Posted on 10/25/2004 2:01:39 AM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
The presidential race continues to be on knife's edge. In 15 polls taken since the third debate on Oct. 13, President George W. Bush has had an average lead of 49 percent to 46 percent over Sen. John Kerry. Bush's percentages of support ranged between 46 percent and 52 percent, Kerry's between 42 percent and 49 percent. In Florida, Ohio and New Hampshire -- states Bush carried in 2000 -- and in Wisconsin, Iowa and New Mexico -- states Al Gore carried in 2000 -- different polls show both candidates ahead.
It was no accident that last week the presidential and vice presidential candidates made 53 of their 59 campaign stops in these states, plus similarly close Pennsylvania and Minnesota. The overall picture is a little more favorable to Bush than to Kerry. But any Bush margin that exists now could disappear by Election Day.
We have had close elections before, but not usually ones attended by such bitterness and anger. The 1968 race between Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey, and the 1976 race between Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter turned out to be very close, closer indeed than expected. But few partisans on the losing side considered the winner unacceptable. That's not the case today.
In the debates, John Kerry recalled that Bush campaigned in 2000 as a unifier, not a divider, and criticized him for dividing the nation as president. Yet the harshest rhetoric of this long, long campaign season has come, not from Bush and the Republicans, but from Kerry and the Democrats. Democrats have called Bush and Dick Cheney unpatriotic, not the other way around; Democrats have charged that Bush was "AWOL" in the Texas Air National Guard; Democrats have claimed that Bush "lied" about Iraq. The Democrats are the opposition party, and as such can be expected to attack the incumbent. But they are not conducting a campaign that will make it easy for them to unify the country if they win.
Nor have they been conducting themselves in a way that will make it easy for them to govern. One of the hardest things in politics is to come up with campaign proposals that will help you win the primaries, help you win the general election and help you govern. Bill Clinton did a good job of this in 1992, though he made a detour on health care in 1993-94. George W. Bush also did a good job of this in 2000, although the Sept. 11 attacks led him to refashion foreign policy as no other president has done since Harry Truman in the Cold War.
John Kerry has not done such a good job. Never much absorbed in policy issues in the Senate, he has had a weak policy shop. His major domestic initiative, on health care, has features that helped in the Democratic primaries but will be problematic if he is elected. Bush has innovative positions on Social Security and health savings accounts, but it's not clear that he's given them enough emphasis to get them enacted.
But those are not the things that are likely to drive voters' decisions. This is an election about foreign policy and basic values. It would be easier for the winner to govern if he could win an unambiguous and uncontested majority. Can that happen?
There are two theories about how voters could break toward one candidate or the other candidate. One, held by Democrats, is that most voters have rejected Bush and are just waiting to make sure Kerry is an acceptable alternative, as voters decided to go with Ronald Reagan over Jimmy Carter in 1980. But Bush's job rating is higher than Carter's.
Another theory, held by some Democrats as well as Republicans, is that voters will decide not to switch presidents in time of war and will surge toward Bush. Possibly spurring such a reaction is the increasingly vitriolic tone of the Kerry campaign and the 527 organization ads against Bush.
The Kerry campaign deliberately tried to avoid that tone at its convention and sounded it again only in September, after Bush built up a post-convention lead. But there can be a backlash to vitriol, as Minnesota Democrats discovered after the bile unleashed at Paul Wellstone's funeral in 2002. Democrats, living in a cocoon where Bush hatred is universal and unexceptionable, failed to anticipate that. Have they made the same mistake again?
Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics.
On January 16, after ten weeks of rioting and legal fighting, Congress will elect Bush president.
It's not a knife's edge... it is more like a blunt mallet...
it is more like a blunt mallet...
Only if the candidates are strong on defense, and one clearly is not. Lets face it, there has been a shift to Bush since the final debate and its shown up the polls for over a week now.
In the debates, John Kerry recalled that Bush campaigned in 2000 as a unifier, not a divider, and criticized him for dividing the nation as president. Yet the harshest rhetoric of this long, long campaign season has come, not from Bush and the Republicans, but from Kerry and the Democrats .....This guy has it right.
You know, when I hear these jerks like Kerry and others saying that Bush is a divider, it really ticks me off.
He worked with fat teddy on the education bill, he had nothing but good to say about kennedy. Dubya's father in January gave fat teddy some special award down around College Station (??) here in Texas.
The VERY NEXT WEEK, how does teddy repay him ?? By stabbing Dubya in the back in the Senate!!
Just G-r-r-r-r !!!
"George W. Bushs Vietnam" ... quagmire ... "Saddam's torture chambers reopened under new management, U.S. management" ... Bush bad ... Democrats good ... blah, blah, blah ! ....
Yeah, but is that spike holding up in Florida and Ohio?
The Bush climb in the polls, I mean...
I think people will freak at the thought of another drawn out lawyer-fest dragging the election through the courts. The more the media talks about Kerry's "army of lawyers" ready to pounce, the more people will decide to put it out of reach by handing Bush a landslide. I think the ABB sentiment is far weaker in most people than the Democrats would like. Sure, they have their rabid Bush haters, but most people aren't like that. Many people who would vote for Kerry just to get "change" could decide that a nice, clean election with no legal hanky-panky is more important to them than getting rid of Bush. If it looks like Bush will win anyway, they may flip just to make it decisive. |
bump
So what' your Electoral Vote prediction?
Bump
Yes it is. However I would add 1-2 points to Kerry for fraud.
That could be a new Bush campaign slogan - "Give a lawyer a day off. Vote for Bush."
Gallup's numbers look okay...
Other than a garbage poll in Ohio, that state looks fine. With Bush's leads in Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and New Mexico, we have 32 electoral votes as a fudge factor.
Florida is also looking good.
Interesting info.
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