Bloomgerg 08-09-07 Primary Calendar Complicates Plans for Clinton, Giuliani, Obama

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Bloomgerg

08-09-07

Primary Calendar Complicates Plans for Clinton, Giuliani, Obama

By Kristin Jensen

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) -- The 2008 presidential campaign strategists must be as wily as chess masters in allocating resources with front-loaded primaries and an ever-changing calendar. It gets more complicated today as South Carolina and

New Hampshire signal intentions to move up their balloting, which may lead to voting as early as December.

South Carolina officials want to protect their first-in- the-South status after Florida advanced, and are now in partnership with officials from New Hampshire who insist that their primary must come first. This may affect the timing of a number of other contests and create genuine calendar chaos. Already, California, New York and other states with troves of convention delegates and expensive media markets have all advanced their primaries to Feb. 5.

This compressed early schedule means ``you have to work harder than you ever have worked in your life,'' said Howard Wolfson, a top adviser to Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton. ``You've got to do everything you can to meet as many people as possible.''

The still-evolving calendar will require tough choices even for candidates with plenty of cash, such as New York Senator Clinton, her main Democratic competitor Barack Obama and Republicans Rudy Giuliani and Mitt Romney. With some candidates likely to spend $7 million to $15 million in Iowa alone, they will be forced to calibrate budgets for as many as 23 other states that may hold contests by Feb. 5, much earlier than ever before.

`Incredibly Expensive'

Clinton, 59, with about $33 million on hand and the benefit of broad name recognition from eight years as first lady, so far is the only leading candidate who hasn't aired any television and radio ads. That will change; she solicited donations in May, saying the advertising needed is ``incredibly expensive.''

Obama, 46, an Illinois senator, bought ads in early states to increase his name recognition. He had $34 million available at the end of the second quarter and plans to make significant media buys in Iowa, New Hampshire and South

Carolina in the next few months, a campaign adviser said.

Giuliani, 63, the Republican frontrunner nationally, has about half as much cash on hand as Clinton and Obama and is putting resources into some of the bigger states.

Giuliani's Strategy

The former New York mayor had Florida atop his travel schedule with 13 visits there this year. He has made eight trips each to South Carolina and California.

He started airing radio ads in Iowa and New Hampshire last month and has made eight forays into New Hampshire and seven into Iowa, including a four- day visit this week. He must decide whether to go all-out in Iowa and New Hampshire where he now trails Romney or to save more money for the bigger contests a few weeks later.

`It is crucial for candidates to do well in Iowa and New Hampshire and simultaneously be out of the starting gate for the Feb. 5 super event,'' said

Steffen Schmidt, a political science professor at Iowa State University in

Ames, Iowa.

Romney, 60, is adopting that strategy. With $12 million in campaign cash and a personal fortune of as much as $250 million, the former Massachusetts governor is investing heavily in advertising in Iowa and New Hampshire months before the first vote.

Some of the consequences already are evident. Arizona Senator John McCain,

70, started out as the Republican front- runner and ran through his money building a national campaign. Then the fund-raising coffers ran dry. Romney, fourth in national polls, leads in Iowa and New Hampshire thanks to his spending.

Edwards, Richardson

Less well-funded candidates, such as Democrats John Edwards and New

Mexico Governor Bill Richardson and probable Republican contender Fred

Thompson, are making different calculations.

Edwards and Richardson are betting almost exclusively on single contests -- the

Iowa caucuses for Edwards and the scheduled Jan. 19 Nevada caucuses for

Richardson -- to give them momentum.

By placing his chips on Iowa, where he finished second in 2004, Edwards, 54, has made the Democratic race there a three- way competition with Clinton and

Obama.

Fred Thompson

On the Republican side, former Tennessee Senator Thompson, who is expected to announce after Labor Day, must decide whether he is going to compete in the early Iowa and New Hampshire contests.

Florida's moving its primary to Jan. 29 is posing the most immediate challenge for strategists.

South Carolina was supposed to have a lock on the first southern U.S. primary and Democrats plan to vote in the state on Jan. 29. The state's Republican Party chairman, Katon Dawson, will announce in New Hampshire today a new schedule for his party's contest.

New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner, who will be at the announcement, has authority to set the date for his state's primary, which under state law must be seven days before any other primary. If South Carolina moves its primary to Jan. 19, then New Hampshire, which always holds its contest on a

Tuesday, would likely move up to Jan. 8.

As New Hampshire goes, so goes Iowa. State law there dictates holding the caucuses eight days ahead of any other state. That would move the first-in-thenation Iowa caucuses to December 2007.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kristin Jensen in Washington at kjensen@bloomberg.net ;

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