election very seriously,” she said.
Upcoming primaries in New York and California will help shake out
who’s going to clinch the party’s nomination, Taylor said. Iowa
doesn’t necessarily make or break a candidate, and former President
Bill Clinton is a perfect example, Taylor said. Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin
won overwhelmingly in his home state caucus in 1992, but Clinton
rebounded in New Hampshire a week later.
Others thought New Hampshire’s primary on Tuesday might be a
turning point for Dean and Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, who along
with Clark skipped Iowa to focus on the eastern state.
While they hold a variety opinions on the seven remaining
candidates, one thing local Democrats agree on is that one of theirs
can win the White House.
“I think Bush is going to get beaten and he’s going to get beaten
rather soundly,” Toledano said.
Bush has won approval from many voters for fighting terrorism and
has passed some key initiatives, such as a prescription drug bill for
seniors, and he has more fundraising clout as an incumbent president.
But Democrats said his handling of Iraq and the country’s dismal
employment situation would wound him enough for the right candidate
to finish him off.
Some might think no Democrat can beat a sitting president who
brought the country through a war, but Foley disagreed.
“It happened to George Bush Sr., didn’t it?” she said.
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