Posted on 09/03/2003 11:28:35 AM PDT by Bob J
"A Lean, Mean Fighting Machine: Why Dean Deserves His Party's Nomination "
by Jonathan David Morris
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean has taken a 38 to 17 percent lead over Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry in a Zogby Poll of likely voters in next Januarys New Hampshire primary. This makes Dean the Democratic Partys presidential frontrunner. Dont look so surprised.
For quite some time now, folks on both sides of the political aisle have tried painting Dean as an unelectable goof. Republicans, for example, have sized up his chances against George W. Bush and basically said bring em on. Establishment Democrats seem to agree: Deans policies lean too far Left to connect with Middle America. Yet most polls show Dean running neck-and-neck with the blue-collar golden boy, Dick Gephardt, for the lead in Iowas caucus. If Gephardt is to Iowa what Kerry is to New Hampshire, and if Deans surging against both men, then its clear hes got the momentum as well as the grassroots support to go all the way. Not only is the nomination Deans to lose, but it ought to be obvious to the Bush team that this sacrificial lamb is no slouch.
Joe Liebermans fond of saying no Democrat can win the presidency without being strong on national security. That may well be, but its contingent upon two contradictory things: (1) That Americans will make homeland defense a priority come November 04; and (2) That Americans will decide Bush isnt tough enough. Having toppled both Mullah Omars Taliban and Saddams Baath Party the second in spite of world opinion its hard to imagine Americans voting Bush out of office if, indeed, they view the War on Terror as Issue No. 1. After all, even Democrats like Lieberman who supported the Second Gulf War havent got Bushs hands-on, day-to-day know-how.
The real question, then, wont be whether our current commander-in-chief has the chutzpah for this conflict, but rather whether chutzpah is what we want at all.
Establishment Democrats can go on and on about the economy if theyd like no one will deny its importance but its clear which issue has defined America since September 11, 2001, and thats the War on Terror in all its forms. Whether you agree with Deans anti-war stance or not, hes clearly the only candidate to have figured this out.
What we saw earlier this year was the defining of two very real factions: Those Americans who were willing to fight back and those who werent. Some in the first group wanted revenge, while some wanted just to feel safe again whatever the reasons may be, these Americans accepted the fact that winning a war means going to war, and theyve supported Bush accordingly. The second group, on the other hand whether they oppose Bush, Bushs war, war in general, or simply America likewise identify with Dean. Hes the only guy who understands what makes the anti-war movement tick. He hears his people. His people hear him.
Hes an energetic man, Dean. He gets out there, gets sweaty, and gets tough. Peace, for him, is something worth fighting for, and hes the only Democrat with the tenacity to do so. Kerry and Gephardt couldnt do it. John Edwards, Bob Graham, and Wesley Clark couldnt do it, either. These men dont appear to believe what theyre preaching; Dean does. The mans on fire, and he makes his opponents look like wax museum rejects by comparison which is to say they cant hold a candle to him, or else theyll get burned.
And that's why the DNC's apparent Deanophobia is astounding.
Theyve got to get over Kerry already. If they want to win back the White House, the chosen ones not the one to do it. Kerrys a lot like Bob Dole, except without the sense of humor. He looks good in a suit, I guess, but he hasnt got enough stage presence to fake the fury that so naturally comes to Dean. No one does. Theres a reason why Kerry, and Lieberman and Gephardt, arent appearing on a landslide of newsmagazine covers, and thats because they dont have Deans charm. Some voters will love him, and some will love to hate him, but both the DNC and RNC would do well to notice how quickly and vividly this mans captured American minds.
Its foolish for Democrats to hope against hope that Dean fizzles. In a two-party system where the two major parties all too often act as one, Dean stands poised to do America a favor. After all weve been through since terror struck two years ago, and with all the exhausting brouhaha building up to the Second Gulf War, Americans deserve a bona fide hawk and dove on stage at the presidential debates next year. Having hit the streets both for and against Bush's policies this past winter, Americans ought to have this chance to come inside, sit down on a nice comfy couch, and watch as the default figureheads of the pro- and anti-war movements duke it out on the defining issue of our time.
Is Bush beatable? Sure. Every president is. Thats not the point here. What matters most is Americas confidence in him. Hes reviled in many corners of the world, this much we know, but what do Americans think? Beyond the flimsy, ever-fluctuating opinion polls, whats Americas real stance on the Bush Doctrine? Do we or dont we agree that national security and his brand of it trumps all?
If Republicans and Democrats are so confident in their positions the former in favor of Bush, the latter opposed then both will welcome a rigorous debate of the War on Terror on national TV. None of this wishy-washy, sometimes-for-it/sometimes-against-it stuff weve seen from the likes of Kerry and Hillary Clinton. Just an honest, open debate between the man who knows the most about this war and the man who most opposes it: Bush and Dean, mano-a-mano, to let us know just where America stands.
The worlds a dangerous place these days. Weve installed a friendly government in Afghanistan, but Taliban remnants threaten stability. Neighbors like Pakistan and India also remain in constant turmoil. North Korea, meanwhile, is threatening to test its nukes, while Syria, Iran, and Saudi Arabia pose threats that grow larger by the day.
With Saddam Hussein gone but not quite forgotten, Iraq, too, takes the shape of a question mark on a map of the Middle East. Can we or cant we establish peace there? Whats it going to take? How many American soldiers will die? One thing we know for sure: Iraq has become our coalitions home base in the War on Terror, and our presence there has brought many a madman out of the woodwork. A Jordanian embassy bombing last month killed 19, a truck bomb at the UNs Baghdad headquarters killed another 23, and an explosion at an Iraqi mosque the other day ended at least 85 lives. The terrorists al-Qaeda and otherwise are ramping up their efforts to thwart our war.
And that's to say nothing of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a threat which may never fade.
These are the things an American president will be dealing with in the coming years. Whether its Bush, Dean, or someone else entirely, these problems have festered since at least the late 70s, and theyre unlikely to just go away. But the decision to fight is in our hands. Come November of next year, well go to the voting booths and decide if not once and for all, then at least for four years how tough we want to be. We can vote for Bush and rest assured that we wont shrink away from our troubles, or we can vote for a guy like Dean and rest assured that, if nothing else, at least Liberia will be secure.
But then thats the beauty of democracy, isn't it? And I, for one, can't wait to see the dynamic of Bush vs. Dean take form.
© 2003 Jonathan David Morris. All rights reserved.
The scenario all depends on GWB actually out-performing Dean in debate. What has been alarming to date has been the President's 'lassitude' with respect to charges from the left. The only ones the PR team seems to get worked up about are the attacks from the right. And their standard ploy for the left is to meet them more than halfway, rather than repudiate them at square one. Hence the debacle of the '16 words in the State of the Union'. I'm not sure if GWB has learned anything from that debacle yet. If so, as a consequence, it could prove to be disastrous poll-wise. Our man needs to toughen up politically. No more bipartisanship crapola. No more compassionate conservatism. No more political pandering to the minority votes, Islamic, Black, Mexican, ACLU, etc. It's back to basics, and the Base if he wants to continue staying at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
and 3 years wasted on this crapola. Sadly expect more. Again GW tell us Islam is a religion of peace, tell us how hard those here from Mexico are all hard working people & an asset to our country(he means to his elite buddies), tell us why European & Afro-Americans can't get minimum wage jobs because they don't speak Spanish & tell us why the borders aren't secured & anyone trying to inforce such is the criminal.
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