Refried Dean: why the Democratic front-runner is more like Bill Clinton than George McGovern.

AuthorMencimer, Stephanie
PositionWinning Back America - Book Review

Winning Back America By Howard Dean Simon & Schuster, $11.95

No story about Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean these days seems complete without the obligatory quote from some Democratic Party insider that Dean is, simply, unelectable. Whether it's his support for civil unions while governor of Vermont, his opposition to the war in Iraq, or his vow to represent "the Democratic wing of the Democratic party"--a shot across the bows of party centrists--detractors say Dean is too liberal to win the hearts of swing voters in an evenly divided nation, and could even provoke an electoral debacle comparable to George McGovern's 49-state loss in 1972. Indeed, those sharing this view run from the Democratic Leadership Council, whose leaders blasted Dean in a memo last May as the candidate of the "McGovern-Mondale wing" and the "elitist, interest-group liberalism," all the way to McGovern himself who, The New York Times reported in November, sees in Dean's candidacy "echoes of his own." But reading through Dean's new book, Winning Back America, one begins to sense that it is another former Democratic candidate who has left the deepest imprint on Dean: Bill Clinton.

It's true that, on a purely biographical plane, Dean and Clinton have little in common. Clinton was a meritocrat who began life as a poor white kid in Arkansas with an alcoholic stepfather and ended it as the first Democrat to win a second term since Harry Truman. Dean is an East Coast brahmin with a privileged upbringing which he doesn't even bother to attempt to minimize. His story starts in a tony Long Island suburb, and he writes frankly about his family of achievers and his time in prep school and then at Yale, where he loafed around as an unfocused student, conceding that he's no Horatio Alger, but making up for his lack of childhood poverty by asserting that he was born thrifty. (You've probably already heard how cheap he is, and how he still wears a suit he bought at J.C. Penney for $125 in 1987.) We also find a few interesting personal revelations, such as his decision to become a teetotaler after getting married. (He hasn't had a drink in 22 years.) By far the most compelling is Dean's description of losing his brother, who was kidnapped and murdered by revolutionaries in Laos in 1974. Dean traveled to Laos in 2002 to visit the site where his brother's body was thought to have been buried and worked with a bucket brigade that was excavating various sites looking for POW...

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