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Politics : PRESIDENT JOHN FORBES KERRY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (596)3/11/2004 8:07:26 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1017
 
Mud Tossed at Kerry Might Stick to Bush

_____________________

by Robert Kuttner

THE BUSH CAMPAIGN has a problem. Almost any unflattering issue they bring up about John Kerry tends to reflect worse on President Bush. One thinks of the old proverb, "Never mention a rope in the house of a man who was hanged."

On Monday, speaking at a fund-raiser in Houston, the president tried out what will doubtless be a Republican mantra: "Senator Kerry voted for the Patriot Act, for NAFTA, for No Child Left Behind, and for the use of force in Iraq. Now he opposes the Patriot Act, NAFTA, the No Child Left Behind Act, and the liberation of Iraq. My opponent clearly has strong convictions -- they just don't last very long."

There are two very persuasive rejoinders. For starters, most senators and congressmen also voted for No Child Left Behind and for force in Iraq, but quickly turned into critics because Bush pulled a bait-and-switch.

Similarly, most legislators were stampeded into supporting the so-called Patriot Act, which increases permissible spying on Americans, and now have regrets. Today, the Republican chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Jim Sensenbrenner, says the Patriot Act will be extended "over my dead body." So Kerry is in very good company.

The second rejoinder is even more potent: Compared with whom? If Kerry occasionally modifies his positions as events change, his inconstancy is pretty mild compared with Bush's. This, after all, is a president who ran as a "uniter, not a divider," as a "compassionate conservative," and as a steward of budgetary prudence. The rest is history, and the history does not flatter the president.

Indeed, this is not an incumbent who should welcome close comparisons. Want to talk about Kerry's military record? Oops. Want to discuss No Child Left Behind, where Bush's failure to provide funding combined with impossible bureaucratic requirements has stoked a rebellion of Republican governors? Maybe you don't.

Want to make fun of Kerry as a preppy rich kid? A group of Bush supporters created an ad ridiculing Kerry's wealth, taunting him as an improbable advocate for the poor. But again, compared to whom?

In America, some rich kids grow up to be adults who genuinely care about the poor -- the names Roosevelt and Kennedy come to mind -- and others couldn't care less. As Kevin Phillips's best-selling book, "American Dynasty," recounts, Bush father and son both fall into the latter category.

Bush junior, by his own account, was a dissolute who didn't get serious about his life until he was 40, when he got religion and sobered up. His family connections then allowed him to fall upward. When Kerry, at age 25, was testifying before the Senate, Bush was partying. So maybe family affluence isn't such a great topic either.

Bush's kickoff commercial wrapped the president in the memory of 9/11. But this association is starting to feel like cheap grace. The families of many of the victims resent it, and it flies in the face of earlier Bush pledges not to play politics with terrorism. Instead of evoking Bush's leadership, the commercial reminds us of Bush's cynicism. After the messy outcome in Iraq and the bungling of nuclear nonproliferation policy, terrorism no longer automatically plays to Bush's advantage.

Locating the GOP convention in New York (out of similar motives) could turn out to be an epic political blunder. Bush shouldn't expect a hero's welcome from New York's first responders, the real heroes of 9/11. Bush walked away from financial commitments to New York; the firefighters union is very pro-Kerry; and Bush is resented by New York's cops and EMT's for his opposition to urban aid and public-sector unions.

Also, Gotham's top three Republicans -- New York Governor George Pataki, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and former Mayor Rudy Guiliani -- all favor gay rights.

Gay marriage, supposedly the ultimate wedge issue marginalizing Democrats like Kerry, could well play out against Bush. As civil union (Kerry's position) is fast becoming the national consensus, Bush finds himself marooned with the hard-core bigoted right and alienating moderate swing voters.

So if a real comparison of records and personal achievements doesn't work so well, what do you do? You get really dirty, you have surrogates do the dirty work (remember Kerry's nonexistent affair?), and you hope that the mud so obscures the issues that by November the challenger's advantage on the substance is buried.

This election is about profound differences -- what kind of a country we are becoming, and how to make the world tolerably safe. Let's hope the voters are paying attention.

commondreams.org



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (596)3/11/2004 1:05:56 PM
From: PartyTime  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1017
 
>>>"These guys are the most crooked, you know, lying group I have ever seen. It's scary," Kerry said.<<<

You know there's a telltale sign to this here on SI. How could a thread, like the one below, with such a title possibly do well?

Subject 54632



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (596)3/11/2004 1:13:39 PM
From: laura_bush  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1017
 
Greenspan jawboning again re "protectionism" and "under-educated" US workforce. Here's one of several "updates" on his remarks today:

forbes.com

UPDATE 1-Greenspan-Limiting trade not answer to US job loss
Reuters, 03.11.04, 10:16 AM ET

(Adds details from Greenspan speech, background)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan Thursday urged Americans not to turn high anxiety about U.S. job losses into support for protectionist trade measures, which could hurt rather than help the situation.

In prepared remarks to the House Education Committee, the Fed chief waded into a burgeoning political argument with a strong call for an open trade environment that appeared to echo President Bush's sentiments.

"As history clearly shows, our economy is best served by full and vigorous engagement in the global economy," Greenspan said a day after Bush inveighed against any effort to restrict access to U.S. markets by saying it might hurt U.S. exporters.

Greenspan noted "new protectionist measures" were being proposed, without specifying what he was referring to, and said they could be self-defeating.

"These alleged cures could make make matters worse rather than better," he said. "They would do little to create jobs and if foreigners were to retaliate, we would surely lose jobs."

In the runup to November's presidential elections, Democrats have sought to tag the Bush administration with the blame for a jobless recovery, saying that "outsourcing" of U.S. jobs to cheap-labor countries like India and China could and should be slowed.

Sen. John Kerry, who has the Democratic presidential nomination virtually locked up, sought union workers' support on Wednesday by saying Bush tax cuts helped the rich while doing nothing to protect middle-class jobs.

"Everywhere I've been in this campaign, I've met working Americans who are getting the short end of the stick," Kerry said before the AFL-CIO labor federation in Chicago. "Jobs on the run. Wages and salaries dead in the water."

Kerry has also blistered corporate chieftains who shift jobs out of America, referring to "Benedict Arnold CEOs" who lack loyalty to their employees.

In his remarks, Greenspan said job insecurity was "understandably significant" when nearly 2 million Americans have been on the unemployment lines for more than six months.

"New job creation is lagging badly -- the ironic consequence of accelerated gains in productivity," Greenspan said. "In all likelihood, employment will begin to increase more quickly before long as output continues to expand."

He said putting up barriers to foreign trade and guarding jobs might work in the short run but not indefinitely.

"Our standard of living would soon begin to stagnate and perhaps even decline as a consequence," Greenspan suggested.

He said it would be more fruitful to consider reforms in the education system to ensure that workers with needed skills in technology are available. That would have the coincidental benefit of easing some of the pressure that has driven wages of highly skilled employees up while pay for less-skilled workers has been virtually stagnant.

Copyright 2004, Reuters News Service