February 16, 2024

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  • Barnes on Bush v. Kerry

    Fred Barnes ponders a Kerry Nation and notes that Bush should be in good shape going into the general election campaign, so long as they focus on the proper elements.

    For example, I think he is quite correct here:

    The key is not to scream, "Liberal, liberal, liberal." That rarely works anymore. What should work, though, is a TV spot with wit and subtlety that plays up a Kerry weakness. Take Kerry's insistence that the terrorist threat to this country is "an exaggeration."

    I would play up both Kerry's willingness to let the UN have an inordinate say in our security policy, and his inconsistency on foreign policy in general.

    And I wholly concur with this:

    But if Kerry is a target-rich environment, why are Republicans and conservatives despairing over Bush's chances of defeating him? The answer is they've succumbed to panic. Sure, Bush has had a bad month. His State of the Union address was flat. The failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq (yet) is embarrassing. The National Guard flap is a distraction. The deficit is nothing to brag about. And Kerry has emerged from nowhere as a formidable foe who looks all the better because he's not Howard Dean.

    And, indeed:

    Nothing is more pathetic in the Washington political community these days than tremulous Republicans and conservatives who whine about how Bush may lose to Kerry. Well, he might, but don't bet on it. A simple rule is worth recalling: In politics, the future is never a straight-line projection of the present. The media may think polls showing Kerry ahead of Bush in February are predictive of what will happen on November 2, but that's foolishness. The primaries will end in a few weeks and the Kerry phase of the campaign will fade. Unless Bush stumbles badly, the next phase will be his.

    Posted by Steven Taylor at February 16, 2024 04:22 PM | TrackBack
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