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Political affiliation: Democratic Party |
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Born: November 17, 1948 New York, NY |
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Personal: Married to Judith Steinberg-Dean. Two children: Anne, Paul. Congregationalist. |
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Occupation: Physician, 1981-1991 |
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Education: MD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1978; BA, Yale, 1971 |
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Major political experience: Governor of Vermont, 1991-2002 |
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Howard Dean
SNAPSHOT
Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean catapulted
to frontrunner status with an aggressive spring and summer campaign schedule
in 2003. He surprised his opponents and pundits with the strength of his base.
Then the voters in Iowa brought him back to earth, and put John Kerry into the
frontrunner role. It did not get any better for Dean. He lost in New Hampshire,
skipped South Carolina, and made his stand in Wisconsin, where voters placed
him a distant third. He then dropped out of the campaign. Dean, a physician,
made health care a central theme of his campaign, but is also on record as having
opposed the use of force in Iraq. Although Dean was a candidate for president
in 2000, national attention came to him for signing the controversial Civil
Unions bill into law in Vermont in April 2000. The law granted full legal recognition
to same-sex couples.
Though their candidate is finished, Dean supporters hope to keep some political clout
Howard Dean supporters throughout the state say they're disappointed that their candidate didn't do better in the nation's primaries. But they say even with their candidate out of the race they'll continue their organizational efforts to defeat President Bush in November.
(02/18/2004)
Dean ends presidential campaign
Howard Dean, bowing to the political
realities of a 17-contest losing streak, ended his Democratic
presidential campaign Wednesday but promised to keep his "campaign
for change" alive while supporting his party's eventual nominee.
(02/18/2004)
Presidential politics
A day after the Wisconsin primary, Gary Eichten and his guests discuss the race for president. On Tuesday, presidential hopeful John Kerry won the Wisconsin primary in a narrow victory over John Edwards. Howard Dean dropped out of the race.
(Midday, 02/18/2004)
Wisconsin voters welcome attention from candidates
Wisconsin is in the national spotlight with Democratic candidates for President criss-crossing the state ahead of Tuesday's primary. For candidates John Edwards and Howard Dean, the dairy state is a must-win following John Kerry's victories in 14 of 16 previous primaries and caucuses. All of the attention is a welcome change to the state's residents.
(02/16/2004)
Taking stock of the Democratic presidential nomination
Is John Kerry's perceived electability driving his success? A look at the factors contributing to the once long-shot candidate's winning ways.
(Midmorning, 02/12/2004)
Howard Dean's last stand?
Supporters packed a Superior, Wisc., school auditorium to hear former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean's pitch to the Badger state's most northern Democrats. Dean is focused almost exclusively on next week's Wisconsin primary. He hopes to pull off an upset win that might revitalize his struggling campaign. But Dean lost key endorsements, including from a veteran northern Wisconsin congressman.
(02/10/2004)
The race for president
A look at the key issues and leading candidates in the presidential campaign. Presidential contests in
Virginia and Tennessee are on Tuesday, and Democratic hopefuls are campaigning hard. Trying to steal some of the spotlight from Democrats seeking his job, President Bush is highlighting upswings in the U.S. economy.
(Midday, 02/09/2004)
Kerry wins in five states
Armed with a multistate win that cemented his
front-runner status, John Kerry is pausing briefly before plunging
into the next round of tests as a national presidential candidate.
His campaign, Kerry said, is "on the move."
(02/04/2004)
MPR Poll: November presidential contest might be close in Minnesota
Minnesota voters say if the presidential election were held today, Democratic Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts would have the best chance to beat George W. Bush in the state.
A new Mason-Dixon poll sponsored by Minnesota Public Radio and the St. Paul Pioneer Press sheds light on voter opinions on President Bush, the Democratic candidates for president, and the war on terrorism.
(01/30/2004)
Democratic presidential contenders meet in debate
Democratic presidential contenders
agreed in campaign debate Thursday night that they can and must
compete successfully against President Bush this fall in the South,
a region that has been hard to crack for many of the party's past
contenders for the White House.
(01/29/2004)
Kerry rolls over N.H. rivals, taking mantle of front-runner as contest goes national
The opening acts behind them, Democrats transformed their
presidential campaign into a national battle Wednesday with John
Kerry, fresh from his New Hampshire win, ready to open an
advertising blitz in all seven states that vote next and his rivals
scrambling to stay competitive.
(01/28/2004)
The next primaries, just around the corner
With the New Hampshire primary over, Gary and his guests take a look ahead to the next series of primaries on Tuesday, Feb. 3.
(Midday, 01/28/2004)
Spouses on the campaign trail
As the campaign progresses, Democratic candidates' wives are receiving more attention from the media. As in years past, one observer says, first ladies and the women who hope to succeed them are expected to drop careers to be hostesses.
(Midmorning, 01/28/2004)
New Hampshire primary
A preview of Tuesday's New Hampshire presidential primary. The candidates are making the most of Monday, in the final day before the primary. Among the Democrats, John Kerry and Howard Dean are leading the pack in some polls. But polls also show eight to 15 percent of likely voters are undecided -- and many others could change their minds.
(Midday, 01/26/2004)
The Iowa caucuses: results and analysis
After the blizzard of ads, the blanketing of the state by most of the Democratic candidates, Iowans caucused and made their choices. What's next for the following important primary, New Hampshire.
(Midmorning, 01/20/2004)
Kerry shakes up race and staggers Dean with decisive win in Iowa
Democratic presidential candidates vied for victory Monday across the chilly precincts of Iowa, the first step in the battle to face President Bush this fall. John Kerry was leading in preliminary results of an Associated Press survey of Iowa Democrats taken as they entered the caucus sites.
(01/20/2004)
Practicing politics at an Iowa caucus
More than 100 people crammed Decorah's City Council chambers Monday night to participate in the Iowa Democratic caucus. For this precinct, in a small northeastern Iowa college town, it was the best-attended caucus in recent memory.
(01/20/2004)
Variety of issues drive Iowans to caucuses
On Monday, Iowa Democrats will meet in close to 2,000 precinct caucuses around the state. Because Iowa gets to go first, some political observers say the views of Iowa residents play a disproportionate role in choosing a candidate for president. But the issues Iowans are concerned about --the war in Iraq, jobs, and education-- are the same ones on the minds of many Minnesotans and other Americans.
(01/16/2004)
Democratic challengers meet in radio-only debate
Howard Dean accused President Bush of
pursuing a policy that will "allow North Korea to become a nuclear
power" on Tuesday, as a Democratic presidential debate turned into
an all-out assault on President Bush's foreign policy.
(01/06/2004)
Standing room only crowd greets Dean in Fargo
The man some call the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, visited Fargo on Monday night. Howard Dean's visit came on the heels of a campaign stop Sunday by Dick Gephardt.
(01/06/2004)
Democratic presidential candidates debate
Seven of the nine democratic presidential candidates debated in Des Moines, Iowa, Sunday night in the first official event of the election year. Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean was sharply criticized by his rivals on taxes, health care, and terrorism. Drake University political scientist Dennis Goldford discusses presidential politics.
(Midday, 01/05/2004)
Rivals target front-runner Dean in first debate of the election year
In a feisty, first debate of the election
year, Howard Dean drew fire from fellow Democrats on Sunday over
trade, terror and taxes, then calmly dismissed his rivals as
"co-opted by the agenda of George Bush."
(01/04/2004)
Howard Dean on foreign relations and national security
Monday's major foreign policy address by the leading Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean. He spoke to the Pacific Council in Los Angeles, California.
(Midday, 12/16/2003)
Rivals gang up on Dean, Gore in debate dominated by endorsement
Eight of the Democratic presidential candidates ganged up on front-runner Howard Dean and former Vice President Al Gore, hoping to take the luster off Gore's newly minted endorsement of Dean.
(12/10/2003)
Local political leaders selecting presidential favorites
The 2004 presidential election is still 11 months away, but the presidential campaign is well underway in Minnesota. Three Democratic candidates recently kicked off their Minnesota campaigns, and some are mobilizing Minnesotans to travel to Iowa in advance of next month's caucuses. Meantime, Republicans are working to sign up a record number of Minnesota volunteers for President George W. Bush's re-election campaign.
(12/09/2003)
The 2004 race for president
President Bush is stepping up the pace this week, packing in four sessions with wealthy Republican donors in as many
states. Meanwhile, Democratic presidential candidates are building their paid staffs and paying frequent visits to Wisconsin, before the Wisconsin primary in two months.
(Midday, 12/01/2003)
Bush TV ad answers criticism over Iraq
Democrats are reacting strongly to an ad running in the crucial early election state of Iowa that talks about Bush's stand on the war on terrorism and Iraq. The ad, sponsored by the Republican National Committee, signals a strategy for addressing criticism of the administration's efforts in the Middle East.
(Midmorning, 11/25/2003)
Gephardt, Kerry take shots at Dean policies on health care in Democratic debate
Rep. Dick Gephardt and Democratic rival
Howard Dean intensified their war of words on Monday, attacking
each others' records in the latest in a series of Democratic
debates.
(11/24/2003)
Dean forgoes federal campaign financing
Howard Dean says he can run his presidential campaign more effectively without public financing. He's the first Democratic contender to say that -- but will he be the last? What does his decision mean for the campaign finance reform movement and political campaigns in the future?
(Midmorning, 11/11/2003)
Who is Howard Dean?
In a major boost to his campaign, Democrat Howard Dean is getting a prized presidential endorsement from one of the nation's largest unions. The endorsement by the Service Employees International Union, which has 1.6 million members, is to be announced Thursday. Also, under pressure from friends and foes alike, Dean apologized for urging Democrats to court Southern whites who display Confederate flags on their pickup trucks. We discuss Dean's campaign and message.
(Midday, 11/06/2003)
Dean regrets pain of Confederate flag remark
Howard Dean said Wednesday he regretted the
pain he caused by saying that the Democratic Party must court
Southerners who display the symbol of the Confederacy in their
pickup trucks.
(11/05/2003)
Mondale and Boschwitz ponder presidential politics
The presidential election is just a year away, and Democrats and Republicans are saying Minnesota is a toss-up. Former Vice President Walter Mondale says he thinks Americans are becoming increasingly dissatisfied with the Republican leadership in Washington. Former Republican Sen. Rudy Boschwitz says President Bush is vulnerable now; but Boschwitz says a year is a long time, and he's predicting the issues will break in Bush's favor.
(11/04/2003)
The impact of third party candidates
We discuss the potential impact of third-party candidates in the 2004 elections with professor Lawrence Jacobs. He discusses his 2004 Election Project at the Humphrey Institute.
(Midday, 10/24/2003)
Presidential candidates profiles: Health care
Health care looms as a major issue in the presidential campaign of 2004. How do the Democratic candidates stack up against President George W. Bush when it comes to health care proposals?
(Midday, 10/21/2003)
Democratic insiders taunt newcomer Clark in presidential debate
Washington insiders seeking the presidency gave Wesley Clark a
rough welcome to the Democratic race, dismissing the insurgent
outsider's 11th-hour allegiance to the party and assailing his
indecisiveness on the Iraq war.
(10/10/2003)
More Democrats join race for president
Friday's Week in Review covers the national political stories as well as the local, including the official entrance of two more Democrats in the presidential candidate field and negotiations on state employees' contracts.
(Midmorning, 09/19/2003)
The race for President
With President Bush's poll numbers dropping, many of his fellow Republicans are uneasy about the state of the U.S. economy, rising budget deficits, and the U.S. military operation in Iraq. Meanwhile, Democratic presidential contender Richard Gephardt launched his sharpest attack on rival Howard Dean Friday, likening his views on Medicare to past efforts led by Republican Newt Gingrich to cut the health care program for seniors. We discuss Presidential politics and other national political issues.
(Midday, 09/15/2003)
Democratic presidential candidates curb their politeness, throw elbows at each other
Democrat Howard Dean's claim that he is the
only white politician who talks about race to white audiences drew
criticism Wednesday from one of his presidential rivals. Sen. John
Edwards said the entire field discusses racial issues on the
campaign trail.
(09/10/2003)
Democratic hopefuls make their cases
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean led off the parade of presidential hopefuls at a gathering of Democratic Party officials in St. Paul Friday. Six of the nine prominent candidates appeared, some in person and some via videoconference. All the candidates criticized Bush's handling of the economy, but the differences between them were also evident.
(06/20/2003)
Dean hunts for money in Minnesota
Ten candidates are vying for the 2004 Democratic nomination for president. The first primary isn't until January, but the candidates are already in high gear raising money. Once, Democrats could count on Minnesota for votes, but many say that's no longer the case. Now Democratic hopefuls come to Minnesota looking for money. And at this point in the presidential campaign, money is everything.
Candidate Howard Dean of Vermont attended a fundraiser in St. Paul on Sunday. He came not only to share his views of the presidency, but to pass the basket among the party faithful.
(06/09/2003)