Pubdate: Thu, 01 Jan 2004 Source: Union Leader (NH) Copyright: 2004 The Union Leader Corp. Contact: http://www.theunionleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/761 Author: Jonathan Finer, The Washington Post Cited: Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org Related: Candidates on Medical Marijuana http://www.granitestaters.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/states/nh/ (New Hampshire) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Comcast SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS PRESS ISSUES IN NH KEENE - At a retirement home here on a recent morning, a young man asked presidential candidate Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., about federal drug raids on people smoking marijuana for medical purposes. Two hours later and 80 miles away on the campaign trail, another concerned citizen waited patiently to ask former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean that same question at a town meeting in Exeter. That evening in Concord, the state capital, 10 protesters picketed the local Comcast cable television office because the company refused their ads outlining each presidential candidate's position on marijuana issues. One might think a full-blown marijuana movement had sprung up in famously conservative New Hampshire. And that, said activist Aaron Houston of the Washington-based Marijuana Policy Project, was the point. "Everyone is paying attention now, and it gives us the opportunity to get our message out," he said. As the Jan. 27 presidential primary here nears, Houston's crew has plenty of company along New Hampshire's other campaign trail. Capitalizing on media attention - and the unrivaled access to candidates the political culture here affords - interest groups are waging a parallel drive to push their issues to the top of the national political agenda. Employing the same grass-roots tactics used by presidential campaigns in this state - and in Iowa, where Democrats caucus one week earlier - they distribute pamphlets door to door, advertise on television and turn up at events to make sure that whenever and wherever the presidential hopefuls appear, certain issues are discussed. "The vast majority of people who show up are regular voters who want to hear what (the candidates) have to say," said Jennifer Donahue, a political analyst at Saint Anselm College's New Hampshire Institute of Politics. "But there is a vocal, and very organized, subset, who are there to push an agenda. This has exploded in the last two election cycles." "You know you're going to get asked about some things over and over again," said Colin Van Ostern, Edwards' New Hampshire press secretary. "You just get used to it." During the 2000 campaign, a man in a rabbit costume soaked with fake blood followed Vice President Al Gore around the state to protest scientific testing on animals for the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). Gore also generated national headlines when, in response to a question from a Medical Marijuana Project volunteer, he seemed to endorse pot smoking by terminally ill patients, a break with Clinton administration policy. This year, interest groups with paid staff in this state are more sophisticated and involved then ever, veteran observers said. Most are locally run branches of national organizations. Perhaps most prominent are the ubiquitous, purple-T-shirt-clad activists of New Hampshire for Health Care (and its affiliated organization, Iowa for Health Care). Funded by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which claims 750,000 health care workers among its members, the group has placed signs in the Manchester Airport that greet every arriving candidate with "Running for President? Health care better be your priority." New Hampshire for Health Care, which wants its issue to be preeminent in the primary campaign, says it has signed up close to 50,000 supporters here and a team of 1,000 volunteers in their purple T-shirts. They have succeeded in passing a resolution at 121 New Hampshire town meetings calling on elected officials to offer solutions to help solve what they term a national "health care crisis." With seven paid staff workers here - and an equal number in Iowa - the group is as large and well organized as many presidential campaigns and is preparing a get-out-the-vote strategy to ensure supporters show up at the polls. Though the SEIU endorsed Dean, a physician, the New Hampshire group will not make an endorsement. "We want people to have the information they need to make an informed choice," said Matt Burgess, a spokesman for New Hampshire for Health Care. Then there is the New Hampshire chapter of the Sierra Club, which favors decreasing U.S. dependence on fossil fuels. And the American Friends Service Committee's Granite State chapter advocates for peace, fair trade and affordable housing. The Washington-based Nuclear Threat Initiative, which opposes the proliferation of atomic weapons, has two paid staffers in the state and aired television ads this fall. Every Child Matters, which promotes preschool health and social programs, held candidate forums at the University of New Hampshire in October and November, featuring several Democratic contenders. Not to be outdone, PETA deployed a man in a carrot suit, who it said is running for president on a platform of vegetarianism. "It's no secret why we pick New Hampshire and Iowa for these things. You really get a face-to-face conversation with candidates that people around the country don't get," said Catherine Corkery of the Sierra Club's New Hampshire chapter, who sends out weekly updates of the candidates' schedules to 5,000 members statewide and has helped train volunteers. But some observers in these early primary states that have come symbolize the accessibility of politics say the heavy involvement of interest groups can lead to distorted notions of what is important to voters. "They tend to represent the more extreme wings of the parties, which creates a misleading sense of what people up here care about," said Donahue of the New Hampshire Institute of Politics. "It can also manipulate press coverage." The activists say they are simply exercising their right to be heard and are serving a valuable purpose. "These are issues we care about passionately, and we are trying to elevate their visibility through the campaign," said Martha Yager of the American Friends Service Committee. Last summer, Yager's group offered weeklong training sessions for volunteers in the art of effectively bringing their issue to the candidates' attention during campaign events - or what she calls "bird-dogging." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake