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IS WESLEY THE ANSWER?

So let us now consider Wesley Clark.

If you are a Democrat, here are the questions you should be asking yourself:

1) Can a general–a lifelong military man whose career, let’s be honest, has largely been devoted to figuring out ways to have people killed–properly represent the Democrat Party?

2) Can a man who voted for Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan (twice) and George H.W. Bush for president; who served in Gerald Ford’s White House; who just two years ago praised the current Bush administration as a “great team” at a Republican fundraiser; and who only lately declared his political affiliation be a real Democrat?

3) Does a man famous for his single-minded ambition and long accustomed to having people say “Yes, sir!” to his every command have the personal warmth, humility, and people skills to attract independent voters and later work with Congress as president?

4) Does a Johnny-come-lately who has never held political office and who hasn’t yet fleshed out his positions on many issues (the budget deficit, health care, the death penalty) deserve to get the support of Democrats–especially Democrats who have already placed themselves in either the Dean or Kerry camps?

5) Is he just a stalking horse for Hillary?

6) Is he electable?

7) Should you start working for him?

As a lifelong left-wing pacifist-leaning Democrat, I hereby offer my own my answers:

1) Yes. 2) Yes. 3) Let’s hope so. 4) Yes. 5) Of course not. 6) Yes. 7) Yes, if you want a Democrat in the White House in 2005.

Let’s take the issues one at a time.

1) A Democratic general? Sure. Why not? True, as a party, the Democrats have always sat far across the room from the military-industrial complex and eyed it with distrust. For Democrats, speaking softly has always been more important than swinging the big stick. But with his experience in negotiating the Dayton accords that ended the killing in Bosnia, and with his credentials as Supreme Allied Commander of NATO, Clark has learned the importance of going into battle only after you have the support of the international community. Given that the current Republican Party has no respect whatsoever for a true internationalist (see how they’ve marginalized Colin Powell), where else is a politician who believes in multilateralism to go except to the Democratic Party? In fact, think of it this way: If Colin Powell himself asked, wouldn’t you, as a Democrat, welcome him into the party, even now, with open arms? Yes, generals think a lot about having people killed. But they also think a lot about ways to avoid having people killed. That puts them well ahead of Donald Rumsfeld and George W. Bush.

2) He voted for Republicans in the past? So what? Good for him for admitting it. At last week’s debate, Clark addressed the issue of his “Democratic” credentials to my satisfaction when he said, “I am pro-choice. I am pro-affirmative action. I am pro-environment, pro-health. I believe the United States should engage with allies. We should be a good player in the international community. And we should use force only as a last resort.” For me, that’s as solid an anti-Bush platform as I’ve yet heard, and the guy deserves credit for coming right out and declaring his support for policies (abortion choice, affirmative action) that will immediately alienate many slightly-to-the-right voters who would otherwise have been attracted to him as a military man. All this just proves that Clark is a man who thinks outside political boxes. Indeed, given his chummy-with-Republicans history, he might, just might be able to return a measure of nonpartisan politics to Washington–which could be the most revolutionary thing to happen there in decades. (A note to conspiracy theorists: If you believe Clark is a Trojan horse planted by Republicans to sabotage the Democrats’ presidential campaign next year, please send your cards and letters to Bill and Hillary Clinton, as well as liberal U.S. Representative Charles Rangel of New York–all of whom seem to be convinced of Clark’s Democratic bona fides.)

3) Campaign skills? As for this, we’ll have to wait and see. Clark is no Eisenhower. He is not kindly, he is not modest, he was not beloved by his subordinates in the military. Nor is he a Bill Clinton; it is not clear whether he feels anyone else’s pain. What Clark is, however, is smart, articulate, and (as long as he doesn’t fall prey to political handlers) refreshingly frank. In all this–both the vices of ambition and the virtues of brains–he has much in common with Howard Dean. They seem to be two of a kind. Does either of them have the ability to compromise when in the White House? We won’t know until one of them is there.

4) A Johnny-come-lately? Clark did start campaigning late. As far as I’m concerned, that’s a good thing. The other Democratic candidates have been campaigning for months, even years, and that’s too long. It wastes their time, and it wastes ours. As for his supposedly uncertain position on issues, forget his supposed flip-flopping in his first days on the campaign trail, when he said he would have voted in October of 2002 for the Congressional resolution giving the president the power to act militarily against Iraq, then seemed to back off on that stance. He was facing a hypothetical question with any number of hypothetical answers (Do you mean, if I knew only what we knew at the time? Do you mean, knowing what we know now?), and he made the mistake of seeing the complexity inherent in the question. He tried to give something other than a pre-fab sound bite that would have amounted to Monday-morning quarterbacking. For that, he should be congratulated, not pilloried.

In truth, Clark has a strong, clearly stated philosophy about the three issues a president can most influence: economic fairness, the environment, and civil liberties. He believes tax cuts for the poor and middle class do more for the economy than tax cuts for the rich. He believes that caring for the environment and protecting the Bill of Rights should be the absolute highest priorities of any administration. None of the other candidates places such an emphasis on those last two issues. Given that the current Democratic candidates have such similar positions on most issues, the question of what they will emphasize as president is paramount for me. Clark’s emphasis, in everything he’s said and written, is on the environment, the need for transparency in government, and civil liberties. In reverse order, those are my Big 3 issues, and he’s right on target on each of them. Bottom line: As president, he’ll nominate the right kind of judges.

5) A stalking horse for Hillary? Nonsense. Like the rest of the candidates, he’s too egotistical to be a stalking horse for anyone. Besides, Hillary and Bill are astute enough to know that Hillary can’t win next year. She’s still too divisive. She needs at least four more years to soften her image in the Senate.

6) Electable? Clark is a dashing, Purple Heart- and Silver Star-winning military hero who says all the right things to liberal Democrats and also appeals instantly to the hardware store clerk in Tennessee who believes in four-star American patriotism and the truck driver in Michigan who believes in four-square American military power. Clark has no experience in Congress or in a state house–a huge plus, since he, like Ike, has no political record to be held against him. Yet he can claim international experience and executive savoir faire. Heck, in a sense, he was commander of all of Europe. He takes the wind out of the Bush administration’s so-called lead on defense issues without alienating those (like me) who think civil liberties and the environment are at least as important as the war on terrorism. Electable? After his first week of campaigning, he led all Democratic candidates in the polls and fared far better in a hypothetical race against George W. Bush than any other Democrat. If he doesn’t flop or start flip-flopping as a campaigner–a big if–he’s easily the most electable of the Democrats.

7) Should you start working for Clark? If you’ve been working for Dean or Kerry, stick with your man. Each deserves a shot in the primaries and may turn out to be a better campaigner than Clark. But don’t let them turn their campaigns against the general. He’s too promising to be made the enemy. Keep aiming your criticism at George Bush. And don’t be shy about jumping to Clark if your candidate begins to flag.

And if you’ve been working for any of the other candidates besides Dean or Kerry, get realistic. None of them is going to win the nomination–not Lieberman, not Edwards, not Graham. Shift to Clark right now. If he is as good on the campaign trail as he is on CNN, he’s our best chance of beating Bush and turning the country back toward nonpartisan political sanity. In fact, he’s the best chance by a military mile.

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tuesday, 30

There s an Australian Wine Dinner tonight at MÇlange with Chef Scott Lenhart and his culinary team dishing up a five-course dinner, each with a different wine.

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FROM MY SEAT

COLLAPSE OF THE CARDS

The Chicago Cubs are champions of the National League’s Central Division. Despite suiting up the most dangerous offensive bunch this side of Atlanta, the St. Louis Cardinals are on the golf course today. What happened to end the Cards’ three-year streak of postseason appearances? A few explanations:

  • Injuries. I know . . . oldest excuse in the book. But let’s review the list of Cardinals who missed at least a month of play: Fernando Vina (Gold Glove second baseman, leadoff hitter), Eli Marrero and Miguel Cairo (two most valuable reserves), J.D. Drew (enigmatic “future star,” made of glass from head to toe), Matt Morris (staff ace, hands down), Jason Isringhausen (closer). That’s a sinister six, folks, especially the loss of Izzy for the first two months of the season. When Cal Eldred is trying to hold a lead in the ninth inning, you can forget October baseball.
  • Horrendous pitching. It’s easy to blame the myriad gopher balls slung by Garrett Stephenson and Brett Tomko, but the mound troubles of the 2003 Cardinals go much deeper. Woody Williams won 18 games, but only four over the season’s final two months. He was outpitched by Tomko — who led the league in hits allowed — during August and September. Dan Haren — called up from Memphis in June — is at least a year away from finding big-league stuff. As for the bullpen, gasoline to a fire. Isringhausen will be back, but expect a purging of his colleagues. Bottom line: St. Louis has exactly one keeper on its pitching staff (Morris).
  • Missing “the big hit.” With a dreadful record in one-run games (14-25), the Cardinals simply failed too often when a game was on the line. And this responsibility rests on the shoulders of the big boys: Jim Edmonds, Scott Rolen, Edgar Renteria, even Albert Pujols. All of them stars, but too little production after the seventh inning. (Remember the horrendous trip to Chicago in early September? The Cards lost two games by one run, another by two . . . in 15 innings. Rolen, Renteria, and Pujols combined to hit .173 in those five contests. Don’t blame Cardinal pitching for that.) The fact is, this team had no speed beyond Renteria. A station-to-station club is not going to be able to manufacture the critical runs necessary in tight ballgames.

    A pair of late-season games revealed a lot about the 2003 Cardinals. On September 5th, St. Louis hosted a Cincinnati club gutted by injuries and salary dumping. The Reds sent a parade of hand-me-down pitchers to the mound, a group that — after giving up a first-inning homer to Pujols — shut out the vaunted Cardinal lineup for 11(!) innings. Five days later, the Colorado Rockies — with the worst road record in the National League and having lost 13 of 14 games — came to Busch Stadium and summarily spanked a team in contention for a playoff spot, 8-1. Not the stuff of champions. And a club without nearly the resolve we saw in the grief-stricken division champions of 2002. Worst of all? The much-celebrated Busch faithful were as lifeless as their ballclub, the most energy-sapped collection of St. Louis baseball fans I’ve seen in the eight-year Tony LaRussa era.

    Longtime Cardinal manager Whitey Herzog used to make four or five deals during the off-season, no matter how comfortable he was with his roster. A baseball team that grows too familiar, in Herzog’s eyes, also grew stagnant. Ballplayers need just enough insecurity in their jobs to remain hungry. You can count on some deals out of St. Louis in the coming months.

    LaRussa has already indicated he’ll be back. But you’ve likely seen the last of Vina, Drew, Tomko, Stephenson, Eldred, and Jeff Fassero in Cardinal uniforms. You have to believe there will be an arms race of sorts, as general manager Walt Jocketty is challenged with rebuilding an entire pitching staff. This may mean the departure of a position player that might surprise (Edmonds?). The club will shop the overpaid, over-the-hill Tino Martinez and the remaining year on his contract. At this point, Martinez clogs the batting order and is preventing the permanent move of Pujols to first base.

    It’s now hockey season in St. Louis, a sad way for Cardinal Nation to spend October. For the most disappointing Cardinal team in many years, a familiar mantra might be called upon during the hot stove months ahead: Change is good.

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    STRICKLAND, MCCORMICK SCORE WITH STRAW-POLLERS

    For what it’s worth, the attendees at District Attorney General Bill Gibbons’ annual fundraising fish fry, held at the Catholic Club on Saturday, have signaled their druthers in the forthcoming Memphis city election.

    A straw poll shows that if Gibbons’ boosters — a middle-of-the-road crowd with moderate Republican tendencies — had their way, the mayoral victor would be incumbent Willie Herenton; the elected councilmen would include incumbents E.C. Jones (District 1) and Myron Lowery (Super-district 8, Position 3), Scott McCormick (Super-district 9, Position 1), and Jim Strickland (District 5); and incumbent City Court clerk Thomas Long would be re-elected. The totals:

    Mayor:

    Herenton – 80 (59%)

    Willingham – 55 (40%)

    Write-in for Wyeth Chandler – 1 (1%)

    City Council – District 1:

    Bates – 2 (2%)

    Bunker – 39 (33%)

    Jones – 76 (65%)

    City Council -District 5:

    Chumney – 37 (28%)

    Flinn – 33 (24%)

    Follis – 4 (3%)

    Strickland – 60 (45%)

    City Council – District 8, Position 3:

    Ford – 25 (23%)

    Lowery – 83 (77%)

    City Council – District 9, Position 1:

    Brown – 9 (7%)

    Lit – 14 (11%)

    McCormick – 61 (47%)

    Murphree – 1 (1%)

    Vanderschaaf – 32 (25%)

    Weiner – 12 (9%)

    City Court Clerk:

    Boyette – 40 (31%)

    Fullilove – 5 (4%)

    Long – 83 (65%)

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    monday, 29

    Two-For-One Burger Night at Old Zinnie s during Monday Night Football with Chef John Scruggs.

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    sunday, 28

    Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends this afternoon at Huey s Downtown, followed tonight by The Gamble Brothers Band.

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    JOE BROWN SPEAKS

    In a recent Memphis city council meeting, the outspoken Joe Brown once again proved his keen insight concerning Memphis law enforcement. “We have a lot of murders here,” he said, “but we are solving them in three to four days. that’s a plus.” When aswked their opinion, local murder victims gave Brown a thunderous round of silence.

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    saturday, 27

    One more art opening: It s at the Clip Joint Gallery for photography by Sarah Counce. Today s Latino Memphis Fiesta at Peabody Place includes a parade of nations, folkloric dance and lessons, and a tribute to Celia Cruz. The U of M Tigers play Arkansas State today at Liberty Bowl Stadium. Back at the New Daisy, moe. is in concert. And tonight s big bash is the Blues Ball, the theme of which is It s Good to Be King. This year s ball, at The Pyramid, features performances by live musicians and is dedicated to Elvis, B.B. King, and Sam Phillips.

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    GIBBONS: CHALLENGES TO SMITH ‘RED HERRING’

    In what sounded like a fairly strong defense of beleaguered Shelby County medical examiner O.C. Smith, District Attorney General Bill Gibbons said Saturday that the Phillip Workman defense team’s efforts to impugn Smith’s judgment constituted a “red herring.”

    Going further, Gibbons said he “never had any reason to doubt the findings” of Smith in any case in which the county medical examiner testified. The D.A. noted that Smith had never offered testimony in any legal proceeding involving Workman that required a verdict. His only involvement was to testify in a clemency hearing for the convicted murderer of a Memphis policeman.

    Workman, currently on a four-month reprieve of his death sentence ordered by Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen, was convicted of the 1981 fatal shooting of Memphis Police Lt. Ronald Oliver. His legal team has attempted a number of challenges to his conviction and his death sentence, most recently challenging the state’s contention that it was Workman’s gun — not that of Oliver’s partner — that fired the fatal round during a shootout following a holdup attempt by Workman.

    When former governor Don Sundquist was reviewing the conviction at a clemency hearing two years ago, Smith corroborated prior findings that the fatal round came from Workman’s weapon. Bredesen’s stay order was apparently related to the Workman team’s challenge of Smith’s testimony.

    Gibbons, who was interviewed during his annual fundraising Fish Fry at the Catholic Club in Southeast Memphis, reiterated that he would not “rule out” using Smith’s testimony in future cases. Spokespersons for Shelby County Mayor A C Wharton had alleged that the mayor’s current efforts to replace Smith were in part based on Gibbons’ unwillingness to employ Smith, but Gibbons has said those allegations were in error.

    Smith is apparently under investigation by federal authorities in the wake of a bizarre incident last year in which he was found outside his office bound in barbed wire, with a bomb attached to him, claiming that he was the victim of an attack.

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