Ron Suskind reported that last month at a confidential luncheon with big-money supporters (the RNC Regents), Bush said, "I'm going to come out strong after my swearing in with fundamental tax reform, tort reform, privatizing of Social Security." The privatizing of Social Security? Everyone in politics knows a candidate is not supposed to say that. Bush has been trained--with a rolled-up newspaper?--to talk about Social Security "reform," not privatization. Mentioning the P-word is a major slip-up (almost as bad politically--perhaps worse--than invading another country by mistake). As soon as the newspaper his breakfast tables across the nation, a Kerry aide emailed me a note:
This Social Security privatization stuff from Bush is a huge gift. Huge.
And the campaign cut a television ad within nanoseconds of the story's release. Here's the script:
The truth is coming out... George Bush has finally admitted that he intends to privatize Social Security in a second term. "I'm going to come out strong after my swearing in," Bush said, "with…privatizing of Social Security." First, George Bush threatens Social Security with record deficits of over $400 billion. Now, Bush has a plan that cuts Social Security benefits by 30 to 45 percent. The real Bush Agenda? Cutting Social Security.
Expect to see heavy rotation in, say, Florida. And how many retirees are there in Ohio? Could this make a difference? In this election--as tight as it is--a sneeze could make a difference. Bush has been dodgy on Social Security for years--talking about a partial privatization without calling it such, declining to endorse a specific plan, or accounting for the $2 trillion short-term cost of such a move. At the last debate, he ducked a direct question regarding the $2 trillion shortfall. And he has tried to self-inoculate himself from the traditional Democratic attacks on Republicans regarding Social Security by essentially saying over and over, "Watch out for those traditional Democratic attacks on Republicans regarding Social Security." But unless the GOPers can succeed in undermining Suskind's piece by pointing out (vigorously) it is based on unnamed sources, Bush has handed Kerry the political equivalent of an assault rifle and said, "Just shoot me." |