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Article published Nov 1, 2003
Former general marching well across S.C., poll
finds
JIM DAVENPORT
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA -- Retired Gen. Wesley Clark made his first stop in
Columbia as a presidential candidate Friday, talking about the universal health
care plan he unveiled Tuesday and how President Bush erred by going to war in
Iraq.Clark spoke for about 45 minutes in a University of South Carolina Law
School classroom packed with a standing-room-only crowd of about 250.It was
Clark's second visit to the home of the first-in-the-South Democratic
presidential primary since he declared his candidacy in September. His other
visit was to The Citadel in Charleston.The former NATO commander had little to
say about his campaign's big news of the day: a new poll that shows him surging
ahead of U.S. Sen. John Edwards to lead the Democratic pack in South
Carolina.When pressed, all Clark would say about the poll was, "I feel good
about the reception I'm getting in South Carolina."The American Research Group
poll of 600 likely primary voters put Clark ahead of Edwards, 17 percent to 10
percent, with 36 percent of the voters undecided. The poll had a margin of
sampling error of 4 percentage points.Jenni Engebretsen, Edwards' South Carolina
spokeswoman, was not concerned about the new polling numbers, which she said
sharply diverge from the campaign's internal polls. "We feel very confident
about where things stand here," she said.Clark told the crowd he never thought
he'd run for president, but "I never thought the country would be in the shape
that it's in today."Clark said his $772 billion health care plan provides
coverage to nearly 32 million of the nation's 40 million uninsured and creates a
new program to make sure everyone receives preventive health screenings. Part of
the plan's cost would be offset by wringing more efficiency from the
administration of health services and prescription drugs.For the most part,
Clark talked about the war in Iraq and Bush's role in it. "I'm against wars that
don't have to be fought," Clark said. Bush's approach to starting that conflict
"was reckless and it was wrong."As Clark spoke, Jeff Brockelsby listened to his
new favorite candidate. "I want to hear where he stands on the issues and what
kind of speaker he is," he said.Clark "has the best chance to beat Bush," said
Brockelsby, 41, of Columbia.Before Clark stepped into the fray in September,
Brockelsby had pulled for another veteran: U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.Among
the nine candidates, Kerry trailed in the new poll, garnering just 4 percent,
followed only by Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who came in with 1 percent.