USA Today 10-03-07 Clinton masters juggling as senator and candidate

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USA Today
10-03-07
Clinton masters juggling as senator and candidate
By Brian Tumulty, Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON — Among the six senators running for president, Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton has emerged as the juggler supreme.
She's kept up an ambitious travel schedule that often exceeds most of her rivals
by relying on a highly organized campaign that orchestrates events designed to
maximize her exposure.
MORE MONEY: Clinton raises $27 million in third quarter
USA TODAY ON POLITICS: Clinton takes 3Q crown
At the same time, she has remained in the nation's capital for important Senate
floor votes and used the Washington media spotlight to criticize the policies of an
unpopular Republican president.
In fact, in the first nine months of this year — dating back to a Jan. 8 resolution
honoring the late President Gerald Ford — New York's junior senator missed
only 32 of 357 votes, or about 9%, according to Gannett News Service research.
That's significantly fewer missed votes than her five colleagues running for
president, although among the 100 members she ranked 10th for most
absences.
"The one thing we've all said about Senator Clinton and the campaign is, they
don't make any mistakes," said Stuart Rothenberg, publisher of the non-partisan
Rothenberg Political Report. "They are heavily into planning and anticipating
problems. They are cautious. It's a very elaborate, well-oiled campaign. This is
further evidence of that."
Steffen Schmidt, a political science professor at Iowa State University, said
Clinton's well-financed campaign allows her the luxury of flying back and forth
from the campaign trail to Washington. Clinton's $27 million in third-quarter
fundraising — $20 million of it for the Democratic primary — outpaced her rivals.
"I also have a feeling Hillary Clinton is a very well put together, organized lawyer
who just doesn't like the idea of missing important things," Schmidt said.
The senator with the second fewest missed votes — Democratic Sen. Barack
Obama Illinois — has been absent for 90 votes. That's nearly three times as
many as Clinton.
Obama's spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, said he "continues to work hard on behalf of
the people of Illinois" and has been playing a leadership role in recent lobbying
reform legislation and congressional efforts to end the war in Iraq.
Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona has missed the most. With polls
showing him trailing in fourth place among the GOP candidates and his
campaign behind in the race for cash, he's been absent for 182 votes — about
51% — while making a bid to revive his flagging campaign with time-consuming
travel through small towns in New Hampshire and Iowa.
Among the other three senators running for president, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn.,
missed 97 votes, Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., missed 105, and Sen. Sam
Brownback, R-Kan., missed 131.
Four presidential candidates — Biden, Brownback, Obama and McCain —
missed last week's Senate vote to renew and expand a federal-state health
insurance program for children.
Clinton, meanwhile, was not only present for the Senate vote but also appeared
on CNN and other TV programs to discuss her support for expanding health
coverage to millions of uninsured children and to criticize the president's
threatened veto. She also did a telephone conference call with reporters in Iowa,
telling the media in the state with the nation's first presidential caucus why
children's health coverage is important to her.
And on the Sunday leading up to the vote on the State Children's Health
Insurance Program, Clinton appeared on five nationally televised talk programs
from the comfort of her home in Chappaqua, N.Y., eschewing the normal practice
where the guest travels to the TV studio for the interview.
When Clinton has traveled as a candidate, the stops are carefully selected and
choreographed.
"We don't count how many days she's been here," said Schmidt of Iowa State
University. "When she's been here, there has been enormous media hype about
it."
On one recent Monday, Clinton spoke at a candidates' forum in Chicago
sponsored by the laborers union and then flew to Des Moines for a 10:30 a.m.
announcement of her proposal for universal health care.Although her stay in
Iowa was short, the health care announcement generated newspaper headlines
and TV news coverage. And she was able to hold closed-door, one-on-one
meetings afterward with the hospital's administrators and meet separately with
unionized nurses before heading to the airport.
Likewise, the day before Clinton maximized her time by being the last of six
Democratic presidential candidates to stop shaking hands and greeting some of
the 12,000 to 15,000 Democrats who attended an outdoor fundraiser for Iowa
Sen. Tom Harkin.
"I can't meet her too often, I like her so well," Mary McGee, a Des Moines
attorney said moments after Clinton's Iowa senior adviser steered the candidate
to McGee, who was one of hundreds of people squeezed together on the other
side of chain-link fence, trying to get Clinton's attention.
McGee, who is legally blind, is chairwoman of the disabilities caucus for the Iowa
Democratic Party and a volunteer for Clinton's campaign.
"We try and point out people who have endorsed, but equally important people
have been volunteering and people who are still undecided," said Teresa
Vilmain, Clinton's Iowa campaign director. "It's a way to do a meeting, but it's on
a rope line. So it's just a different way connecting her with potential caucusattenders and known caucus-attenders."
That particular day, Vilmain said she worked one side while Clinton's state senior
adviser, JoDee Winterhof, worked the other side. Former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack
and his wife, Christie, also helped.
"At the same point in time, we get out our supporter cards and those are cards
for people who are going to caucus for us and get them to sign," said Vilmain,
who worked for Vilsack's 2008 short-lived presidential campaign before joining
Clinton's team in June. "That's one of the best places for us to get people to sign
up to support her."
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