Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Politics

Hawkeye Hoedown

For Clinton, Obama, and Edwards, the stakes in Iowa may be higher than ever

Posted October 5, 2007

OTTUMWA, IOWA—Over a Coke in the historic Hotel Ottumwa's Second Street Cafe, Bob Beisch smiles slyly when asked to compare the on-the-ground campaigns of the Democrats' top three presidential candidates.

Bonnie Eggers packs her car outside the Clinton office in Ottumwa.
Bonnie Eggers packs her car outside the Clinton office in Ottumwa.

"Now, just who are you calling the top three?" counters Beisch, 69, the party's Wapello County chairman, who had lunched earlier with the wife of Sen. Christopher Dodd, a well-liked contender but not on anyone's short list.

Beisch is joking, sort of. In Iowa's caucuses, scheduled for January 14 (the date is still a moving target), anything is possible. But it's the dead-heat battle of the titans here that is captivating the state. Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, both awash in cash, and former Sen. John Edwards, who has far less in the bank but has spent four years courting voters here, have poured time, sweat, and money into Iowa since the spring. They have, by most accounts, equally organized and aggressive field operations that each boast more than 100 paid staffers. Among them, they've opened 67—and counting—field offices and by late September had collectively visited the state 78 times since late 2004.

Showdown. The stakes in Iowa are always high. But this year, with Clinton solidifying an aura of inevitability with big leads in new national polls and top third-quarter fundraising totals, they are monumental. If Clinton takes an Iowa win into the primary in New Hampshire, where she has a double-digit lead, and then on to other primary states where she's also atop the polls, the White House dreams of Edwards and Obama could wither here amid the coffee shops and cornfields.

But consider this: Polls have shown a tight race among the three leading contenders, and a crucial 15 percent of Iowa Democrats say they haven't yet made up their minds. "That's why I get up at 4:30 every day," says Teresa Vilmain, Clinton's Iowa director. On caucus night, it's about getting supporters to show up in classrooms and rented halls with neighbors and friends and declare their loyalty. Campaigns are already calculating how many warm bodies they'll need to meet the threshold for each delegate awarded at the caucuses. And they're making contingency plans for the horse-trading that can turn second choices into victors. What may happen, says Clinton supporter Bonnie Eggers, is that candidates like Dodd, Sen. Joseph Biden, and Gov. Bill Richardson will have supporters but not enough to capture a delegate. "And then you make deals to bring them to your candidate," she says. Do they want to serve on the platform committee? Be a delegate to the state convention? That puts campaigns in the position of not only fighting to win but also angling to be the second choice of fans of weaker candidates. (The mantra now in Iowa, says one campaign staffer, is: "Don't p—- anybody off.")

The jockeying is intense in this Democratic city of 25,000, a traditional labor stronghold that has struggled with poverty, illegal immigration, and methamphetamine addiction. The party's populist message, most pointedly delivered by Edwards, resonates here; Democrats in Wapello County outnumber Republicans 10,733 to 4,182. All three of the top Democratic candidates have field offices here. "This is a big Democratic area," says Dave McMillin, 58, a retired letter carrier and county cochair for the Edwards campaign. "There are people upset about NAFTA, healthcare, the war. We have a National Guard unit in Ottumwa and in Fairfield that's going back to Iraq for a second time."

Favored son. For John Edwards to succeed, "he's going to have to take this area like he did last time," adds McMillin, outside Edwards's office at 611 Church Street, a tough stretch of town just west of the Des Moines River. If there's a favorite son in this race, it's the former senator from North Carolina, who surged in 2004 to finish second to John Kerry in the caucuses. Democrats here like Edwards's personal campaigning style and that he wears jeans like the locals, Beisch says. His biggest asset is that although his early-year status as front-runner has eroded, he has maintained a loyal base from four years ago, was the first to establish beachheads in all 99 counties, and knows that come caucus night, his people will show up. But Edwards recently said he would accept public campaign money, a possible sign of weakness, and the question remains: Will voters choose someone who has not shown much strength outside Iowa?

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