Porterville Recorder

Fried Oreos here: Iowa State Fair a must for 2020 hopefuls

- By THOMAS BEAUMONT and ALEXANDRA JAFFE

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Howard Dean took one bite of a deepfried Oreo and dismissive­ly pitched the rest into the garbage.

Mitt Romney famously flipped a pork chop, right into the gravel. And John Kerry capped his Iowa State Fair fare with a strawberry smoothie, rather than a cold beer that offered a chance for him to seem connected with regular folks.

“I wouldn’t order a smoothie,” said Jeff Link, a veteran Iowa Democratic operative. “That kind of summed the whole thing up right there.”

The state fair, a quadrennia­l presidenti­al prerequisi­te stop, is a cultural obstacle course more fraught with pitfalls than opportunit­ies to sway the narrow band of voters who will attend the state’s kickoff caucuses in less than six months. Starting Thursday, more than 20 Democratic presidenti­al candidates will begin weighing nutritiona­lly questionab­le food choices and navigating media flocks resembling crows on a French fry ‚Äî all while trying to seem both presidenti­al and comfortabl­e with the folkways of Middle America.

This year, selections that include baconwrapp­ed corn dogs and a monstrosit­y called the hot beef sundae pose particular challenges for Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, a vegetarian, and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who keeps vegan.

“There are few breakthrou­gh moments, and the memorable ones are often not good,” said John Norris, who managed John Kerry’s 2004 Iowa caucus campaign.

Joe Biden, who will return to the fair Thursday, would know.

In August 1987, he lifted passages of a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock’s speech without attributio­n during a 1987 Democratic candidates’ debate at the fair. The revelation punctuated previous questions of plagiarism that shadowed Biden and led ultimately to his early drop from the 1988 race.

It was an epic fair fail. But presidenti­al history also is sprinkled with winning performanc­es.

In 2007, Barack Obama’s romp through the Midway with his family ‚Äî and iconic turn on the bumper cars with his daughter Sasha ‚Äî cast a glow over the rising Illinois senator.

But for every such gauzy memory, there are more clunkers, or worse yet, permanent scars.

In 2007, amid heavy expectatio­ns, former Republican Sen. Fred Thompson famously made his Iowa debut by attending the Iowa State Fair wearing a pair of $500 Gucci loafers.

That was after he was chauffeure­d down the voter-packed Grand Concourse by golf cart to meet his escort, the notoriousl­y frugal Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley. Thompson stayed aboard the cart, waving only occasional­ly at the many star-struck voters who recognized him.

The episode was hardly a black eye. But, just as Kerry’s smoothie contribute­d to questions about the Massachuse­tts senator’s connection to regular folk, Thompson’s less than enthusiast­ic embrace of the time-honored Iowa tradition clashed with the down-home Southerner he often portrayed as an actor.

Some candidates this year may be betterprep­ared than others. Former Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er will avoid Kerry’s oversight. Hickenloop­er, who founded a successful brewery, will pour beers for fairgoers at the craft beer tent.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ?? In this Aug. 10, 2007, file photo, Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney, and his wife Ann, flip pork chops in the Iowa Pork Producers tent at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa. The state fair, a quadrennia­l presidenti­al prerequisi­te stop, is a cultural obstacle course more fraught with pitfalls than opportunit­ies to sway the narrow band of voters who will attend the kickoff caucuses in less than six months.
AP PHOTO BY CHARLIE NEIBERGALL In this Aug. 10, 2007, file photo, Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney, and his wife Ann, flip pork chops in the Iowa Pork Producers tent at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa. The state fair, a quadrennia­l presidenti­al prerequisi­te stop, is a cultural obstacle course more fraught with pitfalls than opportunit­ies to sway the narrow band of voters who will attend the kickoff caucuses in less than six months.

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