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


To: stockman_scott who wrote (42644)4/14/2004 8:15:25 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 89467
 
AS THE WHITE HOUSE WHIFFS, KERRY NEEDS TO SWING FOR THE FENCES

By Arianna Huffington

Poor Karl Rove. He's the George Steinbrenner of presidential politics.
Here he's assembled the best campaign team corporate money can buy, and
his all-star lineup of heavy hitters is being mowed down like a bunch
of
bottom-of-the-batting-order chumps.

Once they coaxed her out of the locker room, Condi had a decent plate
appearance but fell for Dicky Ben-Veniste's tricky curveball and
coughed
up the biggest error of the 9/11 hearings — letting it slip that the
president was told "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." just five
weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks. Kinda changes the mental caption to
that image of Bush's reaction in the classroom on that horrible day,
doesn't it — from "They did what?!" to "Oh, my god, they did it!"

Rummy is mired in a woeful Iraqi slump. Anti-American Shiites are
joining
forces with Sunni rebels, our handpicked figureheads on the Governing
Council are threatening to abandon the new ship of state before it even
leaves port, and the U.S. body count is rising at a frightening rate.
But
the secretary of defense continues to swing — and spin — away, saying
of
the chaos in Iraq, "You're going to have good days and bad days." Over
70
dead Americans in the last 10 days, and that's the best he can do? Talk
about your foul gall.

Ashcroft, in his turn in the batter's box, was handcuffed by a series
of
fastballs, unable to counter the growing evidence that Justice has long
been suffering from a bad case of misplaced priorities — more concerned
with covering up bare-breasted statues than uncovering murderous
sleeper
cells.

And, worst of all for Rove, the president, the GOP's cleanup hitter, is
looking less and less like the powerful, hard-nosed, Ruthian Hall of
Famer
depicted in his re-election ads and more and more like the Bush leaguer
we
always feared he might be.

The president's refusal to appear in front of the 9/11 Commission
without
Dick Cheney by his side has comedians everywhere scrambling to locate
their Campaign 2000 routines depicting Bush as a dummy sitting on
ventriloquist Cheney's knee. This is our take-charge "war president"?
White House den mother Karen Hughes says that having Bush and Cheney
testify together is "an effective use of their time." Why not make it
really effective and have them make fund-raising phone calls in between
questions?

As for Bush's claim that the President's Daily Brief he received on
Aug.
6, 2001 wasn't specific enough, let's see: Al-Qaida? Check. Hijacking?
Check. New York? Check. I've watched a lot of TV cop shows over the
years,
and, as far as I can remember, the good guys are never told exactly
where
and when crimes are going to occur. They investigate, follow leads,
talk
to informants, and generally track down the bad guys. Bush should have
made damn sure his top terror cops were doing the same. Instead, it
appears that we have a president more consumed with his PB&Js than his
PDBs.

Things aren't any better on the domestic front, where W has struck out
on
his promise of compassionate conservatism: His latest budget slashes
housing assistance for the elderly, veterans' benefits, and vocational
education while eliminating programs dealing with alcohol abuse, the
arts,
dropout prevention, and family literacy. And his cherished No Child
Left
Behind Act is underfunded to the tune of some $9 billion for the coming
year.

In other words, the president is 0-for-his-entire-agenda.

All of which leaves the dugout door wide open for John Kerry to shake
off
the small ball signals his advisers are giving him and swing for the
fences.

Forget about trying to put together a bunch of policy singles. He needs
to
go to the bat rack and pull out the big lumber. Pine tar it up. And
give
it a Roy Hobbsian whack.

Fifty-seven percent of the public believes the country is on the wrong
track. All across the political spectrum, there is a yearning for
community, a hidden hunger to be part of something bigger than
ourselves —
even to be asked to sacrifice for the greater good. To be reminded that
we
are all in this boat together.

I believe the country is so longing for this that I consider an appeal
to
idealism the sleeper issue of 2004.

We are, undoubtedly, a nation divided. And a nation divided cannot
stand,
let alone move forward. Which is why Kerry needs to call his shot — and
offer up a bold vision that is bigger than the things that divide us. A
nation that has been divided by fear can be united by hope.

If he can step up to the plate and inspire us, Mighty Kerry will be
circling the bases doing his grand slam trot come November and Bush
will
be heading to the showers. Who knows, maybe the Texas Rangers will give
him a roster spot on their Crawford farm team.

© 2004 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.
DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

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