I'm liking Dean more all the time.
Nov. 5th, 2003 12:03 pmDean takes heat for remark about Confederate flags, pickup trucks
By The Washington Post
November 5, 2003
BOSTON - Former Vermont governor Howard Dean came under a fierce attack Tuesday night from Democratic rivals who demanded that he apologize for saying last week that he wanted to be the candidate for "guys with Confederate flags in their pickup trucks."
Dean, saying, "I'm no bigot," declined to apologize for the comment and told his rivals the Democrats will never recapture the White House until they find a way to appeal to working class whites in the South.
"I make no apologizes for reaching out to poor whites," he said.
The fireworks came during a candidate debate aimed at young voters and hosted by CNN and Rock the Vote. They were triggered by a pointed question from a young African American in the audience who said he was "extremely offended" by Dean's statement, which was made to an Iowa reporter last week.
In his defense, Dean invoked the words of Martin Luther King Jr., who he said talked of bringing together the children of slave owners and the children of slaves.
But barely were the words out of his mouth when Al Sharpton leaped into the fray. Last week Sharpton said Dean was embracing anti-black policies and he escalated his criticism Tuesday night.
His voice rising, Sharpton called the Confederate flag "America's swastika" and accused Dean of misquoting King and said of Dean's flag comment, "I think it is insensitive and you ought to apologize for it. You are not a bigot, but you appear to be too arrogant to say I'm wrong."
When Dean again tried to defend himself, Sharpton said he sounded more like "Stonewall Jackson than Jesse Jackson" and accused Dean of stereotyping Southern whites by suggesting they all display the Confederate flag on their pickups.
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., then called on Dean to apologize. Dean refused, saying, "I was not wrong, John Edwards." Edwards then replied, "The last thing we need in the South is somebody like you coming down and telling us what we need."
Asked about past marijuana use, Edwards, Dean and Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said they had used the drug. Sharpton, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Wesley Clark said they had not. Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., answered the same, although he apologized as he did so. Former senator Carol Moseley Braun declined to answer.
Yes!
Never apologize, especially when you aren't wrong!
The Dems lost the South to the Republicans because the Republicans managed to tap the white anger that schools were deteriorating, blacks were taking the jobs for less pay, and that women weren't keeping the men as comfortable.
What the Democrats need to do to get the South back is address the problems that concern the voters most:
Am I going to keep my job, or will it get sent to some Third World Country?
Can I pay my bills?
Why aren't my kids safe in school? Why are there shootings and homemade bombs and kids throwing desks at teachers and grand melees at the flagpole?
What happens if we get sick? We don't have insurance and can't afford a doctor.
These questions cut across color lines, across gender lines.
The Democrats need to address this, and the hopelessness that pervades the working class. And not just address, but actively propose answers for these questions and problems.
But in order to do that, the Democrats have to convince working class/poor men that they aren't out only for women and academics and blacks and queers. That the Democrats do have morals and aren't out to destroy the country, or steal all the bread from the workingman's hands to give to the shiftless and idle. They have to drop the anti-military stance, because for many in the poor areas the military is the only ticket out of poverty they'll ever have a shot at.
They have to convince the men that they will DO something and not just whine. For all that Bush has made a hash of things, he is certainly doing stuff.
By The Washington Post
November 5, 2003
BOSTON - Former Vermont governor Howard Dean came under a fierce attack Tuesday night from Democratic rivals who demanded that he apologize for saying last week that he wanted to be the candidate for "guys with Confederate flags in their pickup trucks."
Dean, saying, "I'm no bigot," declined to apologize for the comment and told his rivals the Democrats will never recapture the White House until they find a way to appeal to working class whites in the South.
"I make no apologizes for reaching out to poor whites," he said.
The fireworks came during a candidate debate aimed at young voters and hosted by CNN and Rock the Vote. They were triggered by a pointed question from a young African American in the audience who said he was "extremely offended" by Dean's statement, which was made to an Iowa reporter last week.
In his defense, Dean invoked the words of Martin Luther King Jr., who he said talked of bringing together the children of slave owners and the children of slaves.
But barely were the words out of his mouth when Al Sharpton leaped into the fray. Last week Sharpton said Dean was embracing anti-black policies and he escalated his criticism Tuesday night.
His voice rising, Sharpton called the Confederate flag "America's swastika" and accused Dean of misquoting King and said of Dean's flag comment, "I think it is insensitive and you ought to apologize for it. You are not a bigot, but you appear to be too arrogant to say I'm wrong."
When Dean again tried to defend himself, Sharpton said he sounded more like "Stonewall Jackson than Jesse Jackson" and accused Dean of stereotyping Southern whites by suggesting they all display the Confederate flag on their pickups.
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., then called on Dean to apologize. Dean refused, saying, "I was not wrong, John Edwards." Edwards then replied, "The last thing we need in the South is somebody like you coming down and telling us what we need."
Asked about past marijuana use, Edwards, Dean and Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said they had used the drug. Sharpton, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Wesley Clark said they had not. Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., answered the same, although he apologized as he did so. Former senator Carol Moseley Braun declined to answer.
Yes!
Never apologize, especially when you aren't wrong!
The Dems lost the South to the Republicans because the Republicans managed to tap the white anger that schools were deteriorating, blacks were taking the jobs for less pay, and that women weren't keeping the men as comfortable.
What the Democrats need to do to get the South back is address the problems that concern the voters most:
Am I going to keep my job, or will it get sent to some Third World Country?
Can I pay my bills?
Why aren't my kids safe in school? Why are there shootings and homemade bombs and kids throwing desks at teachers and grand melees at the flagpole?
What happens if we get sick? We don't have insurance and can't afford a doctor.
These questions cut across color lines, across gender lines.
The Democrats need to address this, and the hopelessness that pervades the working class. And not just address, but actively propose answers for these questions and problems.
But in order to do that, the Democrats have to convince working class/poor men that they aren't out only for women and academics and blacks and queers. That the Democrats do have morals and aren't out to destroy the country, or steal all the bread from the workingman's hands to give to the shiftless and idle. They have to drop the anti-military stance, because for many in the poor areas the military is the only ticket out of poverty they'll ever have a shot at.
They have to convince the men that they will DO something and not just whine. For all that Bush has made a hash of things, he is certainly doing stuff.
no subject
Date: 2003-11-05 11:01 am (UTC)(Where's Art Buchwald when we need him?)
I'm a lifelong (27 years) Republican, and I'm getting ready to vote Democrat. I want change, dammit.
The problem is, I'm cynical enough to think that change will only come when the Oligarchs/Illuminati are forced into it. I don't actually think a Democrat will win. (and with the new voting machines, maybe never again...)