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D'Amatoing D'Amato
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NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y., OCT.
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27--Depending on which high-minded pundit you listen to, you know that the
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Senate race between incumbent Republican Al D'Amato and Rep. Chuck Schumer is
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either 1) the "dirtiest" or 2) the "ugliest" campaign in New York's history. It
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is a campaign, after all, in which the challenger's slogan is "Too many lies
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for too long," where each candidate blithely runs ads accusing his opponent of
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coddling child pornographers, and where virtually the only intelligible
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sentences of the so-called debates were "Stop being rude!" and "Let me finish!"
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Right-thinking New Yorkers (and there are far too many of them) agree: This
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Senate race is a perversion of democracy.
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The
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goo-goos have it wrong. This race has done exactly what a campaign should:
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expose the candidates in all their nakedness. Newspapers and commentators
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solemnly observe that this riot of negative ads and name-calling has cost $40
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million (roughly $25 million from D'Amato and the Republican Party, the balance
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from Schumer and the Democrats). That's about $2 for every New Yorker. A few
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weeks ago,
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Slate
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's Steven E. Landsburg wrote a column arguing that
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every American has got 15 cents worth of entertainment from the $40 million Ken
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Starr investigation. Well, if there are any New Yorkers who haven't got $2
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worth of diversion out of the Schumer-D'Amato race, I haven't met them.
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Schumer is stumping today with Hillary Clinton. This is
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fitting, because Schumer would like everyone to believe that Clintonism is the
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core of his campaign. The Brooklyn representative has spent the last few years
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doing what Bill Clinton did before his presidential run, shaking off a mostly
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liberal record and repositioning himself as a moderate who understands suburban
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voters. Schumer abandoned his opposition to the death penalty, voted for the
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Defense of Marriage Act, and signed on to every crime bill he could find. At
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all his campaign appearances, Schumer emphasizes that "I am a tough-on-crime
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moderate." Like Clinton, he is counting on liberals to vote for him because
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they have nowhere else to go.
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(Schumer resembles Clinton in
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another way: He takes credit for everything. Schumer, I learned from his past
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few days of campaign appearances, is responsible for the national drop in
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crime, the protection of Social Security and Medicare, and the budget deal.
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Thank you, congressman! His New York Democratic colleagues have coined the
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phrase "to Schume." It means "to take credit for something that others have
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done.")
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But if
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Schumer is a Clinton on paper, he certainly isn't in the flesh. Today's
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appearance with the first lady at a New Rochelle senior center makes this
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glaringly obvious. When Bill and Hillary Clinton appear together, he
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radiates the warmth. When Schumer and Hillary appear together, she
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does.
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Hillary is chatty and informal. Schumer has all
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the charm of a lawnmower. To a crowd of genial, upbeat seniors, Schumer serves
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vicious attacks on D'Amato. He fires off some good lines: D'Amato votes "like a
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senator from Mississippi, not a senator from New York," and "When the choice
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was between Newt Gingrich and seniors, Al D'Amato chose Newt Gingrich." But the
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vitriol doesn't fit the mood. When he's not flamethrowing, he lectures. He
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responds to one question from an 81-year-old with an endless, learned, and
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cringingly dull discourse on health care financing. Schumer is no fun. He's a
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grind. If he were a salesman, you'd buy the car just to get him to leave you
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alone. Even his loyalists don't seem to like him much. The half-dozen elderly
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women I spoke to after the event all said the same thing: Of course they would
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vote for Schumer--but mostly because they hate D'Amato.
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(Brief
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interruption for speculation about Hillary's peculiar behavior. She clearly
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loathes D'Amato, and she makes a point of never referring to him by
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name. She calls him only "Chuck Schumer's opponent." Here's the peculiarity:
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She also never refers to Bill Clinton by name. She calls him "my
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husband" or "the president," never "Bill." Does this have psychological
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significance? Is she so angry that she won't say his name?)
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The lesson of the Schumer campaign is not that you need to
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be Clinton to beat D'Amato, given that the overbearing Schumer will never be
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Clinton. The lesson of the Schumer campaign is that you need to be D'Amato to
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beat D'Amato. Clintonism is relentlessness plus charm. D'Amatoism (which is now
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Schumerism) is just relentlessness, and to hell with the charm.
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My
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mother-in-law, who lives in Schumer's congressional district and always votes
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for him, says she's thinking of supporting D'Amato this year: "He's a sleaze.
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But he's good for the Jews." Substitute "gays" or "Irish" or "farmers" or
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"cancer victims" or "bankers" for "Jews," and you begin to see Schumer's
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struggle. Sen. Pothole is the master of the ethnic pork barrel. (He shows up at
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Jewish gatherings wearing a yarmulke with "Alfonse" stitched on it.) He relies
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on "We owe him" to override voters' distaste for his viciousness and basic
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amorality, and for 18 years, it has.
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Schumer doesn't yet have the pull to imitate
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D'Amato's pork-barreling (though he would if he could--Schumer, for example,
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happily obeys Wall Street's bidding on the House Banking Committee in order to
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raise campaign funds). So Schumer has done the next best thing, which is to
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steal D'Amato's campaign style.
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In
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Schumer, D'Amato finally faces an opponent who's as hardheaded, shameless, and
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effective as he is. Usually D'Amato dictates a campaign, and his opponent
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desperately plays defense. Schumer has turned the tables on D'Amato. The first
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day after the Democratic primary, Schumer unleashed "Too many lies for too
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long" ads. More recently, D'Amato stupidly (but innocently, I think) called
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Schumer a "putzhead," then denied having said it. ("Putz" is a Yiddish insult
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that literally means "penis" but in common usage means "fool.") Schumer has
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managed to gin this into an ongoing controversy about D'Amato's trustworthiness
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and to score major points with Jewish voters. Since last week's murder of a New
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York abortion doctor, Schumer's people have subtly tried to connect the
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anti-abortion D'Amato with the extremist right-to-lifers.
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And every time D'Amato has attacked, Schumer has fired it
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back in his face. D'Amato tried to exploit the ill feelings between New York
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City and upstate. He ran an ad upstate depicting Schumer as a New York
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City shark swimming up the Hudson. Schumer immediately countered by running the
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D'Amato commercial in New York City, labeling it "the ad Al D'Amato doesn't
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want you to see." D'Amato's latest strategy--to tar Schumer as a lazy,
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"part-time" congressman who skips votes--seems to be backfiring as well.
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Newspaper after newspaper has berated D'Amato for this patently dishonest
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strategy, noting that Schumer is probably the hardest-working member of
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Congress.
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Schumer,
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like D'Amato, is aggressive, opportunistic, and unpleasant in more ways that I
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care to discover. But there is a fundamental difference between them.
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D'Amato is the éminence grise (or perhaps the éminence noire ) of
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the corrupt Nassau County Republican machine. He believes that politics is
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about bending the rules for cronies and campaign contributors, and he has been
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implicated in more gross behavior than almost any politician around. Schumer is
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clean. He doesn't cheat. He may have moderated his views to win, but he is
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mostly principled and mostly honest.
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Even so, out-D'Amatoing D'Amato on the campaign
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trail may not be enough. Some signs are promising for Schumer. A week out, the
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polls are dead even and actually seem to be trending slightly in Schumer's
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favor. D'Amato has been distracted by Putzgate, and Schumer is getting sweet PR
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off Hillary's visit and the president's planned campaign appearance Friday.
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But it's hard to imagine
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that D'Amato will lose. He has saved his war chest. He and the GOP will spend
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$8 million on an ad blitz during the five days leading up to the election:
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Schumer has saved only a small fraction of that. You can be sure that the
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D'Amato ads will be cheap and distorted, but that at least something from them
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will stick to Schumer.
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Every
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article about Schumer notes that he has never lost an election. But neither has
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D'Amato.
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Recent
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"Campaign '98" Dispatches
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"The Gambling
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Gamble": South Carolina's Democrats Bet the Farm
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"Foghorn Leghorn Meets
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an Owl": Sen. Fritz Hollings vs. Rep. Bob Inglis. (posted Tuesday, Oct.
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20, 1998)
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