[Mb-civic] EDITORIAL Round Two WashPost

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Sat Oct 9 10:49:12 PDT 2004


  
washingtonpost.com 
Round Two 




 Saturday, October 9, 2004; Page A30

 THE QUESTIONS were often better than the answers, but last night's
presidential debate was useful in framing a contrast between President Bush
and Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.). The nominees articulated sharply different
positions on health care, the environment, stem cell research and other
domestic issues that they had not previously debated. With polls showing
their race tightening, the president and his challenger also sharply
attacked each other in front of a "town hall" audience of 140 undecided
voters. Mr. Bush depicted Mr. Kerry as a tax-hiking liberal too concerned
with winning international popularity contests; Mr. Kerry portrayed Mr. Bush
as a man who "didn't make the right judgments" and resorted to negative
campaigning because of the poverty of his record.

As in the first debate, much of the discussion centered on Iraq, and Mr.
Kerry was effective in outlining the president's shortcomings in failing to
attract allies or deploy a large enough force. Challenged by his first
questioner to justify the invasion in light of evidence that Iraq's weapons
capabilities were less advanced than those of many countries, Mr. Bush did
little more than repeat, without explanation, that "Saddam Hussein was a
unique threat."

But Mr. Bush was effective in pointing out that Mr. Kerry's plan for Iraq is
identical to that of Mr. Bush, except for his promise to attract more allies
-- unlikely, the president said, because "nobody is going to follow somebody
who doesn't believe we can succeed." Mr. Kerry seemed unable, even at this
late date, to articulate one clear position. "I do believe Saddam Hussein
was a threat," he said, but only minutes later he criticized the president
for being "preoccupied with Iraq, where there wasn't a threat."

Mr. Bush's criticisms of Mr. Kerry too often amounted to hurling the
"liberal" epithet at him rather than engaging him on the merits. "Of course
he's going to raise your taxes," Mr. Bush said, though Mr. Kerry promised
last night that he would not raise taxes on anyone making less than
$200,000. Mr. Bush's defense of tax cuts for those wealthiest Americans --
that such cuts will help job-creating small businesses -- is belied by the
fact that the overwhelming majority of those filing as small business owners
don't pay the top rate. And given his record of fiscal recklessness, on both
the spending and tax-cutting sides, the president did not start from a
strong position in attacking Mr. Kerry as a big spender. Mr. Bush described
himself as a "good steward of the land," but his description did not match
his record of opening federal lands to oil and gas exploration, retreating
from action on climate change and weakening regulation on clean air.

If Mr. Bush's strategy was to repeat the word "liberal," Mr. Kerry's was to
drive home the notion that he had a plan on everything from Iraq to health
care to schools to the environment. Like Mr. Bush, he resisted repeated
entreaties from moderator Charles Gibson to explain how he would reduce the
deficit. Mr. Bush may have had a point when he said that Mr. Kerry's health
plan will be more expensive than the Democrat contends, but he was
inaccurate in describing Mr. Kerry's plan as typical, liberal
"government-sponsored health care."

 The candidates left plenty of room for follow-up questions at their third
and final debate in Arizona next week, and plenty of topics unexplored. At
the top of that list, we'd put the question of the country's fiscal
condition even if the next president manages, improbably, to cut the deficit
in half in the next several years. The toughest questions, about the looming
costs of Social Security and, even more, of Medicare, were left unasked, and
deserve some rigorous examination next week.

 © 2004 The Washington Post Company
 



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