Why take Shaheen seriously?
There was also another question that went unasked Thursday: since no one could mistake Shaheen for an objective commentator, why would anyone take his remarks all that seriously to begin with?
As of Thursday night it was too soon to tell, but as sometimes happens in presidential politics, a peripheral figure suddenly became for 24 hours the most crucial person in the campaign.
Shaheen, the husband of former New Hampshire governor Jeanne Shaheen, has a sterling record of success: he piloted the New Hampshire campaign of Jimmy Carter in 1980, when he beat back the challenge of Ted Kennedy, that of Al Gore in 2000, when he crushed Bill Bradley, and the John Kerry effort in 2004, when he finished off Howard Dean.
My vivid memory of Shaheen is of his utter self-confidence. At the lowest point of the Kerry campaign in New Hampshire in September of 2003, when Dean?s popularity was at its peak, Shaheen told me that Dean would come unstuck ? and sure enough, he did.
On Thursday Shaheen said in a written statement, ?I made a mistake and in light of what happened, I have made the personal decision that I will step down as the Co-Chair of the Hillary for President campaign.?
But it is difficult to imagine a strategist as canny as Shaheen is making a thoughtless ?mistake.? A deliberate ?mistake? ? maybe. :scared :00hour
He said in his statement that his comments ?were in no way authorized by Senator Clinton or the Clinton campaign.? They need not have been to be effective.:SIB :shrug: :nono:
How Trippi saw the 'blunder'
Edwards strategist Joe Trippi said the Clinton campaign was dogged by the reality that she has long been a Washington insider and can?t credibly campaign as a candidate who?ll radically break with the politics of the past, as Edwards and Obama each claim they will do.
?This (Shaheen episode) just makes them (the Clinton team) look even more political,? said Trippi. ?They?re just digging themselves a deeper hole? into ?the problem they?re trying to get out of.?:SIB
He added such attacks ?are such a blunder? that they might help Obama.
But Trippi argued, using horse race imagery, ?there?s a reason Obama has not run away from her and there?s a reason she hasn?t run away from him.? In other words, both horses are neck and neck on the backstretch.
?There?s a reason Obama hasn?t run away into the sunset and the reason is there?s a deep concern about his readiness to be president,? Tripp said.
Citing polling data on Obama, Trippi said, ?A quarter of his own supporters think he?s not qualified to be president.?
Both Obama and Clinton are flawed candidates, he said, but ?there?s another guy, John Edwards, who people here really like. They feel like they know him and they know he stands up for working people and they don?t have those kinds of doubts about him.?
Meanwhile, a few feet away from Trippi, Obama?s campaign manager David Axelrod was, in a restrained way, utterly enjoying the chance to spin reporters on the story line that the
....................................................
There was also another question that went unasked Thursday: since no one could mistake Shaheen for an objective commentator, why would anyone take his remarks all that seriously to begin with?
As of Thursday night it was too soon to tell, but as sometimes happens in presidential politics, a peripheral figure suddenly became for 24 hours the most crucial person in the campaign.
Shaheen, the husband of former New Hampshire governor Jeanne Shaheen, has a sterling record of success: he piloted the New Hampshire campaign of Jimmy Carter in 1980, when he beat back the challenge of Ted Kennedy, that of Al Gore in 2000, when he crushed Bill Bradley, and the John Kerry effort in 2004, when he finished off Howard Dean.
My vivid memory of Shaheen is of his utter self-confidence. At the lowest point of the Kerry campaign in New Hampshire in September of 2003, when Dean?s popularity was at its peak, Shaheen told me that Dean would come unstuck ? and sure enough, he did.
On Thursday Shaheen said in a written statement, ?I made a mistake and in light of what happened, I have made the personal decision that I will step down as the Co-Chair of the Hillary for President campaign.?
But it is difficult to imagine a strategist as canny as Shaheen is making a thoughtless ?mistake.? A deliberate ?mistake? ? maybe. :scared :00hour
He said in his statement that his comments ?were in no way authorized by Senator Clinton or the Clinton campaign.? They need not have been to be effective.:SIB :shrug: :nono:
How Trippi saw the 'blunder'
Edwards strategist Joe Trippi said the Clinton campaign was dogged by the reality that she has long been a Washington insider and can?t credibly campaign as a candidate who?ll radically break with the politics of the past, as Edwards and Obama each claim they will do.
?This (Shaheen episode) just makes them (the Clinton team) look even more political,? said Trippi. ?They?re just digging themselves a deeper hole? into ?the problem they?re trying to get out of.?:SIB
He added such attacks ?are such a blunder? that they might help Obama.
But Trippi argued, using horse race imagery, ?there?s a reason Obama has not run away from her and there?s a reason she hasn?t run away from him.? In other words, both horses are neck and neck on the backstretch.
?There?s a reason Obama hasn?t run away into the sunset and the reason is there?s a deep concern about his readiness to be president,? Tripp said.
Citing polling data on Obama, Trippi said, ?A quarter of his own supporters think he?s not qualified to be president.?
Both Obama and Clinton are flawed candidates, he said, but ?there?s another guy, John Edwards, who people here really like. They feel like they know him and they know he stands up for working people and they don?t have those kinds of doubts about him.?
Meanwhile, a few feet away from Trippi, Obama?s campaign manager David Axelrod was, in a restrained way, utterly enjoying the chance to spin reporters on the story line that the
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