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It Doesn't Get Any Better Than This
The Weekly Standard ^ | December 29, 2003 | Fred Barnes

Posted on 12/19/2003 9:22:34 PM PST by RWR8189

PRESIDENT BUSH has gotten a bigger reelection boost in a shorter period of time than any other president ever. And that may be putting it mildly. Yes, Sherman's taking of Atlanta in early September 1864 was critical to Lincoln's reelection, and Bill Clinton's signing of welfare reform in 1996 assured him a second term. But those don't quite match the gust of good news for Bush between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Here's the list: capture of Saddam Hussein, Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi's about-face, enactment of a prescription drug entitlement, signing of the first rollback of Roe v. Wade, fastest economic growth in 19 years, quickest pace in worker productivity gains in 20 years, two-decade high in increased manufacturing activity, significant drop in jobless claims, lowest underlying rate of inflation in 38 years, and rock-bottom interest rates. Oh, yes, the stock market: A week before Christmas, the Dow's up 23 percent for the year, 4 percent since Thanksgiving.

Let's not give Bush a big head and declare his reelection a done deal. He still faces daunting problems (job losses, post-Saddam insurgency in Iraq, al Qaeda, nukes in Iran and North Korea, energized opponents at home). But, to Bush's credit, the string of accomplishments on the eve of 2004 are mostly his own doing. It turns out more troops were not needed in Iraq, at least not to seize Saddam. The answer, as the administration insisted, was better intelligence. Bush's tax cuts, nearly everyone agrees, were the catalyst in rejuvenating the economy. A full-blown recovery is now a given. Bush had helpers like Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan and a good bit of luck. As the baseball saying goes, it's better to be lucky than good. It's better still to be in Bush's situation, lucky and good.

Grabbing Saddam produced a reversal in the Iraq debate. Saddam at large was the symbol of Bush's losing the battle of postwar Iraq. His captivity is the symbol of Bush's winning that battle. For months now, Saddam will be the story--his imprisonment, his interrogation, his atrocities, his prosecution, his punishment. When the spotlight is on Saddam in chains, Bush gains. If the terrorism directed by Saddam's cronies continues to abate, as it did in the days after his capture, Bush will gain further. In any case, he's no longer on defense in the debate over Iraq.

His foes are no longer on offense. Democrats were flummoxed by Saddam's capture. Columnist Robert Novak reported that Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, a top deputy to Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, had taped a radio statement, sneering at the prospects of seizing Saddam. It was to be broadcast the day after Saddam was captured. The Democratic presidential candidates, along with Sen. Hillary Clinton, responded to the capture with the cliché that Bush must "internationalize" the war in Iraq. This was a non sequitur: Because Bush's policy in Iraq was working, it was time to change the policy. That is not a serious argument.

Democrats exuded an air of unreality. They called for the United Nations to assume a bigger role in Iraq just days after Secretary General Kofi Annan announced the United Nations had no intention of doing that. They said Bush should recruit more foreign troops to replace American soldiers in Iraq. But there was no evidence any country was prepared to dispatch troops. And the Saddam capture led to more conspiracy-theorizing by Democrats. Congressman Jim McDermott of Washington suggested Saddam was ripe for seizure any time and Bush had planned the event for political gain. Of course this clashed with the standard Democratic criticism that Bush had lost control of postwar Iraq.

Democratic presidential frontrunner Howard Dean reacted with remarkable pigheadedness. He inserted in a speech the claim that Saddam's jailing did not make America safer. Earlier he had said Saddam was a "threat" to the United States. So Dean would have it that a threat was removed with no gain in safety for America. That defies logic. Besides, documents from Saddam's briefcase showed he was in regular touch, by courier, with terrorist cells perpetrating attacks on American soldiers and Iraqis. Once that was known, Dean could have revised his view. He didn't. He tossed out three charges against the president. One, Bush had claimed a direct link between al Qaeda and Saddam and later retracted the claim. Two, Bush had said the United States knew where Saddam's weapons of mass destruction were. Three, Bush had declared Saddam an "imminent danger." Dean was wrong on all three counts.

When was Bush lucky? That occurred as he dispatched former secretary of state James Baker on a mission to win debt relief for Iraq. Months ago, the administration made it known that countries not helping in Iraq would be ineligible for contracts to rebuild the country. The press missed this. Shortly before Baker departed for France and Germany, a routine Defense Department memo formally limiting the contracts was reported in the press. The belated scoop was the lucky part for the president. It created a media firestorm that Bush exploited to reiterate his policy and show the United States wouldn't be "played for patsies," as a White House official said. And the French and others finally "understood the ground rule is you've got to help" in Iraq. The result: They began to help, welcoming Baker and promising to forgive some or all of the Iraqi debt amassed by Saddam.

The White House has refrained from gloating. "We're happy with success, but we're looking forward" to 2004, Bush adviser Karl Rove said. Bush has a theme, the "ownership society," and a fat agenda that includes "lifetime savings accounts"--essentially tax-free IRAs with no penalties for withdrawal--and Social Security investment accounts. Bush's idea is to give Americans ownership of their money for retirement, health care, and everything now in the hands of government or other providers. Achieving all this would be a major feat, almost as amazing as what Bush wrought in late 2003.

Fred Barnes is executive editor of The Weekly Standard


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: fredbarnes; gwb2004; libya; weeklystandard
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To: thesummerwind
"Albright... She is one pathetic creature."

You are too kind...

61 posted on 12/20/2003 7:12:49 AM PST by Thom Pain
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To: onyx
"Madeline was mistaken for a cleaning lady."

I find this VERY demeaning to cleaning ladies all over the world!

62 posted on 12/20/2003 7:14:27 AM PST by Thom Pain
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To: Aeronaut
"I also think when election season really begins (when the Bush team engages) that the RATs are going to pay a price for their judicial obstructionism."

You have hit on the key element of this upcoming election! We have to give W the overwhelming majority in both houses or the Ninth Circuit will become the model for the Supreme Court. A failure to bring the S.C. back to the U.S. Constitution will have disastrous impact for a hundred years!

63 posted on 12/20/2003 7:18:56 AM PST by Thom Pain
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To: MeeknMing
OOOOOOOOOOOh! I just wish these sickos would just disappear. I still cannot believe the extreme low quality of the people Clinton put in high positions of our government.
64 posted on 12/20/2003 7:19:06 AM PST by thesummerwind (like painted kites, those days and nights, they went flyin' by)
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To: Ouachita

You know, if those three
teamed up to host SNL,
I think I'd watch it...
65 posted on 12/20/2003 7:20:19 AM PST by theFIRMbss
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To: RWR8189
Here's the list: capture of Saddam Hussein, Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi's about-face, enactment of a prescription drug entitlement, signing of the first rollback of Roe v. Wade, fastest economic growth in 19 years, quickest pace in worker productivity gains in 20 years, two-decade high in increased manufacturing activity, significant drop in jobless claims, lowest underlying rate of inflation in 38 years, and rock-bottom interest rates. Oh, yes, the stock market: A week before Christmas, the Dow's up 23 percent for the year, 4 percent since Thanksgiving

A sweeping illegal alien amnesty and it's in the bag!

66 posted on 12/20/2003 7:23:29 AM PST by dagnabbit (Amnesty is Treason)
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To: theFIRMbss; Prime Choice; Ouachita; LS
Someone may have already thought of this, but I am going to make up Free Saddam! stickers and place them next to the Howard Dean stickers on every leftists vehicle I can find.....
67 posted on 12/20/2003 7:57:09 AM PST by SW6906
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To: thesummerwind
I know what you mean. After he was first elected [ick!] and I heard of his
cabinet picks, I knew we were in trouble. I still remember thinking:

What a circus act, what a bunch of clowns !


68 posted on 12/20/2003 8:39:45 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: theFIRMbss; autoresponder; PhilDragoo
haha ! I love that Free Saddam T-Shirt !!

69 posted on 12/20/2003 8:44:22 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Hillary is a TRAITOR !!: http://Richard.Meek.home.comcast.net/HitlerTraitor6.JPG)
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To: SW6906
Hehehehe. Priceless.
70 posted on 12/20/2003 8:45:46 AM PST by LS (CNN is the Amtrack of news.)
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To: Lando Lincoln
First Durbin.....I can't stand the guy. I wrote a polite but direct letter to him regarding the judicial nominees/filibuster ..... never received so much as a form letter in return.

Typical Democrat.

As for the accomplishments of the Administration and President..... the dems continue to "misunderestimate" the "stratergery". Failing any bad turn of events, I suspect the perfect storm is brewing for the democrats in 2004. The shift will be seismic - in the presidential election and congress. It will be as much the President's doing as it will be the dems. The map on election night will be red, baby!

It would be nice. This country elected Clinton twice though so I don't underestimate the media's ability to pull the wool over enough people's eyes to fool enough of the public to get what they want.

71 posted on 12/20/2003 8:47:32 AM PST by #3Fan
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To: chiller
Hmmmm.....I'm dieing to know if W and Rove knew the content of the Demo response and went public with Saddam's capture on hoping to splatter big egg on the Dems faces. They obviously scrambled fast enough to avoid disaster. OTOH, probably not. By holding the news a few hours they would have splattered egg all over Durbin.

True. I wouldn't have minded they set that liberal jerk up though. lol

72 posted on 12/20/2003 9:02:01 AM PST by #3Fan
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To: RWR8189
"Here's the list: capture of Saddam Hussein, Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi's about-face, enactment of a prescription drug entitlement, signing of the first rollback of Roe v. Wade, fastest economic growth in 19 years, quickest pace in worker productivity gains in 20 years, two-decade high in increased manufacturing activity, significant drop in jobless claims, lowest underlying rate of inflation in 38 years, and rock-bottom interest rates. Oh, yes, the stock market: A week before Christmas, the Dow's up 23 percent for the year, 4 percent since Thanksgiving."

or as the NY Times would say "RECENT STRING OF SETBACKS BAD NEWS FOR BUSH"

73 posted on 12/20/2003 9:10:12 AM PST by wny
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To: Samwise
You posted:

Democrats were flummoxed by Saddam's capture.
He stole my word. :^)


I have stolen, er, borrowed it from you. Flummoxed was one of my Grand Dad's favorite words. Thanks for recycling it!

It is so appropriate with what GW is doing to the Rats.
74 posted on 12/20/2003 9:12:17 AM PST by Grampa Dave (George $orea$$ has owned and controlled the Rats for decades!)
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To: All
Just a little love note from the DU. We will be stuck with this regime if the Dems. luck doesn't change. How can everything always turn up roses for these *&^%# ers."

hee hee, and this from MEMRI should be sent to really drive em nuts!



In a column in the Saudi daily Arab News, columnist Dr. Muhammad Al-Rasheed praised the American capture of Saddam Hussein, and hailed President Bush as a liberator. The following are excerpts from his column: [1]

"Beware the march of history or the ides of March, whichever appeals to you. Those who have eyes and ears will learn from the demise of Saddam Hussein and the pathetic pictures shown to the world. Gone are the palaces, the swagger, the mindless ruthlessness, the endless resources of money and men. Nothing is left but a shabby old man, who is now as pathetic as his rise and fall had been tragic and murderous.

"Dictators and murderers are a breed apart. The lucky ones die in office. The majority live to suffer the humiliation and anger of their victims and those who survived them. Count with me and fill in the blanks as you wish: The Shah, Bokassa, Idi Amin, Ceausescu, Sese Seko of Zaire, Hitler, Mussolini, the Soviet apparatus, and last but not least, Saddam, the son of Hussein. The most notable of this lot were the most courageous: Nero and Hitler. At least Nero had the courage to fall on his sword and lament that Rome was losing a 'great artist.' I wonder who is next.

"The jubilation in Baghdad put the Arab media to shame. America, for this brief moment at least… is a liberator and not an occupier. I can't help being smug, since what I saw gave me back some confidence in the possibility of justice in this world. I had almost lost hope. It took George Bush to give me that back. I don't agree with him on many things, and while many Americans share my stand, I'll give the man his due. He will go down in Arab history as the liberator of Baghdad, even if the whole mission in Iraq comes to nothing more than this.

"… The reality we have to face is the fact that it took Americans to relieve Baghdad of its dictator. Arab impotence recorded a new low. I might sound naive but I would like to ask where the 'freedom fighters,' 'the resistance,' 'the strugglers for the freedom of Iraq' were when that man ran amok. Having delivered Saddam, the Americans will have to deliver Iraq. Shouldn't we now be wise enough to give them at least a chance, if not a real helping hand?

"We started this business of post-September 11th by jousting with the Americans loudly and virulently. We could not believe that any of our sort would behave in such barbaric ways. The truth became clearer with time. Regardless of the reason for the American intervention in Iraq, the end result couldn't have been happier for the Iraqis or more loaded with hope for other Arabs.

"Dare we say Carpe Diem and actually seize the day?"
[1] Arab News (Saudi Arabia), December 18, 2003.

http://www.memri.org/bin/latestnews.cgi?ID=SD63103



75 posted on 12/20/2003 9:15:56 AM PST by anglian
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To: RWR8189
Grabbing Saddam

I'm seeing a two-reeler here.  Get Warren Beatty on the phone,
and correct me if I'm wrong, but here's our Bush!

76 posted on 12/20/2003 11:05:32 AM PST by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: LS
I don't know which book you're reading, but in a book I read a few years ago, one guy in the position to know said, years later, that Sacco was innocent - Vanzetti was guilty. Or vice versa...
77 posted on 12/20/2003 11:10:12 AM PST by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: SW6906
Someone may have already thought of this, but I am going to make up Free Saddam! stickers and place them next to the Howard Dean stickers on every leftists vehicle I can find.....

That's the most pernicious, perfidious, persnickety, perverse idea I've heard all year!

I love it. Take pictures when you do it! ; )   : )

78 posted on 12/20/2003 11:24:47 AM PST by Prime Choice (Leftist opinions may be free, but I still feel like I'm getting ripped off every time I receive one.)
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To: RWR8189
This president is always four steps ahead of the media and Bolshies.

I get such a kick out of the commies being played for the fools they are.
79 posted on 12/20/2003 11:34:34 AM PST by Luke21
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To: anglian
I was shocked to find this posted by another DU'er:
McGovern was the anti-war candidate.
Mondale said we needed to raise taxes on the middle class.
Dukakis was a short governor from a New England state with a temper.
Dean is indeed a bit of all three. Add some Goldwater and a light peppering of Adlai Stevenson to taste.
Conclusion: All got their butts kicked in the elections they were in.

80 posted on 12/20/2003 11:44:18 AM PST by hobson
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