Monday, July 26, 2004

BOSTON (AP) — Howard Dean formally released the 201 delegates who supported his failed presidential bid and urged them yesterday to vote for John Kerry at this week’s Democratic National Convention.

He said the ultimate decision rests with the delegates, but that he asked them at a private meeting to drop any rogue campaigns on his behalf.

“I have released my delegates,” the former Vermont governor told reporters after the meeting. “I’ve asked them all to vote for the Kerry-Edwards ticket.”



Many of the delegates leaving the hotel ballroom said they had been enthusiastic Dean supporters but they now were united behind Mr. Kerry, the junior senator from Massachusetts, and his running mate, Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina.

“In the primary season, I thought he was the best candidate, but unfortunately a majority of people didn’t,” said Jacob Crumbine, 19, a Dean delegate from Vermont, the only state he won. “I think Kerry is a good candidate. Edwards is a good candidate. Now I’m excited to go to the Fleet,” the sports arena where the convention is being held.

Several supporters said they were impressed that Mr. Dean didn’t tell them what to do, but instead explained to them how he had come to the decision to support Mr. Kerry and asked them to follow his example.

“He’s consistent in his approach of asking his supporters to make a decision themselves,” said Sandra Frankel of Brighton, N.Y., who worked for Mr. Dean in the primaries but traveled to Boston as a Kerry delegate. “But he encouraged them to follow his example of supporting the Kerry-Edwards ticket.”

There was a short-lived effort to draft Mr. Dean from the convention floor for vice president. Organizers of that campaign disbanded it a couple of weeks ago, but Mr. Dean addressed it in his delegate meeting.

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“I’ve told them I don’t think there’s anything to be gained by trying to put in a vote for me for vice president or president, and I hope they won’t do that,” he said. “This is a very independent-minded group of people but a very enthusiastic group of people, and I don’t expect there to be any votes to the contrary on the floor.”

Mr. Dean’s staff said he carried 121 committed delegates to the convention and 80 superdelegates, including 34 members of Congress. All of them have been asked to throw their allegiance to Mr. Kerry on Thursday.

Mr. Dean takes great pride in turning some of the major operations of his campaign to people organizing at the local level. He pioneered the use of locally organized house parties to raise money, a technique that the Kerry campaign now uses.

Before meeting with his delegates, Mr. Dean talked up Mr. Kerry and Mr. Edwards, urging delegates to work on campaigns up and down the ticket because that would help in the presidential race as well.

“We need to be in every state fighting for every vote,” he told D.C. delegates.

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“You have to do the work,” he urged California delegates.

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