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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Selectric II who wrote (36656)1/31/2004 12:30:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
I have been enthusiastic about Clark, Kerry and Edwards...Yet, I now feel Kerry will be the strongest candidate with the best chance to defeat Mr. Bush...I tend to agree with this Washington Post columnist...

washingtonpost.com

An Unexpected Powerhouse
By Harold Meyerson
Thursday, January 29, 2004

NASHUA, N.H. -- If Karl Rove thinks he can take down John Kerry the way his mentor, Lee Atwater, took down Michael Dukakis, he's got another thing coming.



The Kerry who delivered that victory speech in Manchester on Tuesday night was the most effective Democratic politico since the fall of Bill Clinton. Within his first two minutes at the microphone, Kerry had delivered a stinging populist attack on the president and managed to identify himself with his Vietnam vet comrades who surrounded him onstage.

"I depended on the same band of brothers I depended on some 30 years ago," said Kerry, thanking Max Cleland and a bunch of guys wearing the insignias of their old units for delivering in New Hampshire as they had in Iowa. "We're a little older, a little grayer, but we still know how to fight for our country!"

Almost instantaneously, Kerry deployed both his offense and defense.

On the stump, he is seldom so succinct: Digressions abound, adverbs pop up to take the punch from his punch lines. But Kerry has a sense of occasion; he is at his best -- as he was Tuesday night, and during his debates against Bill Weld in their 1996 Senate contest -- when the whole world is watching.

What should most concern Republicans, though, is Kerry's adeptness in attacking the administration's nearly 90-degree tilt toward the rich -- toward the insurance, drug and oil companies, against which Kerry, like all the Democratic candidates except Joe Lieberman, inveighs. The response of the GOP bloggers, talk show hosts and columnists is to accuse Kerry of a culturally inauthentic populism. Teresa Heinz Kerry and her husband, they note, bear scant resemblance to Ma and Pa Kettle.

Historically, though, the Democrats have done pretty well under the leadership of patricians who've attacked Republican plutocrats. Those patricians have needed some way to establish their normality, to be sure. In that sense, Kerry's time in Vietnam humanizes him much as the battle with polio did Franklin Roosevelt.

Like FDR, Kerry doesn't claim the populist mantle, nor does he have to. "What I'm talking about is fundamental fairness," he told me while bouncing down a New Hampshire highway the day before the primary, addressing people's outrage "that powerful lobbyists could achieve their ends on the Medicare bill to the detriment of the larger interest of the country. I don't call that populism; I call that Teddy Roosevelt-style 'Let's make the market fair.' Republicans misjudge the sense of institutionalized unfairness that Americans are confronted with every day."

But the Republicans' vulnerability runs even deeper than that. For the very real economic anxieties of the American people -- diminishing health coverage, the inflation of college tuition and the disinclination of American corporations to do their hiring in America -- the Bush administration has nothing whatsoever to offer.

The abject failure of Bush's State of the Union address last week -- his popularity actually sank in its aftermath -- hasn't drawn much attention, sandwiched as it was between Iowa and New Hampshire. But I suspect a large segment of the American public views the president's interest in Mars exploration and in steroids in baseball as a kind of admission of his cluelessness or indifference (or both) to the nation's genuine needs.

The proclivity of U.S.-based corporations to create their new jobs abroad, for instance, has altered not at all the administration's patently absurd commitment to throwing money at those corporations as a way to generate jobs here at home. For his part, Kerry believes that the globalization of the job market imposes new obligations on the federal government. He's not calling for a new WPA, but he does believe that through tax policy and appropriations, the government can expand energy conservation, alternative energy, health care and schools in ways that will create large numbers of blue- and white-collar jobs.

The fact that Kerry, and the Democrats generally, have a relevant economic program and Bush does not is one of those things that the American electorate has already begun to detect. Kerry in particular has shown a consistent ability to win portions of that electorate that Rove is counting on to keep George Bush in the White House. The Massachusetts senator ran particularly well among New Hampshire's working-class Catholics this week, and why not? Kerry had the faith, the populism, the Vietnam vets and the support of the firefighters union -- not normally a political powerhouse when stacked up against the giant unions supporting Howard Dean, but one hell of a cultural signifier to voters Bush will need in November.

Real men support John Kerry. How would Lee Atwater get out of that one?

meyersonh@washpost.com



To: Selectric II who wrote (36656)1/31/2004 1:06:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
The Bushies are getting worried about Kerry...They should be concerned. It will be tough for Bush to run on his track record and win in an honest election...

washingtonpost.com

Kerry Keeps Overcoming
By Richard Cohen
Thursday, January 29, 2004

MANCHESTER, N.H. -- John Kerry surrounds himself with what he -- borrowing from Shakespeare -- calls his "band of brothers," veterans from Vietnam and other wars. That's understandable given how Americans feel about military service and the importance of physical courage. But what brought Kerry his initial fame was not his battlefield exploits. It was his decision to turn against the war in Vietnam and ask a congressional committee questions that had no answers: "How do you ask a man to be the last man to die in Vietnam? How do you ask a man to be the last to die for a mistake?"

That was April 1971, and Kerry was a leader of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. He was already a genuine war hero, having received a Silver Star, a Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts. The Vietnam vets had taken over the Mall in Washington -- an unforgettable sight for those of us who were there. Some of them were amputees, and one of them, missing an arm, took me up to Walter Reed Army Medical Center. We toured the wards together -- bed after bed of men missing limbs and other body parts. At one point I nearly fainted.

The war in Vietnam is suggestive of the one in Iraq. It's not that either was a totally crackpot venture -- it made as much sense to stop the march of communism as it did to rid the world of Saddam Hussein. It's rather that both were triggered by false information. In Vietnam, it was the murky Gulf of Tonkin incident; in Iraq it was Hussein's nonexistent program to develop weapons of mass destruction, not to mention his apparently fictional links to al Qaeda. David Kay's recent statements have substantiated what long has been clear: When the war started, Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction.

Kerry voted for the war. Twice now I have asked him about that and whether he thought he was "betrayed" by the Bush administration. Both times he said yes. A couple of days ago, on his campaign bus, I asked him what he thought of Kay's statements and whether he thought the U.S. intelligence community -- particularly the CIA -- needed to account for findings that supported the Bush administration's insistence that Iraq represented an imminent threat to world peace. With a startling intensity, he said yes. Among other things, he feels that CIA Director George Tenet has to go.

Contrast that with the business-as-usual pose of the Bush administration. Oh so grudgingly it has conceded that its primary reasons for rushing to war are evaporating under scrutiny. No WMD. No nuclear weapons program, in particular. No verifiable links to al Qaeda. Add it all up, and there was no reason to hurry to war. Sanctions and U.N. inspections were doing their job. Hussein not only could be contained, he was.

On the way back from New Hampshire this week, I ran into James Carville, and I borrow from him something he said about Kerry: He has faced three of the fears that haunt almost every man. The first is how we would conduct ourselves in combat. The second is how we would handle cancer. (Kerry recently underwent surgery for prostate cancer.) And the third is whether we would face ridicule for sticking with a losing effort. Kerry, who was 20 points down just a month ago, persisted -- and now has won the first two Democratic contests.

But I would add something else: moral courage, or indignation -- call it what you want. Kerry exhibited that as a leader of the Vietnam vets. To my mind, this was as important as his battlefield valor, including the rescue of an all-but-doomed colleague who had fallen out of Kerry's Swift boat. Turning on a war in which he had distinguished himself says something about Kerry, and suggests that one line of attack on him is off the mark. He may well personify the Washington establishment -- 19 years in the Senate testifies to that -- but he is capable of turning against it.

John Kerry may yet revert to being the remote figure he once was. But in a life of privilege, he has overcome challenges that most men have chosen not even to face. He is not the most affable of men, but somewhere in his gaunt frame is a rod of steely determination that enabled him to come off the mat and win the first two Democratic contests. He is not, like John Edwards, a natural, but in the end he asks, as he did back in the Vietnam War era, the right questions. "How do you ask a man to be the last to die for a mistake?" Another couple of victories, and George W. Bush had better have an answer.



To: Selectric II who wrote (36656)2/2/2004 10:07:23 AM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
It was Bush Senior who bedded Kenney-boy Lay in the Lincoln bedroom.

Of course they received a good contribution in return.

TP