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Where was George?
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Nov. 22, 1999 | TEMPE, Ariz. --
Like the Cardinals-Cowboys game, the event was without its star
attraction. Both starting quarterbacks -- the Cardinals' Jake Plummer and
the Cowboys' Troy Aikman -- were not on the field Sunday. Also noticeably
absent Sunday night was GOP marquee attraction George W.
Bush, apparently still recovering from a rough weekend in California,
sketching out his foreign policy at the Reagan
Library and heavy-duty fund-raising. "Where's Bush?" screamed a member of
the audience, as the crowd erupted in applause. Former Reagan policy
advisor Gary Bauer was also absent, though not as many people seemed to
notice. Hometown favorite John McCain, who has represented Arizona in Congress
since 1982, finds himself in a predicament similar to that of his hometown
football team. Both need to have a month of great performances to make sure
they're still in the hunt come January. While McCain has enjoyed a recent
surge in polls in New Hampshire and even Iowa, where he's not even
competing, the next six weeks are pivotal to the McCain campaign. Asked to articulate what winning the Arizona primary means to the campaign, the senator's
communications director Dan Schnur joked, "It means we won New Hampshire
and South Carolina."
Indeed, the primary comes at a pivotal juncture in the schedule,
nestled between South Carolina, a state with a large veterans
population where McCain has campaigned aggressively -- and the March 7
sweepstakes, a day in which voters in New York, California, Pennsylvania
and other key states will flock to the polls en masse. Arizona is one of only three states where McCain has campaign offices up
and running -- South Carolina and New Hampshire are the others. Schnur said
offices are on the way in Michigan and Washington, and a California
campaign manager has just been hired. Arizona will also be key for Forbes, who beat Sen. Bob Dole here in 1996.
"After 1996, I truly view Arizona as my second home," Forbes told the
crowd, pockmarked with orange-shirted Forbes supporters. But the home field advantage Sunday belonged to McCain, who routinely
received the most vigorous applause from the audience, and had the most
T-shirt advertising among the 2,000-plus people in attendance.
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