TERRE HAUTE — Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean tried to rally support for presidential candidate Barack Obama on a visit to Indiana, a state that has favored only one Democrat (Lyndon Johnson in 1964) since 1936. He answered a few questions in a telephone interview with Tribune-Star columnist Mark Bennett.
• For decades, Indiana has been taken for granted as a red state by both parties in presidential campaigns. What makes Democrats think this election can go their way here?
“First, people in Indiana really do want a change. They’d like our troops to come home from Iraq, and they’d like the economy to work for ordinary, working Americans. And neither one of those are going to be true if John McCain wins. They want real change.
“And the second is, frankly, that we have polls that show Barack Obama ahead here in Indiana.”
• After all these years and all the different presidential candidates, why this year have the people in Indiana changed their mindset?
“I don’t think the people in Indiana have changed that much; I think it’s the Republican Party. They’re not at all conservative about money; they’ve been spending up a huge amount of debt for our kids. They have no sympathy for ordinary, middle-class Americans at all. And they basically have us in a war policy with no plan to get out. Those are things that people in Indiana, I don’t think, like.”
• In the 2006 midterm election, the Iraq war was a primary reason Democrats displaced some longtime Republican congressmen in Indiana. In the past couple years, do you think the effort by Congress to bring the war to a conclusion has been adequate?
“I think it’s pretty clear you have to have a president to want the war to end in order for the war to end. And so, if you really want to get out of Iraq, you have to have a Democratic president, because John McCain has basically adopted George Bush’s policies on both Iraq and the economy.”
• But have the people in Congress pushed hard enough to make a change?
“The Republicans in the Senate have the power to prevent anything from coming to the floor, and they did that hundreds of times to stop [Democrats] from doing anything about health care, the war or anything else.”
• People here are interested in whether Senator Evan Bayh will be Obama’s vice presidential candidate. Are you satisfied that two Midwestern senators would be an appropriate combination at the top of your ticket?
“I consider Evan Bayh to be a close friend, but I’m not going to have any comment of any kind about the vice presidential selections. Senator Obama has asked us not to comment about that, and I’m not going to.”
• Is that completely his call?
“It’s completely his call.”
• What advantage do the Democrats present in solving some of the economic problems we’re having here in Indiana?
“There are three things the Democrats will do that the Republicans never do. One is balance the budget, the Republicans haven’t done that for 40 years. Two is, readjust the trade bill so that trade works for people instead of hurts them. And three is, to reconstruct the tax structure so it helps seniors and working people instead of Exxon/Mobil. Cutting taxes to Exxon/Mobil is what John McCain thinks is a solution.
“There’s a huge difference this year between the two parties. This isn’t like it doesn’t make a difference. McCain is basically pushing the Bush approach to the economy, and Obama has a different approach. And I think people will make a choice based on that more than anything else.”
• Can you see Indiana becoming an intensified battleground state, or are we still on the fringes of the hottest part of the political spectrum?
“I wouldn’t be in Indiana if I didn’t think we could win it. You can’t be everywhere, but this year we have a real chance in Indiana. And the reason we have a chance is because people in Indiana are hurting economically, and the country always does better economically under Democrats.”
• Do you think the upcoming Democratic National Convention will convey that to Hoosiers?
“I think the convention will help, but I think the biggest difference is the debates. I think the debates are going to make it really clear that Barack Obama really understands the plight of working people, in terms of their health care, helping their kids pay for college, having jobs available, and that the Republicans really don’t. Four more years of George Bush’s policies is not the direction I think we want to head in, and I don’t think it’s the direction Indiana voters want us to head in either.”
• Were there lingering doubts raised by Sen. Clinton about Sen. Obama that will become a problem for him in his campaign against Sen. McCain?
“Barack did very well [in Indiana], and we had a huge turnout here. I think having those primaries in all 50 states that counted, mattered and helped people to get to know the candidates.”
• What campaign mistakes have you seen by the Republicans so far?
“I think the Republicans are very good campaigners. I don’t think they’re very good at governing the country. … I think it was a mistake to take the low road and attack Obama’s patriotism. I think that’s a big mistake, because I think people are sick of that kind of campaigning.”
• A new ad for Sen. McCain involves favorable comments from Democrats, including you, about him. Is that a misrepresentation?
“I would urge you to look at our ad as a reply to it, and then you can decide that one for yourself.”
Mark Bennett Opinion
Q&A with Howard Dean
- Mark Bennett Opinion
-
-
MARK BENNETT: Toxic victories
When the Super Bowl ends tonight in Indianapolis, most of the Giants and Patriots will shake hands, despite their competitive fire, win or lose.
-
MARK BENNETT: Indianapolis will be on display for the nation with the Super Bowl coming to town
Someone immersed in a crash diet to make a smashing impression at a class reunion may get the desired effect.
-
MARK BENNETT: Patiently waiting for Indiana's primary
While standing in a check-in line at Leonardo da Vinci Airport in Rome a few years ago, I watched an Italian woman walk past dozens of more patient travelers to grab a spot up front.
-
MARK BENNETT: Processing postal change
You probably know one of those 10,026.
-
MARK BENNETT: Multiple choice question: Voters must choose which direction they want the future of education to go
There was a time when few Hoosiers outside of education circles could name the state superintendent of public instruction.
-
MARK BENNETT: With an historic election behind Terre Haute, it’s time to look at the future’s possibilities
Everybody knows their “woulda, coulda, shoulda” moments.
-
MARK BENNETT: Economic forecast: Things looking up but don’t expect ‘much of a dent in unemployment’
Outside the Columbia Club, the atmosphere matched the picture of 2012 painted by a panel of economists for an audience of business people gathered inside that ritzy building on Monument Circle in Indianapolis.
-
MARK BENNETT: Students who reach for a college education too often are buried under a pile of debt
Right now, millions of college graduates are wondering whether their education was worth the effort.
That doubt hurts the country. -
MARK BENNETT: Tangier’s festival volunteers keep past alive for future
Traditions stay alive only as long as the people who hold them dear.
Small towns have that same life expectancy. -
MARK BENNETT: Made in the USA? A political T-shirt faux pas
The most rational statement about a small furor in the U.S. Senate campaign was uttered by a tea party organizer.
-
MARK BENNETT: Daniels goes where a candidate probably won’t in new book
Some things simply won’t get said on the political campaign trail.
-
MARK BENNETT: Time waits for no Manning
Sad, disappointed and uncertain. Colts fans feel all of those.
-
MARK BENNETT: Value of every minute deeply realized on 9/11 (related VIDEO)
Editor’s Note
This summer, the Tribune-Star’s Mark Bennett visited New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pa., sites where the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, are now memorialized. He observed the cityscapes and landscapes forever changed by the events of that day and talked with people he encountered there, many of whom witnessed the attacks and their aftermath from close range and had personal ties to its victims. -
MARK BENNETT: As school begins, carve out daily time
By now, most back-to-school checklists are tattered and creased.
-
MARK BENNETT: Movie scene shows Terre Haute accepting Debs' role in its history
You stay classy, Terre Haute.
-
MARK BENNETT: Community outpouring represents collective sympathy for fallen officer
Every Terre Haute resident has probably been asked the same question.
“Why do you live there?” -
MARK BENNETT: Declaration of cursive’s death reminiscent of ’70s metric-conversion mania
When the state of Indiana announced it would no longer require schools to teach cursive handwriting, I was LOL.
-
MARK BENNETT: On Fourth of July, remember, too, those we depend on
A spatula in one hand, a cool beverage in the other, and a stash of bottle rockets in a plastic sack in the garage.
-
MARK BENNETT: Get out and see what the Valley has to offer
Maybe you drive the same route to work every day. Shortest route. Saves time and a few dimes worth of gas.
-
MARK BENNETT: Walking the fine bipartisan line
Lugar’s occasional departures from hard-line conservatism have put his six-term Senate position in jeopardy.
-
MARK BENNETT: Terre Haute man receives kidney from younger brother
The act of giving often triggers an instant calculation of loss.
-
MARK BENNETT: Tornadoes stand as catastrophic mileposts in history
Aforce stronger than mankind rivets the attention of humans. Fear. Awe. Curiosity.
-
MARK BENNETT: A degree can open doors but in this day and age, is it enough?
This month, hundreds of brand-new graduates of the local colleges are staring at that piece of paper and wondering, “Was it all worth it?”
-
MARK BENNETT: Appeasing hard-liners in presidential race could erode Daniels’ budget-minded appeal
Some Hoosiers who voted Mitch Daniels into the Indiana governor’s seat in 2004 may not recognize Mitch Daniels, candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, if he chooses to run.
-
MARK BENNETT: From Mother to Child
My mom remains a sweet, generous, energetic, faithful lady at 87 years old. Raising five children somehow didn’t break her bright spirit or my late father’s endless patience.
-
MARK BENNETT: Hoosier college grads may want to consider teaching jobs elsewhere
Commencement ceremonies at Indiana State University and St. Mary-of-the-Woods College are just six days away.
-
Mark Bennett: Consumers stuck when it comes to dealing with increasing gas prices
Most motorists pulling up to the gas pumps lately can relate to Frank Costanza.
As George Costanza’s volatile father on “Seinfeld,” Frank was told to say, “Serenity now,” whenever he felt his blood pressure rise. Instead, Frank screamed the phrase, defeating the purpose and illustrating his perpetual state of agitation. -
MARK BENNETT: Vigo County struggles with persistent child poverty
The statistics are hard to accept, especially for a community proud of its progress.
The situation those numbers expose is difficult to change. -
MARK BENNETT: Long live ... us
In never-say-die America, life expectancy is longer than ever, according to a report issued this month by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
-
MARK BENNETT: Commission calls for academic success to be tied to NCAA Tournament participation
Follow the money.
That advice from Watergate informant “Deep Throat” led Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward to the truth that uncovered corruption in the nation’s public office. The concept applies to situations beyond the Oval Office, though. - More Mark Bennett Opinion Headlines
-
MARK BENNETT: Toxic victories








