Howard Dean "shook up his presidential campaign on Wednesday after absorbing back-to-back defeats, bringing in" Roy Neel, a former aide to Al Gore, "to try and stabilize his faltering candidacy," the AP reports. The New York Times profiles Neel.
Campaign manager Joe Trippi resigned. "Dean offered Trippi a spot on the payroll as a senior adviser, a source said, but he decided to quit the campaign rather than accept the demotion."
Kos notes the campaign Trippi built "was amazing. Unprecedented. But the results weren't there. And in this biz, there's no margin for error."
The Washington Post notes Dean's "bleeding campaign" has "shifted strategies more than half a dozen times over the past month in search of the magic he worked in 2003 to shoot to the top of polls and shatter party fundraising records."
Josh Marshall says simply, "the appointment of Neel is even weirder than the canning of Trippi."