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Election 2004

Democrats unite around new standard bearer

With Presidents Clinton and Carter looking on, John Kerry takes over the party and raises $11-million.

By Associated Press
Published March 26, 2004

WASHINGTON - John Kerry said the country deserves leadership that "tells the truth" as he took over the mantle of the Democratic Party at a unity dinner Thursday with former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter and some of his former foes.

"Never has the Democratic Party been more united than it is today," Kerry said. "And tonight, not just as Democrats, but as Americans, we are united in the belief that America deserves better than a debate full of attacks and distortions."

Carter, Clinton, 2000 Democratic nominee Al Gore and most of Kerry's primary rivals attended the celebratory dinner that raised more than $11-million for the Democratic National Committee.

"We now have a standard bearer of the Democratic Party," said DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe.

Democrats who tried to tear Kerry down during the primary were full of praise for him as they united in the common cause of beating President Bush.

"This is a night where you all are going to get to eat some great barbecue and the nine of us who ran against John Kerry are going to eat a little crow," said Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman. "But John has won it fair and square."

Retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark said Kerry "has the character and values to regain the trust and confidence of Americans and to bring our allies back on board."

There also was much condemnation of Bush.

Florida Sen. Bob Graham labeled him "Houdini" for turning a budget surplus into a deficit. Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt said Bush is the worst of the five presidents he has served under in Congress.

"I'm nostalgic for Ronald Reagan," he said.

Earlier, Kerry was endorsed by his harshest primary rival, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who said Kerry's decorated service in Vietnam made him the better man to lead the country's military.

He also picked up support from two labor unions - the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, and the United Auto Workers. AFSCME's 1.3-million members make it the second-largest union in the AFL-CIO, boasting one of organized labor's largest and savviest political operations. The UAW gave its backing ahead of Kerry's visit to Michigan.

AFSCME president Gerald McEntee said his union, which endorsed Dean last fall and pulled the endorsement after his 11-state losing streak, plans its "most aggressive mobilization program," spending about $30-million to turn out members in support of Kerry.

Former rivals Dennis Kucinich and Carol Moseley Braun did not attend. Kucinich, who hasn't formally ceded to Kerry, says he will support the eventual nominee but wants to continue campaigning for peace, universal health care and fair trade. Braun cited a prior commitment.

Diners paid $1,000 to $25,000 to attend and eat chicken, pulled pork sandwiches, baked beans and coleslaw on plastic plates.

As polls show Kerry and Bush running about even, Kerry accused the president of misleading Americans in a rush to war with Iraq.

"Above all, this country deserves leadership that faces the truth and tells the truth," Kerry said, "that trusts the American people and knows that when we live up to our values, the United States of America never goes to war because it wants to, but only because it has to."

Kerry said Bush had presided over a failed economic policy, job losses, a growing deficit, dependence on foreign oil and millions of uninsured Americans, and he sought to boost his national security credentials with a message for America's friends and allies.

"When it comes to defending our security and defeating the terrorist threat, this nation is united," Kerry said. "We will stand as one country to protect the safety of our people. And we will never rest until we win the war on terror."

McAuliffe said the party, with $25-million on hand and no debt, was better prepared than ever to challenge the GOP.

Still, Kerry and his party are at a disadvantage. The Republican National Committee reported $45-million on hand at the beginning of the month and has raised more since then. Kerry reported $2.4-million on hand and has raised roughly $20-million over the Internet since then. But Bush dwarfed him with $110-million and took in millions more at fundraisers in recent weeks, including one Thursday in Kerry's hometown of Boston.

Democratic-leaning groups are spending millions in support of Kerry, which could help even the gap. And McAuliffe said the party plans to raise $100-million more.

Kerry also met privately with Dean and Dean's congressional supporters and donors.

Earlier, Bush's campaign distributed a list of criticisms Kerry's rivals made against him during the campaign, including that he should have voted to support troops in Iraq, that he changed his position on that war and affirmative action and that he's a Washington insider who can't pay for his programs without eliminating Bush's tax cuts.

"All of the Democratic opponents he faced during the primary said that John Kerry's numbers didn't add up in the primary and they don't add up now," said Bush spokesman Steve Schmidt. "It means a massive tax increase for middle income families."

[Last modified March 26, 2004, 01:20:43]


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