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How Bush can destroy Kerry fast
The Hill ^ | 3-3-04 | Dick Morris

Posted on 03/03/2004 5:14:46 PM PST by Indy Pendance

The Democratic Party chose a nominee Tuesday who probably cannot win the White House in November.

In opting for Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts and turning down Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, Democrats have broken from the pragmatism and moderation that dominated their party’s profile under Bill Clinton and Al Gore in the 1990s.

Their party has now moved back to the liberal extremism of Walter Mondale and Michael Dukakis that characterized the 1980s — with the same predictable result.

It is now up to President Bush to take advantage of this by implementing a three-part strategy in the coming campaign.

First, his paid media must attack Kerry’s voting record to define him as an ultraliberal. There are likely those in the White House who are urging Bush to run positive ads. That won’t work. Even if positive ads produce a small, short-term bounce for Bush, events soon will come to dominate, and the impact of those ads likely will evaporate.

But if Bush uses the next eight months to educate voters on Kerry’s opposition to the death penalty, his vote against the 1991 Iraq war, his poor attendance record in the past year and his opposition to the Defense of Marriage Act, he could put this election away by defining Kerry right now.

Kerry has not been tested. He was nominated by running in the shadow of Howard Dean. Throughout the fall, all eyes were on the former Vermont governor. When he crashed and burned in late January, Kerry, as the liberal heir apparent, inherited his disappointed voters.

Meanwhile, Edwards never got the money or the momentum to run a decent race against Kerry because Gen. Wesley Clark — remember him? — crowded the field. By the time Edwards got Kerry one on one, the number of primary states stretched his resources to the point where he could not afford it.

But now, Kerry is a fair and inviting target. Bush has to zero in on him and push him to the left right now. Whether Kerry ever consorted with Jane Fonda is beside the point, but Kerry’s voting record is not.

Second, while his anti-Kerry ads are running, the president himself needs to make Americans understand that the war on terror is still atop our national agenda. He needs to elevate the sense of threat so that his advantage as a war president begins to count.

Kerry has also made a big mistake in backing the criminal-justice approach to terrorism, seeking to transform the war on terror into a series of DEA-style busts. Voters recognize that Bush is right when he says that this is a war against nation-states that sponsor terror, not a hunt for criminal bands in the mountains.

Pundits say that Kerry’s admirable war record makes national security irrelevant as a campaign issue. They couldn’t be more wrong. His efforts to defund the CIA and his opposition to the funding of the Iraq war are all key targets for Bush.

Some of those who have Bush’s ear may urge him to speak more about the economy and less about terror. This would be a big mistake. Bush must use his profile as president to make Americans understand how crucial staying the course in the war on terror is to our safety. Bush has lost a lot of support among women with the war in Iraq. But he can restore that support by stressing the need to make America safe from terror attacks and to stress how important it is to stick to this task.

Finally, Bush must begin to pull American troops out of Iraq after the handover in June. He should leave a sufficient number there, in safe, secluded bases, to intervene if the bad guys try to come back in power. But the daily drip of casualties must end.

President Johnson kept the troops in Vietnam and lost. President Nixon was withdrawing them, and he won.

If Bush’s ads and surrogates savage Kerry while the president raises the profile of the war on terror and his foreign-policy team brings the troops home, this race could be over long before either Bush or Kerry is officially designated as the standard bearers of his respective party.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: dickmorris; gwb2004; kerry; massachusettsliberal; ultraliberal
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To: HardStarboard
Have Fox call me - I'll vouch for you as someone that has a thinking head as well as a talking one.

Thanks! When they call I'll holler.

I also think that it really showed up how non-thinking the Dems are. They really are like sheep.

41 posted on 03/03/2004 6:50:54 PM PST by lonestar (Don't mess with Texans)
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To: Indy Pendance
[ In opting for Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts and turning down Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, Democrats have broken from the pragmatism and moderation that dominated their party’s profile under Bill Clinton and Al Gore in the 1990s. ]

MODERATION!...
Dickie lose the hashish!...
Its makein you sound STUPID'er...

42 posted on 03/03/2004 6:54:02 PM PST by hosepipe
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To: Indy Pendance
I have absolute confidence in the Bush team to run the right campaign - strategery isn't about to fail them now.

Right, Ma Richards?

Memo to the toe sucker: Rove has forgotten more than you'll ever know.

43 posted on 03/03/2004 6:58:48 PM PST by mombonn
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To: Indy Pendance
The best thing to do right now is keep hammering on Kerrys flip flops and make him take hard stands on things. Once he does that he loses one of the sides he was playing too and it makes him look even more of a hypocrit.
44 posted on 03/03/2004 7:00:35 PM PST by John Lenin (The Kerry locomotive is headed for a train wreck)
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To: Indy Pendance
Pundits say that Kerry’s admirable war record makes national security irrelevant as a campaign issue.

Has anybody actually seen Kerry's war record, or do we just have some medals he pretended to throw over the White House fence and some supposed Republican he supposedly rescued supporting him?

45 posted on 03/03/2004 7:00:54 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: HardStarboard
All the GOP needs to do is to keep repeating:

If Kerry is elected in 2004
then the terrorists will have won.

46 posted on 03/03/2004 7:14:31 PM PST by auzerais (Stop C*ANSWER from Infecting America's Foreign Policy!)
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To: Indy Pendance
This is my take on this Bush vs. Kerry presidential race. First, Kerry is fond of saying "Bring it On!" and the press just squeals in delight although I'm having a hard time exactly understanding who or what Kerry's telling to bring it on!". Second, President Bush, used that same term earlier and got ramroded by the indignant tones coming from the democrat leaders and of course their good pals, the press. I at least knew to whom the President was referring to and it was not the American people.

And finally, in response to Kerry's bring it on", that the President has already "Brought it On!".

The world's dictators just dropped by 3 and that's in less than 4 years. And, a whole lot of people have been liberated from tyranny. Gosh, doesn't Kerry ever hear the Bells of Freedom Ring?

BTW, Mr. Kerry, where is the exit plan for Bosnia and Kosovo?

47 posted on 03/03/2004 7:18:08 PM PST by harpo11 (Give 'em Hell Team Bush! The Right Didn't Start the Fire! We're Fightin' to Put It Out!)
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To: don-o
well, he lost me when he suggested our troops pull back into safe bases - as if being a blatant and passive target is supposed to enhance our warriors' domination when these same are on the hunt for the enemy.

This is a war. In war, you do not get snug and wait for the enemy to shoot at you - that surrenders the initiative to your enemy. In war, you destroy the enemy; you win the war... and you can best do that by getting after him.

Aside from that, I say let the shias who were brutalized by the sunnis have full run of the so-called sunni triangle; right down to razing every building and salting the earth, just as Rome did to Carthage - we'll then see how much longer all this bullshit would last.

CGVet58

"if you see a rabid dog, you either shoot him or leave him alone. kicking him just makes him wanna bite you more"
48 posted on 03/03/2004 7:18:55 PM PST by CGVet58 (God has granted us liberty, and we owe Him courage in return)
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To: don-o
Bad advice. Some tell me how such a clymer get so prominent?

I got half way through this article before I decided that this guy was giving some bad advice. For starters, Morris wants Bush to throw away the whole Vietnam issue, an issue that's not going away because Kerry refuses to let it go, and it's an issue that Bush could capitalize on in so many ways. At the bottom of the article Morris talks about Bush beating the war drum, but who fights our wars? Men and women that end up becoming vets. And who isn't supporting Kerry because of his deplorable treatment of them? Vets! The two issues are tied together. Morris completely missed the target on this one.

49 posted on 03/03/2004 7:23:38 PM PST by randog (Everything works great 'til the current flows.)
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To: Indy Pendance
Bush should run a positive campaign about his record and smile a lot (Kerry looks constipated most of the time)

all attacks on Kerry should be generic without Bush actually saying the words. The last month Bush needs to hammer the coming tax increases under Kerry and ask every middle-class family how much they want to spend out of their own pockets to elect Kerry. (At about $2,000 per household only the real nut-jobs would vote for Kerry)
50 posted on 03/03/2004 7:44:01 PM PST by hford02 ((Hold your nose and pull the lever on the right))
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To: Indy Pendance
First, his paid media must attack Kerry’s voting record to define him as an ultraliberal... if Bush uses the next eight months to educate voters on Kerry’s opposition to the death penalty, his vote against the 1991 Iraq war, his poor attendance record in the past year and his opposition to the Defense of Marriage Act, he could put this election away by defining Kerry right now.

Absolutely correct.

Finally, Bush must begin to pull American troops out of Iraq after the handover in June. He should leave a sufficient number there, in safe, secluded bases, to intervene if the bad guys try to come back in power. But the daily drip of casualties must end.

Absolutely incorrect. President Bush must decide on troop placement and/or withdrawal based upon sound military strategy. He must NEVER allow politics to dictate policy.

51 posted on 03/03/2004 7:54:39 PM PST by Jeff Chandler (Why the long face, John?)
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To: Indy Pendance
When did Johnson lose by keeping troops in Vietnam? He beat Goldwater in '64 and refused to run in '68. His VP, Hubert Humphrey, lost to Nixon in '68.

At least that is the way it looked to a 10 year old.

BigBlockk

Later.....
52 posted on 03/03/2004 8:06:35 PM PST by BigBlockk
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To: Indy Pendance
Bush should run his ads only in important states and let the media run them around for free, like Morris did for Clinton.
53 posted on 03/03/2004 8:09:31 PM PST by BobS
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To: Indy Pendance
bump
54 posted on 03/04/2004 5:04:14 AM PST by RippleFire
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To: ServesURight
ROFLOL!!!
55 posted on 03/04/2004 5:06:25 AM PST by kcvl
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To: don-o
He is very smart, and right. He told Clinton what to do. I can't imagine the betrayel the left feels towards him.
56 posted on 03/04/2004 2:59:18 PM PST by NotchJohnson
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To: McGavin999
Dick Morris is ALWAYS wrong

He kept Clinton in office, even after Monica, I disagree.
57 posted on 03/04/2004 3:01:19 PM PST by NotchJohnson
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