Daily Kos

Closing Time

Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:35:18 PM PDT

MEMORANDUM

To: Senator John Kerry
From: Tom Schaller
Date: September 7, 2004
Re: Out-Roving Rove

Your reputation is that of a closer. Well, it's closing time, Senator. Stop worrying like Al Gore did about how the editorial pages will judge you. Rove and Bush don't give a damn whether the Beltway snobatorium thinks they play gutter-level politics; indeed, many are happy to smile cheerily as they get knee-deep in the sewage.

The point is that the Bush team knows history will only remember the Electoral College results. That said, it's long past time to start giving Rove the Rove Treatment by going directly after the president's strengths.

Essentially, Bush has four:

  1. His image as a successful, wartime commander-in-chief;
  2. His reputation as a strong leader;
  3. His image as a straight-shootin' tough-talker; and
  4. His family name and connections.

Here, respectively and respectfully, are suggestions for how to Rovertime each:

  1. Reconnect Iraq to the war on terror. Bush repeatedly claimed (past tense) that Iraq was central to the war on terror - until, of course, the warrants for and management of that war went afoul. Now he wants to disconnect Iraq because his Iraq approval ratings are consistently lower than (and, thus, have steadily weakened) his approval ratings for the generic war on terror. Don't let him get away with that. Keep repeating that the president told America that Iraq is central to the war on terror, and by that standard, he's doing a terrible job on the war on terror. It's really that simple. To make the reconnection hurt, start repeating two very simple facts: (a) according to Defense Department counts, the rate of military fatalities is higher since Saddam Hussein was captured than before his capture; and (b) according to the State Department, the number of global terrorist incidents and deaths is increasing, not decreasing. Have surrogates repeat these two facts endlessly, followed by the question: "If American fatality rates are higher this year than last year, and terrorist incidents are increasing worldwide, what kind of progress in the war in Iraq and the war on terror is the president talking about?" Even the stupid-ass media will be able to follow this argument. And, from this point forward you and your surrogates should cease referring only to "the war on terror" but instead and always jointly as "the war in Iraq and the war on terror." This is political jujitsu, pure and simple; you must turn Bush's best weapon back on him by re-linking Iraq to the war on terror.

  2. George Balker Bush. Strong, resolute and decisive - whatever. Reports indicate that western Iraq is becoming an Afghanistan-style swamp, and Afghanistan remains an Afghan-style swamp. And why? Because the truth is, that at the critical moments in both countries, Bush went soft. The Islamic terrorist threat in Iraq is growing because, in the moment of truth in Falluja, Bush balked; meanwhile, the Afghan situation remains unstable and Osama at-large because, in the moment of truth in Tora Bora, Bush balked. So say so. Then, in order to complete the balker trifecta and remove once and for all the giant rhetorical monkey from your back, you also need to flip the script on the $87 billion war appropriation. This will be the hard, given that ridiculously senatorial phrase you uttered about "voting for before voting against." The solution is to point out that doing "whatever it takes" to support the troops, as the president claims he always does, means having the courage to find the money for the $87 billion - rather than balking, by adding the costs to the national debt that returning soldiers, their kids and grandkids will be handed after they've returned from combat. You'll have to educate the public a bit about what's happening in Afghanistan or Iraq, and how congressional budgeting and voting work; that's tougher than blurting out Bush-style platitudes. But if you can't educate the electorate a bit, you don't deserve to win anyway.

  3. Scared Straight. Forget Bush's fleeting gaffe about the war on terrorism not being winnable; he's not going to trip up again. Besides, micro-angles like this or the band-aid purple heart flap are thin threads onto which to hang your campaign message. (N.B.: Your staff must end its fixation on minutiae.) You need a strong, simple and damning line of attack. That said, the dirty (but open) secret the conservative national media know, yet won't dare utter, is this: Bush is petrified to speak in public about most everything, and especially about policies and his specific record over the past four years. He's scared to do press conferences; scared to allow anyone who hasn't signed a loyalty agreement into his campaign events; scared to debate you; scared to talk about how his prescription drug plan is backfiring among seniors and fiscal conservatives, his immigration policies are backfiring among Latinos and social conservatives, his steel tariffs and tax cut policies are backfiring among blue-collar white workers in manufacturing states, and his No Child Left Behind and stem cell policies are backfiring among suburban white women. The key point is not the specific policies or economic statistics; to mention them, or call for weekly debates, is to fight smaller skirmishes instead of the larger war. Rather, push the macro message that Bush is petrified to talk about any of it. You and your surrogates should use these exacts words: not "doesn't want to," but "scared and petrified." Make the media repeat them, thereby forcing the Republicans to refute your charges in your language. And you need to do this now, pre-emptively, because Jim Baker came on board specifically to negotiate you down to two debates and Bush-favorable rules. You need all three; if you have established the "president is petrified" storyline in advance, no matter how scared Bush-Rove may be of debating three times they'll be more scared of being labeled scared for backing down. And when the tough questions during the debates on the economy, health care and Iraq are asked, and Bush's answers and eyes start darting around, he will ratify the scared-and-petrified criticism with his verbal and non-verbal responses.

  4. Royal Treatment. This last strength - the family dynasty and its connections - is different from the others because it's an asset the campaign likes to utilize (see Baker arrival, above) but not discuss publicly (notice that father and brother never spoke from the stage in NYC). Now, you don't need Euclid on your campaign staff to recognize that somebody named George Bush has been on six of the last seven Republican national tickets. I repeat: that's six of seven, every year since 1980 but 1996 (aka, The Kennebunkport Regroup Year). Um, how about pointing this out, say, daily? Try: "There's been a George Bush on every Republican ticket since 1980. That's six of the last seven elections!. The president's dad was on the ticket in 1980, 1984, 1988 and 1992. After taking a brief family hiatus, George W. Bush was on the ticket in 2000 and again this year. And if you think the reason Jeb Bush was quiet at this year's convention means the mantle is going to be passed next to Rudy Giuliani or John McCain, folks, you're not paying attention to how the Bushes run the family monarchy. Maybe George Bush slept through his American history classes at Yale, but I seem to recall that we fought a war 200 years ago to free ourselves from a monarchy led by a guy named George." The presidency is not won on esoteric arguments about this or that economic report; sadly, it's won by convincing Americans - 70 percent of whom cannot identify their member of Congress - with schoolyard political tactics. Bush is the guy who gets the girls to do his homework, and still gets to be class president because he is a star on the baseball team and sits at the cool table at lunchtime. But enough kids, though scared of him, still hate him. Play on that base-level animosity (filmmaker John Hughes made a career doing so), because the "enough with the Bushes already" sentiment offers a strong motive people can access readily once they're inside the voting booth that the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics report doesn't.

Once you take these fights straight at Bush's four strengths, and discipline yourself and your surrogates to sing from the same libretto, all the advantages on the domestic economy, environment, health care, and so on will provide the margin you need. Or, you can keep micro-refuting which Swift Boater was where, doing what, on which boat 35 years ago, offering symbolic salutes for the camera, and have the staff release another memo about how much the latest Halliburton fine was - and lose.

Oh, and in closing, I will reiterate a recommendation I made earlier, in regard to television ads, Senator: Because you may not be the best person (and in fact, may be the worst person) to advocate for yourself, your positive ad campaign between now and election day should borrow a page from the "everyday surrogates" media approach used by Stevens & Schriefer to defeat Bob Shrum client Kathleen Kennedy Townsend in the 2002 Maryland governor's race.

  • ::

Tags: (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 155 comments

  •  Bush as Flip-Flopper (none / 0)

    = "Texas Two-Stepper."

    Prof. McCain:
    By Iraq, is Pakistan near;
    While Czechoslovakia's here.
    Sunnis are Shi'a,
    Sudan is Somalia,
    and Putin's the German premier.

    by Michael D on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:39:25 PM PDT

  •  I disagree with #4 (none / 0)

    I don't see that swaying many voters.  Similar arguments were used against Bobby and Ted Kennedy's senatorial campaigns, and they didn't work.
    •  Agreed. (none / 0)

      I agree.  I think in their hearts people kind of like the idea of family dynasties.

      However, that takes nothing away from arguments 1-3, which are excellent.  I hope somebody at the Kerry campaign either reads this or comes up with the same ideas.

    •  Yes, but also (none / 0)

      Edwards:

      Do we believe in an America where the family you're born into controls your destiny? Our ancestors left a place of princes and paupers and masters and servants. This is not our America. What we believe [is that] wherever you live and whoever your family is, and whatever the color of your skin is, if you're willing to work hard, if you're willing to take responsibility, you ought to be able to go as far as your God-given talents and hard work will take you.
    •  I disagree with the disagreers (none / 0)

      On point #4, I would focus more on the friends of the Bush family, who always have their checkbooks at the ready for another Bush political campaign.  I remember that John McCain got smeared by friends of the Bush family.  The Swift Boat liars were funded by two Texas-based real estate dirt-bag friends of the Bushes.  And let's not forget Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia!

      Otherwise, Tom Schaller advice is a grand slam!

      For people of deep faith like George W. Bush, beliefs are intoxicating, and facts are sobering. Sober up, America!

      by slip kid no more on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 07:22:12 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  there are so many things (none / 0)

    I'd only add his reputation as a decent, honest, Christian.  He is not decent, he is not honest, and while they say "family values," we value families!  There is nothing Christian about a non-livable minimum wage, millions of jobs lost, not protecting the environment for our children, ... this list could go on for quite some time.

    [stole the family values part from Wes Clark]

    •  Dubya the anti-Christian (none / 0)

      ""I'd only add his reputation as a decent, honest, Christian.""

      More accurately he is an anti-Christian. His religion is a punative Old Testament brand that in effect denies what Christ taught. Christ rebelled against the exclusiveness and punativity of Old testament Judiasm and espoused a religion of inclusion and empathy. Dubya thinks Jesus was a bleeding heart girly-man.

      A good label can defy intelligent analysis for 50 years or more."

      by Phoenix6 on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 11:49:42 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  What about Kerry-Edwards strengths? (none / 1)

    Enough with the Bush-brand building.
    •  Yes, let's hear the great stuff about Kerry! (none / 1)

      That's what the public wants to know!  Especially folks who don't watch TV or cable (ahem!) and whose news comes solely from Internet or radio.

      Don't believe everything you read or hear. Check it out for yourself.

      by Daemmern on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:21:08 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  Labor Day and Overtime Regulations (none / 0)

        Today, Edwards talking about Kerry to 12,000 supporters in Minnesota (see post):
        The previous 11 presidents "all created jobs -- until this president," he said. "So it gets to be a very simple thing. If you believe in millions of Americans losing their health care, millions of Americans falling into poverty, millions of Americans who are struggling every day just to pay their bills, family incomes down, if you believe that that's the right track for America, you ought to vote for George Bush.

        "But if you don't, we have to have President John Kerry."

        ... "The day that John Kerry is sworn in as your president, we're going to reverse this overtime regulation that they just put into place and give you back your overtime," he told the cheering crowd.

    •  The case for kerry (none / 0)

      What I like about him is his courage in standing up to the powers that be. He stood up to it when I was in Vietnam and he was trying to bring me home. He stood up to it when he took down the corrupt and well connected BCCI. He did it in his investigations of Iran/Contra. He has the courage to take on whoever needs to be taken on, even the leadership of his own party. He is a man of impeccable integrity who is nonetheless pragmatic enough to choose his battles carefully and not be an intractable purist. He knows how to live to fight another day. He's no ideologue, but his core liberal beliefs are strong.

      A good label can defy intelligent analysis for 50 years or more."

      by Phoenix6 on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 11:59:26 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  anyone got kerry's personal fax #? (none / 0)

    Kerry needs to step up the heat, like yesterday!  Nice punching points...
  •  Leadership (none / 1)

    Bush claims that his strength is "strong leadership and dedication". Here is what I think Kerry should say:

    Stubborness and refusal to admit failure/shortcomings or to accept constructive criticism does not equal or represent strong leadership.

    •  Like your idea but it needs to be simplified (none / 0)

      Bush claims consistent leadership so respond with a simple sound-bite ready:

      George Bush is consistent - consistently wrong on (insert issue here!)... you could also follow any of these up with and he is "scared and petrified." to talk about (insert issue here).

      See Post bellow for more

      I am Dyslexic, it is a battle (which I often lose) to write without error. Thanks in advance for putting up with my mistakes

      by jmorton on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:08:01 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  What about this then (none / 0)

        Stubborness and refusing to change to adapting circumstances does not represent strong leadership.

        True leaders are willing to accept constructive crticism and admit failure when they are wrong.

        •  yes yes yes - but you are missing the point (none / 0)

          you are correct in all you say - but how do you convey your argument to the general public in the fewest words - how do you turn a Bush positive talking point into a negative.

          Bush is Consistent - consistently wrong.

          we need sound bites - we need strong rhetoric if we are going to win this - yes follow up with strong fact and arguments but without a strong lead-in you have already lost your audience.

          I am Dyslexic, it is a battle (which I often lose) to write without error. Thanks in advance for putting up with my mistakes

          by jmorton on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:52:22 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  WRONG-WAY BUSH (none / 0)

            This why I like the label wrong-way

            It can be used over and over so effectively.

            It's a simple tag that applies to every issue.

            It is tag line that crosses all social lines and is easily understood.

            At the same time one uses it, it also reminds one that there is a
            RIGHT-WAY..... KERRY

            Today's problems are yesterday's solutions. Don Beck

            by Sherri in TX on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 07:38:49 AM PDT

            [ Parent ]

      •  Bush is decisive (none / 0)

        But there's no follow-through.

        He decisively led us into Afghanistan - a wise and necessary move.  But he has not followed through. And now the Taliban are regrouping. Once again Afghanistan is becoming a swamp (per Tom's post) of terrorist fanatics and warlords.

        The President decisively led us into war in Iraq - but without a plan to win the peace. Again -- no follow through.  And more American soldiers have died since Mr. Bush declared combat operations finished than in the months during the 'war'. And because there was no plan to win the peace, because the President tried to fight that war 'on the cheap,' foreign terrorists have now found a home in the chaos of Iraq.

        The President is decisive about the need to prevent unfriendly governments from getting their hands on WMDs. Or at least, he talks decisively.  But again - there's no followthrough. He went after Saddam, who it turned out didn't have any WMDs.  Meanwhile, North Korea and Iran have been busy building up their nuclear capacities.  

        Because Bush has shown no follow-through, no stamina, we live in a world where the number of  terrorist incidents and deaths worldwide is increasing. Because he has no follow-through, we live in a world where North Korea and Iran have far greater potential to threaten us and their neighbors with nuclear weapons than they did four years ago. And unless the President of the United States develops followthrough and stamina, these dangers will only grow.

        Bush is decisive - but decisiveness without followthrough is dangerous.

        (anyone with a shorter, pithier, one-word synonym for follow-through?)

  •  Before I even read all that, let me (none / 1)

    say that I have a feeling they are planning something big. I have this feeling that some time, in the next few weeks, they will drop an H-Bomb on Bush and Cheney. Now is just the time to do the warm ups, I suspect they feel.

    "But Democrats mustn't give up the fight. What's at stake isn't just the fate of their party, but the fate of America as we know it."-Paul Krugman

    by theprogressivemiddle on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:46:35 PM PDT

    •  If they are waiting then they are stupid (3.00 / 2)

      Flat out morons.   The campaign is now.  Hit Bush now.  

      Frankly, I think you are engaging in wishful thinking.  If they had anything it would be out there.  Kerry is just a crappy campaigner.

      •  Well, why do it now? (none / 0)

        It's Labor Day weekend. Bush is ahead and enjoying his bounce. Let him enoy it; let him get cocky. Then crush him.

        Of course, it's just a hunch.

        Perhaps the newly-positioned Clintonistas are working on something. Remember that they have only been there a few days, if that.

        "But Democrats mustn't give up the fight. What's at stake isn't just the fate of their party, but the fate of America as we know it."-Paul Krugman

        by theprogressivemiddle on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:56:12 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  On the subject of Kerry as campaigner . . . (none / 0)

        this piece from today's Salon.com is pretty disheartening.  I know that all of us are trying to stay positive and pumped up about Kerry's chances.  But Tim Grieve suggests in this article that Kerry is STILL rambling in his speeches and STILL is reluctant to go for the jugular.  I find this almost incomprehensible: after the Swift Boat smear, shouldn't Kerry be highly motivated and passionate, focused and on the attack?  Now that he's had to pull several daggers out of his back, any qualms that he may have had about going negative should be long gone.  And yet . . . Grieve's piece shows him batting back suggestions from aides and others to put a harder edge on his attack.  This election is CRITICAL; we cannot afford to have a loser challenging this dangerous, incompetent bozo.  I'm not saying that Kerry IS a loser; I'm just saying that it's awfully late to be finding your voice and fine-tuning your message down to a few, simple, easy-to-remember words.  Here's the link to Grieve's piece (Salon requires either a subscription or the viewing of an ad for access):

        http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/09/07/kerry_ohio/index.html

        "It is possible to fool all the people all the time -- when the government and press cooperate." -- George Seldes

        by Doofus on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 05:59:48 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Um (none / 0)

    The Republican convention very firmly reconnected Iraq with the war on terror (incorrectly, but firmly), so while I agree with the attack you outline, perhaps you should word it differently.

    So much for sticking with domestic policy . . . .

    Kerry will have to step up on terrorism/Iraq.

    Educating the public a bit would be great. Stay as optimistic as plausible but explain how screwed Iraq is now (we do not control, or dare visit, many cities without massive force). He has to show he can get us out OK with more than a Secret Plan because he gets it.

    •  what? (none / 0)

      the bush speech had five words on Iraq out of 5000. go see the NYT content analysis. Iraq was mentioned several times more at DNC than RNC. not sure what conventoins you were watching, WADR.
      •  Not just . . (none / 1)

        The whole "taking it to the terrorists" line. Also, Bush said
        "Because we acted to defend our country, the murderous regimes of Saddam Hussein and the Taliban are history, more than 50 million people have been liberated, and democracy is coming to the broader Middle East. . . . Despite ongoing acts of violence, Iraq now has a strong Prime Minister, a national council, and national elections are scheduled for January. . . . Free societies in the Middle East will be hopeful societies, which no longer feed resentments and breed violence for export. Free governments in the Middle East will fight terrorists instead of harboring them, and that helps us keep the peace."

        Also, see McCain's speech. The Iraq war is a response to 9/11 and was noble. Also Rudy tried the same thing. "5/5000 words" misses the content IMHO. Also see WaPost http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62435-2004Sep4.html

        On the big point, I agree that the connections are tenuous and ripe for attack.

        Nice post, btw

      •  Attack! Attack! Attack! (none / 1)

        You're right Tom.  Whether it's exactly your points or different ones, I'll let the "pros" hash out, but stop this be nice to Bush bull shit that dominated our convention and ATTACK!

        It's great to see a little constructive criticism and advice on the front page.  I have become very sick of reading the Mary Sunshine echo chamber.  Maybe collectively we can put back in place the Howard Dean spine transplant.  I sure hope they are listening!

        Patriotic, flag waving, radical centrist Howard Dean Democrat. Until we stand on principle and lose our fear of defeat we will never win.

        by rusrivman on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:21:59 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Nailed it brother. (none / 1)

    I only hope that it will get to the right people.

    I am part of the NDN here in SFO and will forward this blog in its entirety to the right people.  I will also follow up with the requisite calls.

    Time for us to kick the shit out of the faux-tough guy right.  It takes real strength to fight adversity while fighting the good fight on a separate front.  Being a liberal isn't being a wuss and we need to underscore that fact NOW!!

    Good luck to all and get this meme in the public conscience.

    He who gives up liberty in exchange for security is deserving of neither

    by joby on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:47:37 PM PDT

    •  If your argument is correct (none / 0)

      then Rove must be congratulated for setting the agenda of this race.  

      Do we want that?

      •  There is no argument... (3.50 / 2)

        Rove, unfortunately, has dictated the month of August.  Like it or not, dems the facts.  It is now up to K/E, as well as us, to use their[his] strength against them.  There is plenty of material to work with and the info-tainment anchors need to be engaged as well.  

        In a perfect world, you are right.  Then again, in that world Gore would have been rightfully in office and we wouldn't be having this discussion.

        Rove needs his ass kicked hard in the press and the tiller ripped from his glutenous little hands.

        He who gives up liberty in exchange for security is deserving of neither

        by joby on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:02:16 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  Month of August (none / 0)

          is not the race.  There are other launch vehicles for strategies besides conventions.
          •  Maybe you missed this little controversy... (4.00 / 3)

            called the "Swift Boat" liars.

            It had a pretty big impact in August.

            It had Rove's grubby little fingerprints all over it and it (again, like it or not) had some influence on undecideds.

            You are correct that the elections are not based on August launch vehicles.  But early, impacting slime needs to be mitigated in Sept. and Oct. so that it is eventually a non-issue.

            The issues are: economy, health care, economy, jobs, economy, Iraq, economy.  In that order.

            K/E will address those in stumps around the country.  But Rove's slime will be in the background and should not be dismissed.

            He who gives up liberty in exchange for security is deserving of neither

            by joby on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:13:39 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

    •  No. No. No. (none / 0)

      Mr. Schaller's #3 piece of advice is a recipe for disaster.

      If we start calling Bush chicken to debate or speak openly we lower his expectations for the debates.  That will make it nearly impossible for Kerry to "win" them since Kerry will have a huge threshhold to pass and Bush will have a very low one.  As we saw in 2000, it doesn't even matter who the public perceives as the winner while they watch, it only matters who controls the post-debate spin and if we spend the lead-up talking about how scared Bush is of blowing his candidacy then, assuming Bush delivers his usual folksy BS without some horrible gaffe, all the right-wing cable networks will spend the post-debate period talking about how Kerry didn't get what he needed from the debate.

      •  I disagree.... (none / 0)

        If Kerry doesn't keep pounding on the need for debates, Bush will weasel out of at least one, maybe more.  Or just as bad, have his people pull rank and influence the acceptable topics or install pro-Bush loaded questions.  

        What we've got to do is have faith that, given a level playing field, Kerry will wipe the floor with Bush.  If we can't count on that, why do we even think that Kerry can win?  Kerry's position on the issues must be strong and must reverberate with honesty and righteousness.  (Don't mean to get religious here...)  He's got to make Bush look like what he is, arrogant, stubborn, and Wrong on the issues that matter to middle America.  

        I know Kerry can do it... if he's given the chance in 3 (or more) debates.  I have to trust that the majority of Americans are not stupid to swallow the Bush bait-and-switch routine.  

        I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat. Will Rogers.

        by tomathawl on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 08:14:37 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  Strategically correct, tactically wrong (none / 0)

          Yes, we want three debates, and I feel pretty confident that is going to happen.

          However, what we don't want is two weeks of stories centering on the debate about debates. That is a loser for us.

          First, it takes away from discussion of the issues and of Bush's failed record.

          Second, it  lowers expecations for them.  If the big story going into the debates is that Bush was afraid to do them, then when he doesn't drool on himself he will (falsely) be declared the winner.

          Frankly, I think Kerry will clean his clock on substance, but maybe not on style.  In fact, I'm quite nervous that given the right-wing spin machine that is our television news and Bush's BS folksy style, we may not be declared the winner at all.

          While I want three and I hope we work hard behind the scenes to make it happen, frankly I wouldn't be upset with two because then it was give us the opportunity to pound him for being afraid to talk about his record .

          Beyond that, I think we ought to appear to be afraid of a heavily stylized format (like town hall meetings) because Bush has such an advantage in connecting with the average voter.  This way, when Kerry comes across empathetic, personal and knowledgable we'll  be the ones who exceeded expectations for change.

          •  I'm obviously not the average voter... (none / 0)

            Because Bush connects with me like a cattle prod connects with an Angus.  I see his face on the TV from across the room, or hear his whiny voice mangling the English language and I leap to the remote and change to the Discovery channel, A&E, anything, just to get rid of him.  Having lived in Texas for the last 30 years, I guess I just got too much of him and the rest of his family.  All of them make me want to retch in their laps, ala Dad.

            Pass the broccoli, I need some ammunition.

            I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat. Will Rogers.

            by tomathawl on Wed Sep 08, 2004 at 06:00:13 AM PDT

            [ Parent ]

  •  governor races... (none / 0)

    how is it that there so many republican governors in the north east and in hawaii...isnt that supposed to be our territory??
    •  maine dem gov (none / 0)

      Not all in NE are repub.  Gov. Baldacci is working hard for us.  Check out Dirigio health - coverage for all...
    •  We won back (none / 0)

      the governorships in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, after a few years of GOP control.

      It may be due to a weakness in the candidates, it may be because they are so moderate that they could easily be Democrats, or it may be that people aren't upset with the way things are going, which is probably the most likely answer.

      "But Democrats mustn't give up the fight. What's at stake isn't just the fate of their party, but the fate of America as we know it."-Paul Krugman

      by theprogressivemiddle on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:53:59 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  other lefties (none / 0)

      i think that the leftwing vote gets divided by other candidates...
    •  Dem Govs in Red States (none / 0)

      OTOH, there are Democratic governors in KS, OK, WY, etc.
    •  Even liberals less concerned about exec positions (none / 0)

      Because voting for a Republican Governor doesn't really help Frist, DeLay, and Bush except in teeny coat-tail effect (OK, and in some states a role in redistricting), it's easier to vote for a Republican who looks like (maybe wrongly) a better manager and executive than the Democrat. See under: Maryland, Massachusetts, California.

      Even I might do that, say if Tom Campbell had ever won a CA GOP governor primary, over the craven and maladroit Grey Davis, while I would never consider voting for a GOP legislator.

      •  Repub Gov in Mass (none / 0)

        Mitt Romney is almost as much of an empty suit as FratBoy, though he did actually make a boatload of money with his Harvard MBA.

        Repubs have owned the State House corner office here for 15+ years almost entirely because the Dems have owned the legislature for as long as anyone remembers, and the electorate seems reluctant to turn it all over to them.

        They've also run mostly mediocre candidates and lousy campaigns. That might change next time around, or maybe not.

        But here's one thing I guarantee - Mitt Romney isn't going to make it on the national level in 2008, 2012, or any other time in this century.

        There's simply nothing in him to keep from being quickly eaten alive at that level. You heard it here first.

        "I don't just want Kerry to kick FratBoy's ass...I want to see him rip Bush a new a--hole." Me

    •  They are fiscal conservatives, social liberals... (none / 0)

      ...which is what the public at large is.  If the Republicans would drop all the Religious Right crap and just focused on cutting taxes, they would crush the Democrats.  These governors are proof of this.  Arnie is another example-nobody can claim he is a member of the Religious Right.
  •  It's Clobberin' Time! (none / 0)

    To borrow a phrase from the Fantastic Four's The Thing, that is.

    This campaign needs a little less Bob Shrum, and a little more Michael Whouley.

    Liberals drive me crazy. Unfortunately, conservatives are even worse.

    by goblue72 on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:48:55 PM PDT

  •  Bush afraid to speak (none / 1)

    i'd add to number 3 that Bush promised the public to deliver 5 speeches on Iraq and quit after one.  I'll let you all imagine how far Bush would have pounded Kerry into the ground if he "flip-flopped" on a similar pledge.  The point is that Bush is "scared and petrified" to talk to the American public about Iraq.
    •  I sort of like that (none / 0)

      you may be on to something along the lines of "rich-kid quitter."  Gave up on speeches, gave up on Iraq, gave up on Mars, Gave up on Immigration. Kinda' nicely cuts into his whole resolve thing.
    •  Yes, I never understood why more wasn't made of it (none / 1)

      That Bush just casually decided not to do what he said he'd do, isn't proof of "He says what he means, and he means what he says."

      Absolutely think #1 is inspired to the nth degree. They did make a big deal about Iraq being the major front in the WoT -- they need to be reminded of their abject failure at planning it, winning it, and getting our soldiers out of there.

      It also opens the door to pointing out that Bush has done to a far greater degree what he criticized Gore (and Clinton) for in the 2000 debates:

      http://www.debates.org/pages/trans2000b.html

      From Gore-Bush debate on October 11, 2000

      MODERATOR: Sure, absolutely, sure. Somalia.

      BUSH: Started off as a humanitarian mission and it changed into a nation-building mission, and that's where the mission went wrong. The mission was changed. And as a result, our nation paid a price. And so I don't think our troops ought to be used for what's called nation-building. I think our troops ought to be used to fight and win war.

      [snip]

      BUSH: But we can't be all things to all people in the world, Jim. And I think that's where maybe the vice president and I begin to have some differences. I'm worried about overcommitting our military around the world. I want to be judicious in its use. You mentioned Haiti. I wouldn't have sent troops to Haiti. I didn't think it was a mission worthwhile. It was a nation building mission, and it was not very successful. It cost us billions, a couple billions of dollars, and I'm not so sure democracy is any better off in Haiti than it was before.

      [Contrast this to the 200 billion spent so far in helping to 'bring democracy' to Iraq]

      [snip]

      BUSH: I don't think so. I think what we need to do is convince people who live in the lands they live in to build the nations. Maybe I'm missing something here. I mean, we're going to have kind of a nation building core from America? Absolutely not. Our military is meant to fight and win war. That's what it's meant to do. And when it gets overextended, morale drops. I strongly believe we need to have a military presence in the peninsula, not only to keep the peace in the peninsula, but to keep regional stability. And I strongly believe we need to keep a presence in NATO, but I'm going to be judicious as to how to use the military. It needs to be in our vital interest, the mission needs to be clear, and the extra [I think he meant 'exit'] strategy obvious.

  •  Amen! (3.50 / 2)

    Attack!

    Attack hard, and attack often. I hope to God someone on Kerry's team reads this webpage tonight.

    The Republicans will win if they don't get hit back - it's that simple. I've been saying this kind of stuff at work for weeks, and it works. Nothing shuts up the GOP faithful like brazn criticism of Shrub.

    Miserable failure, war on terror a disaster, economy a shambles, million jobs lost, Bush chicken to debate because he's a complete moron - there is no end to the ammunition we can use for these type of criticisms.

    -What have you got that a man could drink with just a minimum risk of blindness and death.

    by Toadvine on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:50:11 PM PDT

  •  Yes, but (none / 1)

    I like the tone, but the author seems to be in basic agreement with the general strategy of having a US military presence (acting in the role of a policeman) in the Middle East for a generation or more. Why link Iraq with the War on Al-Queda? If Kerry uses that to hit Bush on his handling of that, then if Kerry is elected he now is held to a standard of "winning" in Iraq in order to be successful against al-queda. It also blunts the attacks against Bush's credibilty that are so effective, because it sweeps away the whole discussion of the lies that got us into war. And then the talk about going soft...will a President Kerry now have to take the hardline on every incident that occurs in Iraq?

    Its one thing to win the election, but if by doing so you box yourself in policywise...I don't know if that is very wise.

    In any case, I am smart enough to know that there is a lot I don't know about campaigns. So I won't be sending the KE campaign any memos on how to fight the GOP.

    Might post once in awhile, though. :)

    •  Exactly (none / 1)

      Hoping that Al-Qaeda goes on vacation while we indulge in Iraq is not a strategy.  

      "Fighting abroad so that we don't have to fight at home" falsely implies that the enemy at home is the enemy abroad.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  

      Might there be a small problem with Afghanistan opium money sprouting right next to the Nuclear Home Depot wannabe that is Pakistan?

    •  An Analogy of a Miserable Failure (none / 0)

      Hi Zach,

      I think I understand where you're coming from here...and it makes a lot of sense. But, it also reminds me of a conversation I was having with a conservative libertarian this past week.

      The guy has been someone who has been doing everything he can to forward the flip flopper notion to everyone he meets. I've told him that I think the whole charge is idiotic and that I don't subscribe to the notion that an adult making serious decisions could be portrayed as a 'flip flopper' and have it stick.

      After Bush dropped his ' We can't win the WoT' bombshell, this same guy didn't want to accept that his hero was mortal just like Kerry. That they both flip flop, because they're both human. He didn't seem comfortable with this, maybe because the Republicans really aren't humans -- but I digress. He tried to throw it in my face saying, "Oh, you don't point it out when Kerry does it, but when Bush does it -- that's different?"

      I explain that I'm merely pointing it out to him as an example that everyone changes their mind from time-to-time (if they're smart) -- and that the whole notion was just ridiculous in the first place. In the same way, I don't think Kerry needs to say that he believes that Iraq is the main front on the WoT. All he has to do is remind everyone that, to Bush, it most certainly was.

      If Bush was supposedly telling us the truth, and he believed Iraq to be that integral to our winning the entire WoT enchilada, then he's really made a mess of the whole WoT, not just Iraq.

      Does that make any sense?

      •  Screwing up big time (none / 0)

        "If Bush was supposedly telling us the truth, and he believed Iraq to be that integral to our winning the entire WoT enchilada, then he's really made a mess of the whole WoT, not just Iraq.

        Does that make any sense?"

        It makes perfect sense.

      •  It does but (none / 0)

        I am concerned that whomever is elected will get in and basically carry on the same policy. On CSPAN this weekend there was a thought provoking presentation (by a Thomas Barnett?) about how the govt and military should be planning strategically for the next several decades. He views the challenge as one of integrating Africa and the Middle East into the world economy by changing (forcibly if necessary) some of its leaders and culture. He distinguishes this policing (which sets the minimum rules) from empire-building (which sets all the rules). Basically I feel that he identifies the problem, and some of the solution, but it concerns me that there is this elite, policy-wonk mentality that appears to boil down to a crusade.

        I don't pretend to be an expert, and I realize that we cannot ignore problem situations in the world, but there are different ways of dealing with these problems.

        I want to make sure we get the guys that got us on 9-11.

        I am not interested in starting some multi-generational cold war/police action for some crusade, whether that be on behalf Christian fundamentalists or current upper middle class  sensibilities about globalization.

        Its very late. I hope that makes sense. Remember, its not the War on Terror, its the War on al-Queda!

        Goodnight, all.

  •  Giving control of cities over to insurgents (none / 1)

    Why don't they make an issue over giving a greater share of Iraq over to insurgents an issue? It basically says that we are backing down, which is both idiotic and does not fit with the persona Bush wants to display.

    Of course, people would ask Kerry what his plan is, and unless he has one, he could be stepping into a landmine.

    "But Democrats mustn't give up the fight. What's at stake isn't just the fate of their party, but the fate of America as we know it."-Paul Krugman

    by theprogressivemiddle on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 08:51:41 PM PDT

  •  Re: #3 Scared Straight (4.00 / 6)

    If Bush refuses a third debate, Kerry should come back with an offer to let George bring along Dick, as he did with the 9/11 Commission...
    •  asdf (4.00 / 2)

      that'd be incredible. 'don't worry george, you won't be under oath this time either.'

      if ron reagan dyed his hair, and i'm not sayin' he did, it was only to show his strength to the communists - hank hill

      by leif on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:12:36 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  Great one...how about using Girlie Men here, too? (none / 0)

      I don't think the Girlie Men thing has taken on the same connotation as the Flip Flopper thing. I don't think the Republicans own this one.

      Couldn't Kerry & Co., along with calling Bush scared to debate, come out and call Bush a Girlie Man if he refuses to three debates?

      Use their language against them, before they say it so much that they own it entirely.

    •  Absolutely (none / 0)

      And use "scared and terrified" not "petrified" -- "terrified" just sounds better.
    •  Disagree (none / 0)

      That's a funny line, but the last thing we need to do is lower Bush's expectations for the debates.  

      Unfortunately we're in a box.  If it gets in public that Bush doesn't want a third deabte, but we do, then it elevates our status as the favorite in the debate.  In other words, by arguing for more debates -- or calling Bush chicken -- we lower Bush's expectations. Then, when Bush doesn't lose his cool during the debates, every right-wing media outlet, like CNN and MSNBC, will talk about how Bush got what he needed from the debates and Kerry didn't (regardless of who actuall did better).

      •  Aren't 3 debates 'common-practice?' (none / 0)

        I don't know much about this in historical terms, but I was under the impression that the debate schedule is posed not by Kerry, but by the official debate board (or what not -- I'm not sure the name of the group...doh!)

        You're right about worrying about getting cornered here, though, because it sure seems like that's exactly what's happening in certain cases lately to anything Kerry says. Can the Kerry campaign frame their wish to get away from negative ad dialogue -- and show that they'd rather sit down in front of the American people and discuss the issues in an adult manner?

        Then again, since Bush thinks we're all a bunch of 10 year olds, I guess that explains why he doesn't place as much importance on talking all 'serious-like' in front of the kids.

        And we all know we have a certain Hannitized segment that go around acting like a bunch of 10 year olds -- they can't handle the debates. Big words and all, you know? :o)

        Maybe Bush's comment wasn't so off-the-wall, on second glance -- especially when you look a the behavior of his base.

  •  Awesome (none / 0)

    commentary. One nice attack for the "petrified"  plan.  A perfect example of Bush petrified is the 7 minutes in the class room. He was notified the 2nd plane had hit, but 2 other planes were still out there flying towardes their targets. And he did NOTHING. Didn't even ask if any more attacks where incoming.Just sat there petrified.
  •  Bush is a consistent leader (none / 0)

    consistently wrong - from now to the election - Kerry and every Democrat and surrogate need to repeat over and over - every-time they start to discuss an issue.

    George Bush is consistent - consistently wrong on Iraq...

    George Bush is consistent - consistently wrong on Steel Tariffs...

    George Bush is consistent - consistently wrong on Senior Drug Benifits...

    George Bush is consistent - consistently wrong on (insert issue here!)... you could also follow any of these up with and he is "scared and petrified." to talk about it.

    I love your 4 point plan but we need a counter to the RNC's Kerry is a Flip-flopper - and Kerry has already start in this direction with W stands for Wrong.

    I am Dyslexic, it is a battle (which I often lose) to write without error. Thanks in advance for putting up with my mistakes

    by jmorton on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:00:30 PM PDT

  •  'It's the bungled War on Terror, Stupid..' (none / 0)

    OBL is still plotting and setting attacks in motion, lo these many years, while GWB fiddled his tune about Iraq.

    WOT is not a strength, it is only perceived as such.  Such perceptions can be changed. Get to it.

    The public gets it about the bungled economy.  They can get the WOT, too.

    Three years to get OBL.  Three years to fix the economy.  Failed.  GWB has screwed up every thing he has touched, all his life.  Congenital Screwup.  Four more years?  Nah.

    James Webb is a bigot. And an uber hawk. Stephanie Herseth is a bigot. Harold Ford, Jr. is a bigot. And so are those who support them.

    by NorCalJim on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:00:31 PM PDT

    •  Bungled works (none / 0)

      I've been trying hard to push the Bush is a bumbler meme. Bungle/bumble are practically interchangable, though. We just need to pick one and stick with it, repeating it relentlessly until it really sticks.

      Rob

      •  Yep. Not mutually exclusive, either (none / 0)

        In fact, he bungled in part because he bumbled, tsk, tsk.

        James Webb is a bigot. And an uber hawk. Stephanie Herseth is a bigot. Harold Ford, Jr. is a bigot. And so are those who support them.

        by NorCalJim on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 07:06:11 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

    •  On not getting Osama... (none / 1)

      It's extremely tempting to hit Bush & Co. with the line "You have not gotten Osama". It's also dangerous. It's possible (unlikely, but possible) that Osama is even now cooling his heels in Guantanamo or elsewhere, and Rove is just waiting for the appropriate moment (like the last week of October) to pull him, rabbit-like, out of his hat. But you don't have to be an aluminum-hat wearing paranoid like me to imagine that by great good fortune we or the Pakistanis or somebody decides that the bounty is worth it, and the SOB OBL is actually caught between now and the election.

      If Kerry & Co harp on this particular failure, and if OBL winds up in US hands, then maybe he gives too much to them.

      Frankly, at this point, OBL is only one out of many who wish us ill. It would be great to have him on trial for 9/11, but even with OBL out of the way, the war on terror will be far from over.

      •  I agree... (none / 0)

        that the Osama thing needs to be dropped for all of the reasons you mentioned.

        Carrie French, age 19, died in Iraq on June 5, 2005. Why?

        by Susan S on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 03:22:09 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  Yes, but... (none / 0)

        Here's the problem: Assuming Rove pulls him out anyway, what do we do?  If we set up the argument now that Bush has waited too long to get Osama, then when they do catch him we can argue that Bush's failure to do it sooner has given al Qaeda time to re-group.  If we say nothing about it now, then it will seem like we are just offering a political response because we are desparate.  

        Also, I think an October bin Laden find could backfire on Bush like the Madrid bombing thing. In that case, the government lost because the public felt like they were being manipulated (not becaues they blamed the government for the terrorist act, as the Republicans have falsely claimed).  It's possible that if people think Bush is losing, they might perceive the timing as political and manipulative.  I'm not saying that's a likely public reaction, but if we remind people that Bush hasn't focused on getting bin Laden until election time, maybe we have a better chance of managing the aftermath.

        •  My comment on Sept 4. (none / 0)

          Dunno, (none / 1)

          but clearly the best thing to do is prepare for either contingency with a campaign theme we can work either way, if OBL is caught or not.  In the three years since 911, how many diabolical plots has bin Laden hatched?  How many has he developed and financed?  How many has he set in motion and which will now run independently whether he is caught tomarrow or not?
          The wrong theme is to criticise in a simple way that he has not been caught, because he soon might be.  The right theme is to criticise by asking what damage has been done since George let him get away and became preoccuppied with Iraq as a first priority.  This works as dereliction, whether he is caught before the election or not.

          James Webb is a bigot. And an uber hawk. Stephanie Herseth is a bigot. Harold Ford, Jr. is a bigot. And so are those who support them.

          by NorCalJim on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 07:02:41 AM PDT

          [ Parent ]

      •  My comment on this on Sept 4 (none / 0)

        Dunno, (none / 1)

        but clearly the best thing to do is prepare for either contingency with a campaign theme we can work either way, if OBL is caught or not.  In the three years since 911, how many diabolical plots has bin Laden hatched?  How many has he developed and financed?  How many has he set in motion and which will now run independently whether he is caught tomarrow or not?
        The wrong theme is to criticise in a simple way that he has not been caught, because he soon might be.  The right theme is to criticise by asking what damage has been done since George let him get away and became preoccuppied with Iraq as a first priority.  This works as dereliction, whether he is caught before the election or not.

        James Webb is a bigot. And an uber hawk. Stephanie Herseth is a bigot. Harold Ford, Jr. is a bigot. And so are those who support them.

        by NorCalJim on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 07:04:09 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  Osama is almost certainly dead. (none / 0)

        There was a known time where Bush and Co. wanted the Pakistanis to produce him-the Democratic convention.  It didn't happen then-and the fact they pushed the Pakistanis to look for him means that Bush doesn't have him either.  He mostly like died within the last year or two, either from an airstrike or illness.  His body was probably cremated or buried somewhere where it will never be found.
      •  I disagree (none / 0)

        Why did it take three years?
        If they pull OBL out the hat for the October Surprise, respond, "what took you so long?"

        "With Liberty and Justice for All" Economic -7.88 / Social -6.46

        by ohshenandoah on Tue Sep 07, 2004 at 11:58:37 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  You Need a Closing Argument (none / 1)

    After establishing that Bush is incompetent in Iraq/WoT, scared to confront Kerry in an open forum, and balks/freezes up (think of his expression in the classroom when told of the attacks) in the face of danger, you have to close the deal.

    You remind voters that Kerry is at his best under pressure, is competent with lots of great ideas, and you ask, "If the President says he cannot win the war on terror, why would someone vote for him?"

    ...that may not be God talking to you, George

    by daxie on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:03:06 PM PDT

  •  Grammer Police: YOUR not You're (none / 0)

    Check YOUR opening sentence.

    Bush will be impeached.

    by jgkojak on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:03:40 PM PDT

  •  You're reputation, Tom (2.00 / 2)

    is that you is a college professor or some such?  So its funny that your making such a silly typo in the first line of you're excellent post.
  •  great post, all items (none / 0)

    great strategy  on bush petrified and on bush dynasty.  re: kennedy parallel - comment upthread -; the kennedys were/ are interested  in public service; the bushes in exploiting the public for their own gain. people know or sense this;  
  •  This is a great post. Somebody send it to Kerry. (none / 0)

    It has been proven over the last month that the public only responds to negative attacks. The Swift boat assholes had their effect as has the negative R.N.Convention.

    Kerry needs to come down hard on Bush and define him as what he is--a failure as a President. The War, the economy, foreign policy are all failures. Break it down and break it down hard.

  •  Now, this is a plan! (none / 0)

    I agree with the previous criticisms of point #4, Tom -- you're absolutely right about it, of course, but pointing it out won't help the Kerry campaign.

    Actually, losing #4 will help focus the talking points on #1-#3.  You have them exactly right.

    If I may make a couple of suggestions for further talking points which buttress these:

    Re #1 (Iraq/terrorism):  I would point out that 1) Bush Sr. et al. supported Saddam Hussein specifically because of his heading a secularist government in a sea of fundamentalist Islamist regimes, most notably Iran and Saudi Arabia; and that 2)  the U.S. invasion of Iraq and our complete failure to secure the borders in its aftermath have led to Iraq's having become a new Middle Eastern haven for terrorist Islamists (not to mention the unsupportable invasion itself's having done more to recruit new terrorists than anything Osama bin Laden could have done, according to a recent nonpartisan study), and have made life much more difficult for the Christian population.  (It is worth noting that this was the only Middle Eastern state outside of Lebanon which had Christians in active political roles -- Iraqi Christians do not believe this will be possible anymore.)

    Re #2 (Balker Bush and the $87 billion appropriation) -- Bush balks not only out of fear but because of "priorities" which supercede national security and the welfare of our armed forces.  A perfect example, which needs to be shouted from one end of this country to the other, is that the White House threatened Congress with vetoing the $87 billion appropriation bill if Congress did not remove a provision extending Tri-care (the military health insurance program) to reservists and National Guardsmen.  (I've heard this numerous times on Randi Rhodes, but I keep forgetting the name of the White House staffer who penned the memo -- yes, there's documentary proof!)

    I wish for once either Kerry or one of his surrogates would just put it this way:  "Kerry voted for the version of the appropriations bill which would expect those making over $200,000 a year to help pay for it, as opposed to the version which would require that our children pay for it over the next generation or two.  Bush threatened to veto the version of the bill which would have provided health care coverage to the families of the men and women he has yanked from their normal lives, and the Republican Congressional leadership backed him up.  That's real support for our troops, huh?"  One could then segue into the numerous other examples of Bush's lack of support for troops and veterans, including proposed cuts in combat pay for soldiers, away-from-home pay intended to help soldiers' families survive economically, and veterans' benefits.

    Another perfect example of Bush's "priorities", which supercede national security, is the Bob Graham bomb about the White House's covering up Saudi support of the hijackers, and actually getting the FBI to help in the cover-up.

    By the way, this could start a whole area of investigative reporting, particularly the FBI angle.  Is it coincidental that this is also the agency which has been intimidating elderly black absentee voters in Florida?  Just how much is the FBI in Li'l Shrub's back pocket anyway?

    I do not suffer fools gladly

    by GreekGirl on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:23:38 PM PDT

  •  Soft on Fallujah? (4.00 / 3)

    From #2: "The Islamic terrorist threat in Iraq is growing because, in the moment of truth in Falluja, Bush balked..."

    Hundreds of civilians were killed in Fallujah, essentially in retaliation for the deaths of four civilian security contractors. The fighting there was kicked off by the mutilation murders of four Blackwater operatives. When US forces moved in to clamp down on the town, several weeks of fighting broke out, with dozens of US casualties, hundreds of Iraqi fighters dead, and an estimated six or seven hundred civilians dead. Sure, we could have flattened the city, plenty of people were advocating just that course of action, but the number of civilians involved would have been many times what it was. Taking the city house-by-house would have gotten hundreds of US forces killed.

    This isn't a good plan of attack on Bush, unless you've got some way to pry an insurgency out of a city without just wiping the city from the face of the earth.

    •  ditto (none / 0)

      I liked a lot of things Tom had to say in this post, but I was very disturbed by his reference to Fallujah.

      It rings of that false macho... like we should have been prepared to kill them all.  Downright disgusting if you ask me.

      Some folks trust to reason. Others trust to might. I don't trust to nothing. But I know it come out right.

      by dalemac on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 11:26:07 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  Thanks (none / 0)

      I am surprised that noone but you has a problem with that point.
    •  Balked in Fallujah? (none / 0)

      From what I remember, Bush did exactly the opposite. In retaliation for the deaths of four civillian contractors, he ordered attacks on the city's civillian population. Bombing runs on residential areas, snipers shooting anything that moved, that kind of thing. That's why the inhabitants of Fallujah became so anti-US. Despite their attempts to surrender, the US just kept killing them by the dozens.

  •  Another fresh Bushism (none / 0)

    From Reuters

    We've got an issue in America. Too many good docs are getting out of business. Too many OB-GYNs aren't able to practice their love with women all across this country.

  •  Amen (none / 0)

    Well put and calling for attention....which I think is already happening.  

    Netroots to Kerry / Edwards:  HELP IS ON THE WAY.

    I agree strongly on surrogates and on pushing Bush hard on running away from his record.  "He doesn't like to talk about his record because, like his record in the business world, there's not MUCH accomplishment."

    George Bush is all HAT and no CATTLE when it comes to results.

    As for the family thing...don't take the dynasty angle so hard....do this:

    We had a President named George Bush twice now:  are you happy with the results?  Two recessions, two wars in Iraq, two blundered, misinformed tax policies, two bloated deficits, two failures to reform health care, social security and intelligence.

    My friends, the APPLE does not fall far from the TREE.

  •  F'ing A, Tom! (none / 0)

    This is the winning playbook, IMHO.

    Especially #4 - boiling it down to playground politics. It may be that surrogates are the ones to portray the President in this accurate way, but it must be done.

    1-3 are masterful and will be highly effective. Sing it from the rooftops people - and get this to the Kerry crew, stat!

    Simple easily digestible chinks for the media and the swing voters - and DISCIPLINE in hitting these points repeatedly and mercilessly over the next 2 months.

    I saw a chink in Mary Matlin's armour on MTP today - Carville and the rest need to stay simple and specific.

  •  On TV ads (none / 0)

    Regarding the point in your last paragraph: MoveOn PAC has a series of just that sort of ads. Real people, no candidates. Straight talk. By Errol Morris.
  •  Ask him this (none / 1)

    Is it true that in you briefing with Clinton during the transition in 2001, Clinton told you that Bin Laden was his number one concern?  Clinton says he told you this. Why did you ignore him (not to mention all the other warnings that came later)?  If you missed it then what are you missing now, etc.

    Bush's tenure is a trial of incompetence. Point it out, over and over.

    Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter - Martin Luther King

    by Do Something on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 09:44:16 PM PDT

  •  Scared and Petrified (none / 1)

    Why is Kerry afraid to run a commercial showing Bush sitting in a classroom "scared and petrified" while the U.S. is under attack on 9/11?  This was devastating in Fahrenheit 9/11 and I don't know why Kerry or moveon.org isn't using it.  It's a direct hit on the hero myth that Bush's handlers have created for him.
    •  Exactly right. (none / 1)

      The "scared" theme is the overarching attack theme that will work better than any other.

      It is the equivalent of Rove's flip-flopper tag on Kerry: go after the opponent's perceived strength.

      Hit Bush with ads on the My Pet Goat followed by his running to Louisiana and then to a hole in Nebraksa.  

      I can just see the video of ordinary people now:

      "I'm not saying the president is yellow, he just ran when we were under attack."

      "He looked like a deer caught in headlights... and then we found out he was hiding in Nebraska somewhere."

      "I thought he gave some fine speeches after 9/11 when his handlers told him what to say, but the day of the attack he apparently ran to Nebraska.  I was embarrassed for him."

      "He didn't come back to Washington until Dan Quayle urged him to on CNN."

    •  I Don't Know (4.00 / 2)

      ... but I agree. Picture this, if you will (most likely an ad from Move-On.org):

      Across the TV screen, a picture of Andrew Card whispering in Bush's ear about the second plane hitting the WTC, as Bush sits in the Florida classroom.

      Then fade-away to a heading that reads: George Bush: Bold. Then 7 seconds of Bush just sitting there in the classroom.

      Fade-away to next heading: George Bush: Consistent. 7 more seconds of Bush's silence and twitching.

      Fade-away to next heading: George Bush: Decisive. 7 more seconds of "deer-in-the-headlights."

      Large heading: If we can't afford seven minutes, can this country afford 4 more years of George Bush as President?

      For those of you with public speaking experience, seven seconds of dead air can seem like a lifetime. Showing Shrub in this way really nails him and exposes his mythical strength on the issues he prides himself on the most.

      McCain: "I think that clearly my fortunes have a lot to do with what's happening in Iraq" ... Buh-bye!

      by RevJoe on Mon Sep 06, 2004 at 10:23:52 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Some great ideas and some, frankly, horrible ones (none / 0)

    Let me take 'em one by one.

    1. Sorry. This is the worst one. If we reconnect the war on terror with the war on Iraq then his ratings for the war on Iraq will rise.  Tom, you know Iraq has nothing to do with the war on terror... why should we con the American people into thinking it does? If they buy the "we're fighting them over there so that we don't have to fight them here" line then we're truly dead.

    2.  Yes!  Amen!  Just simpler.  Tora Bora, Tora Bora, Tora Bora!  And cut a lot from "we'll smoke 'em out of their caves" and "Wanted: Dead or Alive!" to "Honestly, I don't think about him much."

    3. Scared and Petrified! Yes! Good thinking ahead. Oh, I hope they hit that note.

    4. For you and me, dynasty is a turn-off.  But not for everyone. Check out the coverage of the British Royals or the Kennedy clan if you're in doubt about that.  I think this is a mis-read.

    Glad to read your ideas though!
  •  Amazed (none / 1)

    I am amazed that John Kerry veteran of Senate races and the Dem primaries has surrounded himself with such rank amateurs when it comes to campaigning.  Surely his luck can't hold out for this biggest of races.  If only he knew there were hundreds, literally hundre