Analysis: Party wants Clintons to back, not overshadow Kerry

? It’s John Kerry’s convention, but Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton are stealing his opening-night thunder.

Forceful, charismatic and controversial, the Clintons are the most sought-after stars in the Democratic Party, reminders of White House glory days and an administration willing to wage fierce fights with Republicans.

On Monday night, the Clintons will give prime-time speeches to rouse Democrats and lure undecided voters for the tough race against President Bush.

The problem is that Kerry may suffer by comparison, making Democrats wistful for a more dynamic candidate, one who doesn’t have to struggle so hard to connect with voters.

“Nobody makes the case for the Democratic agenda better than Bill and Hillary Clinton,” said Democratic strategist Bruce Reed, who was domestic affairs adviser in the Clinton White House. “They’ve brought the house down at past conventions, and in Boston they’ll no doubt do the same.”

Where Bill Clinton is eloquent, Kerry is halting. Where Hillary Rodham Clinton is fiery, Kerry is stiff.

Even President Bush recently described former President Clinton as a man of “incredible energy and great personal appeal.”

By contrast, The Economist magazine described Kerry as “the political equivalent of Valium.”

“Nobody doubts that he’s intelligent, but where’s the energy and the passion?” said Margaret Thompson, a political scientist and historian at Syracuse University. “He’s got to somehow connect” and avoid being “so kind of dry and arid.”

The Clintons have a delicate assignment today: Be good, but don’t steal the show. Deliver inspiring speeches, but don’t be hard-edged. Motivate voters, but don’t make it too memorable.

After all, it’s Kerry’s convention.

“They’re not going to overshadow Kerry,” said Harold Ickes, a leading Democratic fund-raiser and Clinton’s former deputy chief of staff. “Kerry is the nominee of the party. He’s running for president. People are focused on who’s running for president. That is the beginning and the end of it.”

Ickes acknowledges that Clinton will have to balance his remarks, rallying Democrats without scaring off people still on the fence.

“There’s nobody better to walk that tight wire, as we know, than Bill Clinton,” Ickes said. “He’ll understand the modulation that he has to hit in terms of his role in this campaign.”

The former president is still popular, with an approval rating in the low 60s — about the same as when he left office.

Hillary Rodham Clinton, serving her first term in the Senate, is a front-runner among Democrats for the next presidential race if Kerry fails this time. Her supporters were outraged when she was omitted from the original lineup of convention speakers. She was quickly added to speak and introduce her husband.

Her speech will be watched closely for hints about her political ambitions.

“People will endlessly turn over Hillary Clinton’s remarks for what’s there and what’s intended and what people think was intended,” said Steve Grossman, who served as a Democratic national chairman under President Clinton.