Word: squier
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...hoping that Clinton will be pulled off the Morris program by serious liberals like Ickes and Stephanopoulos. Clinton pollster Mark Penn and media consultant Bill Knapp, who have already shouldered a great deal of the campaign's strategy and message work, will take on even more. Veteran consultant Bob Squier, a key Gore ally, will remain on board. But no matter how well they identify the political center, few expect them to have the same power as Morris to keep Clinton...
When we got up in the morning Thursday, we called some friends and my sister, who came up to the suite. Then the other consultants came over--Bob Squier, Doug Schoen, Bill Knapp, Mark Penn. Dick was so choked up he couldn't talk. He grabbed my laptop computer and said he was having trouble talking, and he started to type. He wrote a note on it for them to read that said how much he valued them and how he hoped they would carry...
...They are the poster boys of the opposing White House camps: liberals vs. moderate New Democrats. Morris has solidified his role as Clinton's guru of choice. One night a week, usually Wednesday, he leads a campaign meeting at the residence that includes the President, Vice President, Sosnik, Bob Squier (the campaign media adviser brought in by Morris and Gore), Stephanopoulos and other senior aides. Ickes apparently bridles at Morris' highbrow musing about the Hegelian dialectics of campaigns...
...smart, in fact, that Morris is considered the top candidate to be the re-election campaign's senior strategist. Other Morris allies have the inside track on top campaign slots, including pollster Doug Schoen, who worked for Ross Perot in 1992, and media consultants Frank Greer and Bob Squier...
...fact, as Clinton took his seat last Tuesday night for the speech, it was Squier who adjusted the lighting and critiqued the President's makeup. Then Clinton went on the air, emphasizing how his budget plan differed from the g.o.p. version: it would eliminate the deficit in 10 years instead of seven, protect education, and go easier on Medicare. The Morris touch lay in Clinton's conciliatory tone toward Republicans, his embrace of moderate Democrats and his willingness to alienate liberals. "This could be a turning point for us," Clinton told his TV audience, suggesting that bipartisanship could lead...