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or, you can say why it is that you really, really *don't* love
to hate him, but simply hate to love him. I can never
get a straight answer, as it were, from most folks on the street.
note these, on the http://larouchepub.come site,
compared to the usual "mainstream lib/con media outlet" blackouts:
Lyndon LaRouche's Presidential campaign, single-mindedly pursuing the
removal of Vice President Cheney from office, has gone into a "hot
phase," with the candidate meeting Democratic activists nationwide
while his Youth Movement is taking the streets of the nation's
capital.
Boston Campaign Webcast:
`Reviving the Sense of Mission for American Citizens Today'
Missouri State Sen. Maida Coleman speaks at Lyndon LaRouche's campaign
presentation at Univ. of Missouri in St. Louis Nov. 18. Candidate
attended legislators' reception, was interviewed by NPR and leading
black radio station, then went on to Detroit for a meeting of nearly
250 supporters.
http://larouchepub.com/other/2003/3043soros_dems.html
http://larouchepub.com/other/2003/3046chnygte_plmbrs.html
Speaking on a Missouri radio talk show Nov. 7, Lyndon LaRouche
declared that he is the "unnamed" Democrat who can beat President Bush
in 2004. LaRouche was referring to a recent poll showing that all of
his so-called rivals for the Democratic Party Presidential nomination,
running against Bush, would lose, but that an "unnamed" Democrat could
beat Bush. LaRouche dismissed speculation that Hillary Clinton was the
"unnamed candidate," pointing out that her ambitions extend no further
than becoming a Vice Presidential candidate in a hung Democratic Party
nominating convention, a strategy which assumes a Democratic defeat in
November.
LaRouche's remarks capped a week in which his campaign moved from
strength to strength, beginning with the Nov. 3 decision by the
Secretary of State of California to place LaRouche's name on the
California ballot. California Secretary of State Kevin Shelley
selected LaRouche as a nationally "generally recognized" candidate.
LaRouche had previously been certified for the Feb. 3 Democratic
primary ballot in Missouri, despite a last minute DNC-directed effort
to refuse his submission.
The California certification was followed by a smashing victory in the
Nov. 4 Philadelphia Mayoral race, where the deployment of the LaRouche
Youth Movement secured a massive margin for incumbent Mayor John
Street, who was under attack from the Attorney General John Ashcroft's
gestapo Justice Department. Then, on Nov. 7, LaRouche was certified
for Jan. 13 primary ballot in Washington, D.C., by the D.C. Board of
Elections. Washington, D.C. is a hotbed of organizing by the LaRouche
Youth Movement, which has carried the campaign to unseat war-mongering
Vice President Dick Cheney into the streets, as well as into the halls
of the U.S. Congress. The LaRouche campaign has been running ads
indicting Cheney on D.C.'s largest news-radio station WTOP for months.
Overall, it was a very bad week for the Democratic National Committee
faction, which has been leading the Democrats into oblivion, and has
been desperate to contain LaRouche, who has the only campaign with a
significant youth movement, and with demonstrated broad support among
the lower 80% of income brackets in the American population.
In Washington, D.C., five of the so-called major Democratic candidates
promptly withdrew their names from the ballot, on the pretext that the
D.C. primary violates Party rules, a move which was denounced as
"gutless" by D.C. Councilman Jack Evans, the author of the D.C.
primary legislation. Meanwhile, nominal frontrunner Harold Dean
remains on the D.C. ballot, where he will go up against LaRouche, who
is known as the champion of the fight to save D.C. General Hospital,
and to end the murderous HMO system.
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