14 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 5, 1999 FRIDAYFocus "This will be a big battleground state." - Mark Brewer, Michigan Demnocritic Party chair With 1 year left until ele candidates focus on Mic ction, .ran. By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter Democrats and Republicans rarely find themselves in agreement - especially in an election year. But as both parties look to Nov. 7, 2000, when voters will choose the 43rd President of the United States, they agree Michigan is one state that can't be overlooked. "Michigan is clearly going to be an important player." said Betsy DeVos, chair of the state Republican Party. "It could potentially be a turning point for one candidate or another." With 368 days to go until the polls open, candidates have already been adding Michigan cities to their travel schedules. Republican presidential hope- fuls Steve Forbes, Alan Keyes and Gary Bauer attended the Michigan Republican Party's biennial conference on Mackinac Island in September, and Forbes returned to the state for a campaign stop on cam- pus last week. An early primary and strong GOP leadership are enough to put Michigan in the cross-hairs for Republican candi- dates, but Democrats are confident they will carry the state's 18 electoral votes next November on the way to retaining the White House. "This will be a big battleground state," said Mark Brewer, chair of the state Democratic Party. "The way Michigan goes is the way the country goes in the presidential election." Prifdry primer While New Hampshire and Iowa have traditionally led off the spring flurry of presidential primaries and caucuses, Michigan has increased its significance by moving its GOP primary to Feb. 22, a month earlier than in past years. "Michigan will be one of a handful of states that you have to carry to be presi- dent," Brewer said. The move puts Michigan in the unfamil- iar role of being the first major industrial state to hold a primary - one of only seven before the 11I "Super Tuesday" pri- maries scheduled for March 7. "This is the biggest state before New York and California," Forbes said. "I'll be back many times between now and Feb. 22." Many of the Republican candidates lagging in the polls hope to use the first several primaries to give credibility to their campaigns. "You get to be early, you get to be important. said Jeff Bell. senior consul- tant for Bauer's campaign. "If we survive Neuw Hampshire and South Carolina, Michigan is a good place to clinch the deal and pick up some momentum." State Democrats, led by U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, pushed to move their caucus date to Feb. 12, but the Democratic National Committee rejected that move last month. "We don't think it's fair that Iowa and New Hampshire get to go first." Brewer said. "We think we're much more repre- sentative of the country." Although the state isn't likely to play as big a role for Democrats with the party's March 11I caucus, both Vice President Al Gore and former U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley are looking to gather support that they hope to take into the November elections. "We have very strong support from the Democratic leaders in Michigan, who are going to be helping us out there" said Gore spokesperson Roger Salazar. "We're obviously not going to take any- thing for granted." Hot Ithe cI1adIltrdi With the road to the White House grow- ing longer every four years, candidates have announced their intentions to run ear- lier and spend more money sooner. Through the third quarter of this year, R e p u b I i c a n s spent nearly S71 million on their campaigns. The S96 million shelled out by both parties com- bined is nearly 50 percent more than candidates spent during the same period before the 1996 elections. The GOP lost a Texas Gov. George W. leading candidate the hand of a student a last month when Colebrook, N.H., on Tue former cabinet member Elizabeth Dole dropped out of the race, ending her bid to become the country's first female chief executive. Pat Buchanan's bolt to the Reform Party has left Republican candi- dates clawing for any votes he may have left behind. "I think it under- scores the need for the Republican Party to have a visible message," Forbes said during his visit to campus. With President Clinton closing out his second term in office, the nation is faced with putting a new face in the White House. The shock JEREMY MENCh itDaay waves from Clinton's the Michigan Union historic impeachment thern Michigan. trial are still reverber- Vice President Al Gore and former Sen. Bill Bradley made their first joint appearance last week for a forum at Dartmouth College In Hanover, N.H. Bu t s ating as the candidates -- including Gore - distance themselves from one of the nation's most infamous sex scandals. "Democratic voters show some reluc- tance to vote for someone associated with the Clinton administration," said Graham Teall, chair of Bradley for President Volunteers of Washtenaw County. S is fo I nIlllIer? With Republicans eager to make a strong early showing in Michigan, the primary may turn out to be merely a tune-up for Texas Gov. George W. Bush's steamroller cam- paign. Recent statewide surveys conducted by Lansing polling firm EPIC/MRA show Bush far ahead of the other GOP candidates. AP PHOTO "Bush has got sh reaches to shake the state pretty Colebrook Academy in much locked up," day. said EPIC/MRA vice president Ed Sarpolous. Third-term Republican Gov. John Engler has stepped in as Bush's state campaign chair and then carried most other state party members to the campaign on his coattails. "We have almost all of the political lead- ership in the state lined up behind Gov. Bush," said Engler spokesperson John Truscott. "There has been no trouble rais- ing money or getting endorsements." Truscott said Engler maintains a con- stant line of communication with Bush's campaign. The Texas governor has made several trips to Michigan in recent months and is scheduled to attend a Veterans' Day event in Macomb County on Thursday. "We feel like we have strong organiza- tion in Michigan, led by Gov. Engler," Bush campaign press secretary Mindy Tucker said. "We think that people in Michigan are responding positively to Gov. Bush's message." Regardless of whether Bush carries the GOP primaries in the remaining states, DeVos said the party looks poised to come out on top in November. "I am confident that whomever ends up as our nominee." she said. "Republicans will be in a good position for winning back the White House." Power strugIles The noise made by presidential hopefuls isn't likely to drown out the campaigns in other Michigan elections next November. U.S. Rep. Debbie Stabenow (D- Lansing) is challenging first-term Republican U.S. Sen. Spence Abraham in the hopes of putting both of Michigan's Senate seats in the hands of Democrats. Stabenow said she anticipates the battle to be the most closely watched Senate race in the nation, in part because Michigan has never sent a female senator to Washington. "This will really be making history in Michigan," Stabenow said. "There's been such a groundswell of support. To be in a dead heat with the incumbent senator is extraordinary." But Abraham spokesperson Joe Davis said the senator's first term speaks for itself when comparing the two candidates. "We think we have a good record. We're anxious to talk about how that stacks up to Mrs. Stabenow's," he said. "Hopefully people will recog- nize that we've got a good record and we're confident that we'll get sent back to the Senate for a second term." In the state I'il be back many times between now and Feb. 22" - Steve Forbes GOP presidential candidate Utah ien e by Legislature, Democrats are only four seats away from regaining a House majority. "The Democrats are shut out of policy making in Lansing right now and we. want to take back control there," Brewer said. But DeVos said she expects voters to send most of the 41 GOP representatives first elected in 1998 back to Lansing. "I am very confident that the support is going to be there to return those freshmen who were elected last time," she said. "I think that Republicans are going to do very well next year." Republican candidate Steve Forbes speaks at last week during a campaign trip through sou 0 Students campaign to mobilz By Yael Kohen< Daily Staff Reporter With campaigns for the 2000 presidential election going full speed ahead, students across the state have begun orga- nizing campus campaigns for the various candidates. At the University, College Republicans and College Democrats are mobilizing students to increase voter turnout, registering voters and promoting issue education throughout this semester. "Young people are notoriously poor voters for a variety of reasons," communications studies Prof. Michael Traugott+ said. Temporary residency. weak community attachments, less worries concerning paying taxes and homeownership make students less likely to vote, he said, but education on the issues should increase voter turnout among students. A Democratic Issues Conference is scheduled for Nov. 13 as an agenda-building project to define Democratic e campus and getting Bill Bradley's name out around campus," LSA senior Amanda Beaumont, an organizer of Students for Bradley, said in a written response. Former Sen. Bill Bradley, who announced his candidacy last month, has rapidly risen to challenge Vice President Al Gore for the Democratic nomination. As the March 11 Michigan Democratic caucus approaches, Students for Bradley are working hard to get students registered with the hope that they will vote for Bradley, Beaumont said. But Students for Gore got a head start on campaigning. Organizing for Gore's campaign began early in the semes- ter and there already is a strong contingency on campus. said co-organizer Shanna Singh, an LSA senior. The group plans on educating the community about the election and taking part in community service activities, she said. Members of Students for Gore are taking part in a 5- kilometer run sponsored by the Sexual Assault Prevention KIMlVI~TS U OAC1I/DldIy University Regent Larry Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills) speaks at Hutchins Hall on Oct. 21. to Bill Bradley supporters. bers of the Republican party so they can vote in the Feb. 22 primary. But Diamond, who is also president of the College Republicans, said Students for Bush have been taking advan-