| Kerry's
Michigan Coronation
February 11, 2004
BY HENRY PAYNE
Copyright 2004National Review
Online
DETROIT--It's the sober weekdays after, and Michigan's Democratic
party is wondering about the blind date it married in a fit
of passion Saturday night.
John Kerry was elected--"anointed" is a better
word--the Democratic nominee in Michigan on Saturday. But
in the long campaign ahead, national Democrats may regret
that Kerry didn't face a sterner test in the primary of a
swing state that he must win if he has any hope of making
it to the White House in November.
Kerry breezed through Michigan with 51 percent of the vote,
far outdistancing second-place finisher Howard Dean with just
17 percent. But despite those numbers, the patrician Bostonian
with a cold shoulder for the auto industry is an odd fit for
this Midwest industrial state. If state Democratic leaders
had not been so eager to jump on national party chair Terry
McAuliffe's "electability" bandwagon, a scrappy
campaign here might have paid dividends in the long run--forcing
Kerry to reach out to voters that he will need to mobilize
in November. Instead he leaves behind a state where key constituencies
are confused or even hostile--either because they still don't
know Kerry, or because they feel disenfranchised by a process
that presumed Kerry as the nominee.
The uneasiness begins with key state political leaders who
endorsed Kerry, despite his record as a leader on so-called
CAFE (Corporate Average Fuel Economy) rules--federal fuel-efficiency
mandates that have cost thousands of auto jobs over the last
25 years, and that are staunchly opposed by industry executives
and unions alike. As someone who has made job creation her
top priority, Michigan's Democratic governor and Kerry supporter
Jennifer Granholm felt compelled to publicly justify her endorsement
of a man who might put auto jobs in his cross-hairs: "Senator
Kerry has said he wants to make sure jobs do not leave this
state," she explained awkwardly. Granholm added that
Kerry has told her, in private conversations, that he is not
wedded to mandating that trucks get 36 mpg (up from 20 mpg
currently)--the most radically intrusive auto proposal in
Washington.
Rep. John Dingell--"the auto industry's best friend"--also
got the fidgets when asked to explain why he was hanging out
with an SUV-basher. "It would be my hope that as president
he would be much more friendly and solicitous of the well-being
of the auto industry than his comments in the Senate would
indicate," Dingell said.
But in their rush to endorse Kerry without making him run
the campaign trail (Kerry made only one visit here), state
leaders are left with only empty assurances.
"They got nothing," says Bill Ballenger, publisher
of Inside Michigan Politics and one of Michigan's most respected
political analysts. "Kerry stiffed them. The way things
developed with this 'electability' thing, he hasn't done anything
to make himself palatable to Michigan. He didn't have to answer
any hard questions."
All this has Republicans drooling. Michigan Republican-party
Chair Betsy DeVos scoffs at Granholm's assurance that Kerry
will help end the loss of manufacturing jobs. "I've seen
John Kerry's job-killing CAFE plan to help Michigan manufacturers,"
she says.
But Democratic leaders and activists insist that Kerry is
their man, pointing to Al "Earth in the Balance"
Gore as an example of a Democrat who can win Michigan even
while he condemns cars. Gore, however, was a known entity--an
incumbent who had served as Bill Clinton's VP during the 1990
boom years. Kerry is an unknown--as Clinton was in 1992. And
Kerry's coronation contrasts sharply with Clinton's crucial
Michigan victory in 1992 after a bruising contest against
Jerry Brown and Paul Tsongas. That ordeal forced Clinton to
spend time in the Midwest seeding grassroots that rallied
to him against the elder George Bush in the fall.
Still, Democrats dispute that Kerry's cakewalk will have
any negative consequences. They say this race is about George
Bush (the younger), and the sooner Democrats unify around
the ABB ("Anybody But Bush") candidate, the stronger
that nominee will be.
"Kerry is the strongest Democratic candidate to defeat
George Bush, and that is a critical issue," says Carl
Levin, a longtime Kerry foe on CAFE standards, but an ally
on the campaign trail.
Indeed, Bush inspires Democratic hatred not seen since another
Republican president--Ronald Reagan--was pushing tax cuts
and aggressive foreign intervention (Nicaragua) in 1984. At
Michigan caucuses Saturday, the candidate on people's lips
was not John Kerry, but George Bush. "I'm an ABB,"
Democratic voter Alan Helmkamp told the Detroit Free Press.
"Regardless of the candidate we support today, we're
united in our effort to defeat George Bush."
"I'm angry," fumed Larry Loukojarvi. "I want
Bush out," says Angelica Sanchez. "Since Bush got
in, everything's gone to hell," adds Delmonto Manganello.
And so on. But is anger enough? Michigan's turnout Saturday--162,000--was
well below expectations. That's just 2.5 percent of registered
voters.
And in perhaps a more discomforting sign for the party, Kerry's
coronation has been met with downright hostility from black
leaders.
Once billed as a showcase for Michigan voters, a NAACP-sponsored
debate in Detroit the Thursday before the caucuses attracted
only Al Sharpton, with Dean, Clark, and Edwards already conceding
the state. But Kerry's empty seat on the stage looked like
a snub to Michigan voters--particularly blacks--and the backlash
came swift and strong.
The 800 audience members booed Kerry's name when it was called.
The event has left a bitter taste in Detroit's sizeable black
voting bloc, a bitterness that could hurt Kerry. As Michigan
political consultant Sam Riddle told the Free Press: "The
black vote may not be there in the numbers the Democrats need
to win Michigan in November."
Listen closely, in other words, and Michigan's Democrats
are grumbling. "In their heart of hearts," says
Ballenger, "they know they're not happy about this."
Kerry says the election will be about jobs. And Michigan
has lost more manufacturing jobs than any other state in the
Bush years. But Kerry's victory in Michigan's caucus was not
a populist triumph; it was handed to him on a silver platter.
And for a rich, Beacon Hill Bostonian trying to shed his reputation
for arrogance, John Kerry may soon wish he had gotten his
fingernails dirty in Michigan's primary trenches.
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