<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
            Home>News Center>World
                   
           

          Kerry, Edwards sprint toward Super Tuesday
          (Agencies)
          Updated: 2004-02-19 17:01

          Their rivalry engaged, Democratic presidential contenders John Kerry and John Edwards unveiled distinctive strategies Wednesday for a 10-state showdown March 2. The challenger will attack Kerry's free-trade policies and special interest ties, targeting Ohio, New York and Georgia.


          John Kerry waves to supporters Wednesday in Dayton, Ohio. [msnbc.com]

          The front-runner will battle Edwards on one front and U.S. President Bush on another, airing TV ads in general election battleground states while counting on arcane Democratic Party rules to protect his lead in nomination delegates.

          "Every race is going to be contested. Every race," Kerry said in Ohio, the focal point of his plans to beat Edwards in March and Bush in November. "We're fighting for every vote."

          The rhetoric reflected a get-tough attitude in Kerry's camp, victorious in the Wisconsin primary Tuesday but nonetheless stung by Edwards' closer-than-expected second-place finish.

          Kerry, winner in 15 of 17 contests and still the undisputed front-runner, failed to push his chief rival from the race. He settled for the departure of Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor who quit Wednesday after failing to win a single contest.

          The Democratic race makes a pit stop next week in Hawaii, Idaho and Utah — where just 61 delegates are at stake — before turning to March 2 and the motherlode of 1,151 delegates, more than half the total needed to claim the nomination.

          In Wisconsin, Edwards' debate performance Sunday and his criticism of Kerry's free-trade policies fueled his 11th-hour upswing. The first-term senator assailed Kerry's 1993 vote for the North American Free Trade Agreement and also aired an ad condemning the treaty, without mentioning Kerry's name.

          Kerry also took a hit from Bush's re-election team.

          He punched back on Edwards' trade criticisms Wednesday after allowing them to go unanswered in Wisconsin.

          "He wasn't in the Senate back then," Kerry said in Ohio, coolly alluding to Edwards' relative lack of experience. "I don't know where he registered his vote, but it wasn't in the Senate."

          Similar records


          Democratic presidential candidate, Senator John Edwards (D-NC), celebrates during an election night rally in the Wisconsin presidential primary at Serb Hall in Milwaukee, Wisconsin February 17, 2004. [Reuters]
          The 19-year Senate veteran said he and Edwards have similar trade records, a reference to the North Carolina senator's support for a China trade deal.

          Edwards, a trial lawyer who shines in debates, may demand a series of one-on-one forums with Kerry, aides said. On Wednesday, he chastised Kerry for accepting donations from lobbyists. "Records matter," he told reporters.

          Strategists said trade could be a make-or-break issue in Ohio, a state narrowly won by Bush in 2000 but among the hardest hit by job losses.

          Greg Haas, a Democratic strategist in Ohio, said Kerry holds the advantage because of his winning streak and momentum.

          "But NAFTA could pay dividends for Edwards here," said Haas, an adviser to Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman, who is being courted by Edwards. "He wouldn't need any ads — just saying the word NAFTA in northeast Ohio is like raising a red cape in the face of a bull."

          Kerry's advisers said the March 2 round gives him a chance to campaign and advertise in two states that will be critical to defeating Bush in the fall — Ohio, which Bush won by less than 4 percentage points after Al Gore pulled out his resources; and Minnesota, a traditionally Democratic state that Gore won by just 2 percentage points.

          In the remaining states, Kerry's ad-buying strategy will be dictated largely by Edwards' actions.

          'NAFTA could strike a vein'

          Doug Schoen, former President Clinton’s pollster, said Edwards' resurrection in Wisconsin has created three problems for Kerry: He can't focus exclusively on Bush, he must delay plans to raise money for the general election, and "there's a risk that NAFTA could strike a vein.”"

          "I believe this is a glitch in Kerry's glide path to the nomination," Schoen said. "But glitches can turn into gorges."

          While the front-runner can compete in all 10 states, Edwards has already taken Vermont, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut off the table — a total of 178 delegates and prime Kerry territory.

          That puts six states in play — Ohio, New York, Georgia, Minnesota, California and Maryland. Edwards will spend the bulk of his time and TV ad money in the first three, aides said, focusing on job losses in Ohio and upstate New York and familiar Southern terrain in Georgia.

          The NAFTA ad, or something similar, will likely be used. Boxed in by his pledge to remain positive, aides said Edwards won’t criticize Kerry by name in any ads.

          Edwards has key endorsements in Baltimore, which could make Maryland a place where he picks up delegates. Minnesota's economy and California's coveted prize of 370 delegates make those states hard to resist.

          Edwards' goal is to win two states and a number of delegates March 2, then sweep a four-state Southern round the following week. That would set the stage for a showdown March 16 in Illinois.

          Edwards' advisers acknowledge the odds are steep. The task also is made harder by Democratic Party rules that allocate delegates based on the candidates' showing in each congressional district. That means Kerry, who leads Edwards by more than 400 delegates, picks up delegates with every victory — or loss.

          Edwards has failed to win delegates in nine states. Kerry has pocketed them in all 17 contests.

           
            Today's Top News     Top World News
           

          'One country two systems' only solution to reunification

           

             
           

          Kerry, Edwards sprint toward Super Tuesday

           

             
           

          Bigger role for private sectors

           

             
           

          Standard Chartered to launch RMB services

           

             
           

          Teacher challenges Muzimei, posts nude photo

           

             
           

          Doctors find 350 coins in patient's belly

           

             
            Blast danger recedes at Iran train disaster site
             
            Cyprus peace talks start, UN says
             
            Jewish leaders urge end of Israel's 'demonization'
             
            Ex-Enron CEO expected to surrender to FBI
             
            Google adds 1 billion pages to search
             
            'Horrifying attacks' reported in Sudan
             
           
            Go to Another Section  
           
           
            Story Tools  
             
            Related Stories  
             
          Kerry: 'We voted for the China trade agreement'
             
          Kerry edges out Edwards in Wisconsin primary
             
          Senator Kerry blasts Bush, leads in primary
             
          Democrats debate over Iraq, Bush, Viet Nam
             
          Kerry gains ground in Democratic race
             
          Kerry wins in two more states, Clark quits
            News Talk  
            The evil root of all instability in the world today  
          Advertisement