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28. Oktober 2004 - Bruce Springsteen & John Kerry in Madison, WI
Oct. 28, 2004 | MADISON,
Wi
The presidential campaign comes rushing toward you in a million shrill
words, a noisy, cross-country game of tit-for-tat played through TV
feeds and the sharp remarks of a hundred sniping surrogates. It's loud
and it's relentless, or at least it was until Bruce Springsteen stepped
onto a small stage here Thursday afternoon.
With 80,000 people and the future of the nation in front of him, Springsteen
played a wistful, acoustic version of "The Promised Land" then quietly
offered the most eloquent stump speech of this long presidential race.
"I've been writing about America for 30 years," he said. "I've tried
to write about who we are, what we stand for, what we fight for. I believe
that these essential ideals of American identity are what's at stake
on Nov. 2."
Springsteen talked about the choice facing America on the recent "Vote
for Change" tour benefiting America Coming Together, but this time he
delivered his remarks with much more of the world watching. Hundreds
of journalists from around the globe hung on Springsteen's every word.
And with people jammed through the streets leading to Wisconsin's State
Capitol, the city of Madison literally stood still to listen.
Springsteen ticked off a long list of the things that matter: economic
justice, a living wage, a "sane and responsible foreign policy," civil
rights, and "the protection and safeguarding of our precious democracy
here at home." He said: "I believe that John Kerry honors these ideals.
He has lived our history over the past 60 years, and he has formed an
adult view of America and its people. "
Quietly strumming his guitar as he spoke, Springsteen said Kerry understands
that people are not infallible, that struggle and heartbreak are an
inevitable part of the human experience. "That's why we need each other,"
he said. "That's why 'United We Stand' ... and 'one nation indivisible'
aren't just slogans. They need to remain the guiding principles of our
public life."
Springsteen called on the country to face "America's hard truths, both
the good and the bad." "That's where we find a deeper patriotism, that's
where we find a more complete view of who we are. That's where we find
a more authentic experience as citizens, and that's where we find the
power ... to make our world a better and a safer place."
As the huge crowd grew quiet, Springsteen quoted the late Sen. Paul
Wellstone -- "The future is for the passionate" -- and he said the time
to act is now. "That's why I'm here today to stand alongside Senator
Kerry and to tell you that the country we carry in our hearts is waiting."
When he was done, Springsteen reached for his guitar and leaned into
"No Surrender," the song that opens every Kerry campaign rally. As autumn
leaves fell around him, Springsteen reinvented the song. The anthemic
rock 'n' roll song became a meditation on promises made and hopes held
tight, and he dedicated it to John Kerry.
The largest crowd -- ever, for anything -- in Madison's history exploded
in applause. When Kerry took the stage a few minutes later, he fed on
the energy. While he'll never match Springsteen's poetry, Kerry's Madison
speech was strong and sharp and carried all the passion that Paul Wellstone
or Bruce Springsteen could have asked of him. He hit Bush hard for ignoring
reality in Iraq, for putting American troops at risk, for turning his
back on the middle class in favor of the big corporations that support
him. Somewhere in there, the usually humor-challenged Kerry got off
a good line that underscored the cultural divide -- and so much else
-- between the candidates: When Bush heard that "The Boss" was performing
in Madison, Kerry said, "he thought we meant Dick Cheney."
Kerry's aides were overjoyed. Kerry spokesman Mike McCurry has been
unusually serious and quiet over the last two days. In Madison Thursday
afternoon, he was beaming. As Kerry began speaking, he said: "It doesn't
get any better than this."
Springsteen will appear with Kerry again tonight at Ohio State University
in Columbus. The Midwest focus is intentional, of course, and not just
because Springsteen's working-man sensibilities play better in big cities
here than they would in a condo complex in Palm Beach. Kerry can win
without Florida if he can hold on to upper Midwest states like Wisconsin,
but it's hard to conjure up any calculation that gets Kerry to 270 Electoral
College votes if he loses both Florida and Ohio.
On the press plane Thursday morning, Kerry spokeswoman Alison Dobson
said the campaign believes Kerry is up by about 2 points in Ohio now.
And a new Los Angeles Times poll puts Kerry ahead there by 6. But both
campaigns are treating Ohio as anybody's to win. Bush will be in the
Buckeye State Friday with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Kerry will return Monday
night -- if not sooner -- when Springsteen will appear again with the
candidate at an election-eve rally in Cleveland.
Springsteen isn't the first rock star to open for Kerry, but he's the
biggest. Patti LaBelle sang the national anthem in Philadelphia Monday,
Sheryl Crow opened for him in Las Vegas, and Carole King performed before
Kerry arrived in Rochester, Minn., Wednesday. Jon Bon Jovi travels from
rally to rally on Kerry's chartered 757. After performing an acoustic
version of "Livin' on a Prayer" -- it's better than it sounds -- he
exhorts fans to make a difference in what he invariably calls "these
United States."
Kerry played in a rock 'n' roll band as a kid, and his personal assistant,
Marvin Nicholson, is responsible for hauling the candidate's acoustic
guitar off and on the plane each time the traveling campaign stops for
the night. Kerry rallies begin with a recorded version of Springsteen's
"No Surrender," and they usually end with U2's "Beautiful Day." At a
rally Thursday morning in Toledo, the sound man paid tribute to the
Red Sox' World Series win, cueing up Boston's "More Than a Feeling"
as Kerry finished speaking.
For all the excitement over the Springsteen appearance, the Toledo rally
was actually Kerry's best of the week. The University of Toledo's Savage
Hall may be the ugliest auditorium in America, but an electrified crowd
lit it up. Kerry took the stage wearing a Red Sox cap and soon had a
few thousand supporters screaming in a foot-stomping frenzy. The resulting
rumble was so loud that Kerry likened it to the "rolling thunder" he
once heard in Vietnam.
As with all his stops, Kerry's Toledo rally offered up made-for-TV sound
bites and a localized pitch to the home-town folks. Kerry spent a few
minutes reveling in the Red Sox' win -- "It's a great American story,"
he said -- and then vowed that he'd root for the minor league Toledo
Mud Hens from here on out. In a slightly more substantive appeal, he
vowed to return to Ohio for a jobs summit if he is elected.
For the national TV news, Kerry had a few fresh words but no new thoughts
on the 380 tons of munitions missing in Iraq. Kerry aides believe the
issue is playing well for them now, particularly on television, and
they're going to keep pushing it. With the munitions story, the Democrats
seem to have taken a page from the Republican playbook: Paint the story
with big strokes, don't get bogged down in the details, and get all
the surrogates -- from Joe Biden to Wes Clark -- attacking on the same
points all at once. Six months ago, Kerry would have proceeded cautiously
on the story, carefully documenting every question about his charges
even as he made them. Not so now. "The bottom line," Kerry said Wednesday,
is that "the weapons are not where they're supposed to be."
The Kerry assault has kept the Bush campaign on the defensive. Just
as the Mary Cheney flap knocked Kerry's message off the air for several
days after the third presidential debate, the munitions story is keeping
Bush from getting his message out now. After checking in on the evening's
news shows Wednesday night, a satisfied Mike McCurry told Salon: "We
won the day."
Thursday wasn't looking much better for the Republicans. The Bush-Cheney
campaign dispatched Rudy Giuliani to the morning news shows in the hopes
of killing off the story, but Mr. 9/11 botched the job. He said any
blame for safeguarding the weapons lies not with the president but with
the troops on the ground. It was exactly the sort of "denigrating" of
the troops that Bush had accused Kerry of doing, and the Kerry campaign
pounced on it, immediately circulating a transcript and a video clip
to reporters covering the race. The Bush-Cheney campaign responded by
reminding reporters -- just in case they had forgotten -- that John
Kerry voted for the $87 billion before he voted against it. In an e-mail
to reporters, Bush-Cheney spokesman Steve Schmidt said that Giuliani
is a trusted leader in the war on terrorism, and he offered some advice
for John Kerry: "Mind the stature gap, Senator."
Earlier in the day in Toledo, Kerry said Bush's response to the munitions
charge provides a powerful argument for voting him out of office. In
Pennsylvania Wednesday, Bush accused Kerry of making "wild charges"
about the missing munitions and said that a "candidate who jumps to
conclusions" isn't qualified to be commander in chief. Kerry responded
Thursday: "Mr. President, I agree with you." He then applied what he
called "the Bush standard" to judge the president's decisions leading
to the war in Iraq. "George Bush jumped to conclusions about 9/11 and
Saddam Hussein," Kerry said. "George Bush jumped to conclusions about
weapons of mass destruction, and he rushed to war. George Bush jumped
to conclusions about how the Iraqi people would receive us. He not only
jumped to conclusions, he ignored the facts that were given to him."
After his rally with Springsteen in Columbus tonight, Kerry will fly
to Florida to prepare for a full day of campaigning there Friday. He
returns to Wisconsin Friday night for what aides say will be the start
of "intensive" campaigning through Election Day. Kerry aides aren't
saying -- if they know -- where the candidate will be after Wisconsin
Saturday morning. Safe bets are probably Iowa and Minnesota, where Kerry
campaigned earlier in the week, and Pennsylvania, where a new poll shows
the race tied but Kerry aides insist he's in good shape. Democrats are
nervous about Hawaii, but such a long trip isn't in the cards with so
little time left. Arkansas could appear on Kerry's schedule, and there
is sure to be at least one more trip to Florida.
The only immovable objects on Kerry's schedule are the election-eve
rally with Springsteen in Cleveland Monday and a "victory" party in
Boston Tuesday night. Whether it's much of a party -- and, as Springsteen
said, so much else -- depends on what happens between now and then.
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