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Out of times(Bush support, Democrat Meltdown)
TownHall.com ^ | March 27, 2003 | Larry Kudlow

Posted on 03/27/2003 2:20:14 AM PST by FairOpinion

There they go again. Despite a mountain of clear polling data, The New York Times still refuses to admit that the vast majority of Americans support President Bush's war to topple the dangerous regime of Saddam Hussein and liberate the people of Iraq.

In a front-page story on Saturday, reporters Adam Nagourney and Janet Elder unveil a Times/CBS News poll that finds 70 percent of Americans approve of Bush's handling of Iraq -- an increase of 19 percentage points in only 10 days. But the paper of record won't let it rest there.

Most of the story talks about "deep partisan divisions" surrounding the conflict. And this just in: According to the Times, Bush enjoys far greater support from Republicans (93 percent) than he does from Democrats (50 percent). This alleged political division is even more intense when it comes to the president's overall approval rating: 95 percent of Republicans favor the Texan, compared with only 37 percent of Democrats.

What Nagourney and Elder failed to report from that very same poll is that independent voters strongly favor Bush on the war (65 percent) and approve of his overall performance (66 percent). They didn't mention this once in their story. As we know full well, it is precisely these independent swing voters who now determine elections in America. Yet, in their infinite wisdom, The New York Times chooses to ignore this fact.

If the Times' reporters had dug a little deeper, they might have reached the conclusion that what the poll really shows is how isolated the wartime Democratic Party has become. On war, Democrats fall 15 points below independents in their support for Bush. On overall approval for Bush, that gap widens to an astonishing 29 points.

Unquestionably, the Democratic Party doesn't think much of George W. Bush. Why? Because the majority of grass-roots Democrats are antiwar and care little for national-security issues (they also dislike tax cuts). This is why the president was so successful in the GOP midterm election sweep. It might even be true that the Democratic Party has lost more ground since last November.

Certainly the specter of Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle saying Bush "failed so miserably at diplomacy," rather than condemning the egocentric ranting and raving of French President Jacques Chirac, is nothing short of a self-inflicted political wound. Equally problematic for Democrats is the apparent popularity of antiwar presidential candidate Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor who is wowing Democratic state conventions, and absorbing the political oxygen from more responsible candidates like Richard Gephardt and Joe Lieberman.

The Democratic Party is in deep trouble on the great issue of our time. President Bush has successfully made the case that war against Iraq specifically, and all manner of terrorism generally, is essential to our nation's security. But Democratic leaders have countered with a nitpicking and highly partisan strategy. Bush has made the case for overturning foreign Stalins to liberate oppressed peoples in the Middle East and elsewhere, and for assisting the liberated in moving toward a pluralistic human-rights era of freedom. But the Democrats have chosen to take a pass on just the type of issues they used to call their own.

As Lawrence Kaplan, the author (with William Kristol) of "The War over Iraq," put it in The Wall Street Journal, Democrats are now opposing democracy and liberals are now against liberalism. The party of Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Harry Truman, JFK and Henry Jackson still suffers from McGovernite Vietnam syndrome. They are completely lost in the post-9/11 world of new politics and changing international relations.

The New York Times is overlooking this Democratic meltdown. It also refuses to recognize growing support for the war within the broader anglosphere. British wartime leader Tony Blair has seen his support nearly double to 56 percent from 29 percent. The same is true for Australian Prime Minister John Howard.

Closer to home, Ralph Klein, the premier of Alberta, Canada, recently took the unusual step of writing to U.S. Ambassador Paul Cellucci in support of the American decision to forcibly disarm and remove Saddam Hussein. Klein joins two other Canadian premiers who have distanced themselves from the antiwar Prime Minister Jean Chretien, who claims the war has no justification. Both Ontario Premier Ernie Eves and British Columbia's Gordon Campbell have rebuked the prime minister for failing to put Canada at America's side in the Iraq war.

All of this is significant news. It shows considerable support for President Bush, not just partisan support. It leaves no doubt that that the size and scope of the coalition of the willing is growing daily. Regrettably, the great New York Times believes this sort of war news is not yet fit to print.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: approval; bush; congress; democrats; faileddiplomacy; iraq; iraqifreedom; larrykudlow; pollsoniraq
Well, if the Democrats keep this up, maybe we will have a filibuster-proof majority for Bush's second term.
1 posted on 03/27/2003 2:20:15 AM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
How far wrong does it have to be, how obvious it's skewed reporting, before The New York Times loses it's accredidation as "the paper of record?"
2 posted on 03/27/2003 4:01:37 AM PST by ricpic
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To: FairOpinion
Dean/Sharpton 2004 - my dream ticket!
3 posted on 03/27/2003 4:30:06 AM PST by mombonn
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To: FairOpinion
As Lawrence Kaplan, the author (with William Kristol) of "The War over Iraq," put it in The Wall Street Journal, Democrats are now opposing democracy and liberals are now against liberalism.

Because they are Socialist rather than "Liberals" (in the classic sense).

4 posted on 03/27/2003 4:51:10 AM PST by PogySailor
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To: FairOpinion
The Democrats are self-destructing because they've chosen to define themselves as complete and total opposition to Bush. The only thing that drives them is their hatred of him. Daschle, in particular, has defined himself as nothing but an obstructionist. He has nothing constructive to offer voters, no alternative ideas; all he does is oppose Bush. If Bush is for something, Daschle must be against it, whatever it is. I imagine if Bush announced he was going to cure AIDS, or grant gays and lesbians special rights, or offer reparations to blacks, Daschle would oppose these things just out of reflex.

It's pretty hard to get people to vote for you when you simply oppose the opposition and don't offer any alternatives. And that's why the Democrats continue to marginalize themselves even more. After the 2002 elections, they drew the wrong conclusion from their losses. They decided that the reason they lost was because their message wasn't getting out. It simply didn't occur to them that they lost because people didn't like their message. And so, more deluded than ever before, they've been shouting their message even louder... with the result that they are alienating even more people. They chose to move even further to the left and throw a temper tantrum by opposing Bush in every possible way, and they've painted themselves into a corner. Couldn't have happened to a more deserving bunch of folks.

5 posted on 03/27/2003 5:14:05 AM PST by laz17 (Socialism is the religion of the atheist.)
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To: FairOpinion
tHIS IS ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF THE OBVIOUS FACT THAT THE RAT MEDIA IS LOSING IT'S ABILITY TO DICTATE WHAT IS AND WHAT IS NOT NEWS. tALK RADIO THE NET AND foxTV HAVE FREED THE LEMMINGS. tHE EVIL DONKEY CAN'T GET AWAY WITH LIES AS EASILY AS HE USED TO. tHE GOOD GUYS ARE NOT ONLY BOMBING THE IRAQIS BUT; THE RAT MEDIA'S CREDIBILITY AS WELL.
6 posted on 03/27/2003 6:33:29 AM PST by jmaroneps37
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To: FairOpinion
Exactly.

The only poll that'll make any difference is the one coming up in November.

Let's see the NYT spin that one...
7 posted on 03/27/2003 6:36:32 AM PST by Pete'sWife (Dirt is for racing... asphalt is for getting there.)
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