July 23, 2004
View From Lodi, CA: Why Kerry Will Win
By Joe Guzzardi
On the eve of the Democratic
National Convention, I'll make a few predictions.
Unlike
2000, you won't have to wait six weeks to learn the
2004 presidential election winner. In fact, as a Pacific
Time Zone resident, I'm planning an early night.
Despite current polls that show
George W. Bush and John Kerry even, I anticipate a
comfortable Kerry victory. And before you dismiss my
prognosticating skills, consider that I have projected a
rocky re-election road for Bush since 2002—long before
any print journalist dared to even think it.
I am not a
John Kerry fan or supporter. I will not vote for
him. But in this column I will explain why Kerry will
win.
The two most important reasons that
Bush has nowhere to go but down is, first that his long
honeymoon with the press is over.
And, second, Michael Moore's
Fahrenheit 9/11, ham-fisted
though it is, will continue to
influence voters against Bush.
That Bush—a staunch
Republican conservative—received such fawning and
unquestioned coverage from the liberal press about the
reasons leading up to the Iraq war—is one of the
greatest ironies in presidential political history.
Intimidated, the media wrote only
the tamest and unquestioning stories about Bush and
Iraq. To be critical was to risk being labeled
unpatriotic.
Amazingly, the nation's most
skeptical journalist regarding Bush over the last two
years—at least on the record— may have been me. More
than two years ago, I closed my June 7, 2002 column
titled
"Prolonged Bush Honeymoon Will End Soon"
with this sentence, "The closer we get to November
2004, the more challenging Bush's re-election prospects
appear." And in December 2002, I predicted that Bush
could be beaten.
Now, however, the evidence of
Bush's flawed Iraqi policies is overwhelming. And the
rest of the media was finally woken up.
Even the Texas newspapers have been
sharply critical. Although they all vigorously endorsed
Bush in 2000, in the last year they have editorially
taken Bush to task. The most influential Texas dailies,
the Houston Chronicle and the Dallas Morning
News, have been the toughest on Bush.
Bush got a big dose of bad news
from when the Senate Intelligence Committee and the 9/11
panel released their reports this month.
More damning, however, is data from
the Internet site
Iraq Coalition Casualty Count. According to Iraq
Coalition Casualty Count, through July 22th
901 U.S. personnel have been killed. Including all
coalition forces, 1,022 are dead.
And for those who may think that
things are quieting down in Iraq, the Boston Globe
reported on July 20th that nearly as many
U.S. soldiers were killed in the first half of July than
in all of June: in July, 36; June, 42. [US
casualty rate high since handover, By Bryan
Bender]
For Bush, statistics like these
represent his worst political nightmares
As for the controversial Moore
film, it has no surprises for skeptics. But for others
who follow politics only occasionally, they'll learn
about the Bush family ties and financial connections to
Saudi Arabia. And Moore makes a convincing anti-war
statement when he returns to his hometown of Flint,
Michigan to demonstrate how the war adversely impacts
working class America.
I watched the sold-out movie in
conservative,
Republican Lodi—85% for Bush in 2000. But at the end
of the show, the audience clapped.
Make of that what you will. If the
re-action is the same nationwide, then Bush's base may
be weaker than he anticipates.
Fahrenheit 9/11 will be
released on video in September—nearly two months before
the November election.
We know that about 40% of the
electorate leans toward Bush. But a significant portion
of that 40% is "soft." The questions they are
turning over in their minds are, "Why should I vote
for Bush? What has he done for me?"
In the final analysis, Election
2004 is really not Bush vs. Kerry. Instead, it is all
about George W. Bush.
If America thinks he's done a good
job, Bush is safe.
But if Americans remain vaguely
unhappy or dissatisfied—as they are today—then Bush is
finished.
An interesting closing note:
according to a CNN poll released earlier this week,
there is no state where Bush's support is greater today
than it was in 2000. In Idaho, Bush's best state in 2000
where he won 65% of the vote, his polling numbers are
currently 55%.
The math says it all: if that trend
holds up, John Kerry will be the next U.S. president.
[JOENOTE
to VDARE.COM readers:
Our Hobson's choice: the
two leading candidates, Bush and Kerry, are poison on
immigration. But Bush, who through his silence has
backed way off of his January amnesty proposal, appears
to be aware of the cold wind blowing on immigration
enthusiasts on Capitol Hill. That the
AgJobs bill, S.1645, was not brought to the Senate
floor for a vote is a tremendous triumph for the
immigration reform movement.
Kerry, touring the country and touting
amnesty every inch of the way, should call his
office once in a while to see what's really going on.
Maybe if he did, he'd understand that one of the reasons
Bush is in such hot water is because the nation is fed
up and disgusted with his immigration agenda. Kerry can
only gain by becoming more moderate on immigration.]
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.