September 29, 2004

KERRY IN THE BALANCE:

How to Debate George Bush (AL GORE, 9/29/04, NY Times)

In the coming debates, Senator Kerry has an opportunity to show voters that today American troops and American taxpayers are shouldering a huge burden with no end in sight because Mr. Bush took us to war on false premises and with no plan to win the peace. Mr. Kerry has an opportunity to demonstrate the connection between job losses and Mr. Bush's colossal tax break for the wealthy. And he can remind voters that Mr. Bush has broken his pledge to expand access to health care.

Senator Kerry can also use these debates to speak directly to voters and lay out a hopeful vision for our future. If voters walk away from the debates with a better understanding of where our country is, how we got here and where each candidate will lead us if elected, then America will be the better for it. The debate tomorrow should not seek to discover which candidate would be more fun to have a beer with. As Jon Stewart of the "The Daily Show'' nicely put in 2000, "I want my president to be the designated driver.''

The debates aren't a time for rhetorical tricks. It's a time for an honest contest of ideas. Mr. Bush's unwillingness to admit any mistakes may score him style points. But it makes hiring him for four more years too dangerous a risk. Stubbornness is not strength; and Mr. Kerry must show voters that there is a distinction between the two.


Accidental insight from Mr. Gore who if John Kerry had any ideas or a record of achievement he was running on would presumably have mentioned them. It is the absence of either, and the mistaken assumption that just being Anybody But Bush would be sufficient, that leaves the Democrats with a candidate who has nothing to say that's not negative.

Posted by Orrin Judd at September 29, 2004 7:31 AM
Comments

Thank God this clown is not president.

Posted by: pchuck at September 29, 2004 9:57 AM

The greatest political mistake of the last few decades has got to be that day when Algore came out to the Rose Garden and announced his undying loyaltiy to Slick Willy. If he'd instead said that he found perjury to be a disqualification for the presidency, and called for Slick to emulate one of his predecessors, he could be coasting to a second reelection right now.

Posted by: Raoul Ortega at September 29, 2004 12:44 PM

Raoul:

No wonder Gore has gone crazy. Has anyone from the press ever asked him about it?

Posted by: jim hamlen at September 29, 2004 2:10 PM

Thinking about Al's performance in the '00 debates, I wonder if the agreement to mandate the candidates don't leave their podium to cross the stage was the idea of the Bush people or the Kerry folks.

Posted by: John at September 29, 2004 2:47 PM

Too bad Bush can't hand Kerry a Form 180, and ask him to sign it on the spot.

But I'll bet Kerry does something, anything to break out of the ground rules. He almost has to.

Posted by: ratbert at September 29, 2004 3:35 PM

Kerry's not going to release his military records, regardless of what happens.

Posted by: Michael Herdegen at September 30, 2004 7:00 AM

I loved when Alpha Male Al crossed over to Bush's podium. I half-expected him to lift his leg and urinate on it, marking his territory like my Corgi.

Posted by: Bart at September 30, 2004 8:37 AM
« THERE'S NO BUBBA TO CARRY HIM HOME THIS TIME: | Main | OBLIGATORY CONFEDERATE REFERENCE: »