Pick One

Bloomberg.com: Top Worldwide

(1) A review of state-by-state polls and historical voting data by Bloomberg News shows Bush ahead in 19 states, including Texas and Idaho, with 153 electoral votes. Kerry leads in 12 states, including New York and New Jersey, with 179 electoral votes. In 19 states that have 206 electoral votes, including Ohio and Wisconsin, the most recent polling results are within the margin of error.

(2) A compilation of surveys by Utica, New York-based Zogby Interactive said Kerry was leading Bush in the Electoral College, 286 to 214. The survey focuses on 16 battleground states and assumes that voters in the other 34 states will support of the candidate of the same party they backed in 2000.

(3) Current Electoral Vote Predictor 2004

EC totals – (1) – (2) – (3)
Bush – 153 – 214 – 238
Kerry 179 – 286 – 280

The Jackass Brays in New Mexico

Remarks by President Bush at Las Cruces, New Mexico Rally

In order to keep this country safer, stronger, and better put Dick and I back into office. (Applause.) …

See, I don’t think you can be — I don’t think you can be pro-patient and pro-doctor and pro-trial lawyer at the same time. (Applause.) I think you have to choose. My opponent made his choice and he put him on the ticket. I made my choice: I am for medical liability reform. (Applause.) …

There’s not enough money to tax the rich to pay for all his promises. If he gets elected, he’s going to tax you. But the good news is we’re not going to let him get elected. (Applause.) …

I want to thanks the Senator for clearing that up. (Applause.) There’s still a little over 60 days for him to change his mind again. (Laughter.) …

We received great bipartisan support for that important spending. Matter of fact, the support was so strong that only 12 members of the United States Senate voted against it. Two of them are my opponent and his running
mate.

AUDIENCE: Booo!

THE PRESIDENT: The Senator tried to explain his vote by saying this: “I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it.” Now, he’s offering a different explanation. Originally, he said he was proud of the vote. And then when pressed, he said it was just a complicated matter.
There’s nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat. (Applause.)

Two Good Letters RE: The Not-So-Swift

Opinion > Kerry and the Swift Boat Ads (6 Letters)”

href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/24/opinion/l24swift.html?

ex=1251086400&en=4c94acc5b848c744&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland”>The New York Times > Opinion > Kerry and the Swift

Boat Ads (6 Letters)

To the Editor:

John Kerry fought in the war and then returned to try to convince our government to stop

the endless and needless bloodshed.

That was an honorable thing to do. Those who criticize him for learning from his experience in the

field and then using that experience to help the antiwar effort do a great disservice to those patriots who forced our government to end

an unjust war.

Marc J. Osterweil
New Kingston, N.Y., Aug. 22, 2004

To the Editor:

An Aug. 21 news analysis suggests that

John Kerry made a strategic error by not promptly rebutting the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth’s attacks. But might not he have made a

principled decision to stick to the high road and to resist efforts to drag his campaign into the mud? More important is why many news

outlets reported the Swift boat veterans’ allegations as if they were true, or why tapes of veterans “speaking coolly and directly to

the camera” found their way into TV news reports.

The real problem is not with Mr. Kerry’s decision but with the fact that the press

effectively provided free campaign advertising for his attackers. Perhaps hoping to appear balanced, the press has once again failed to

investigate and report the facts.

Richard B. Miller
Bloomington, Ind., Aug. 21, 2004
The writer is the director of the Poynter

Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions, Indiana University.

Read the Daily Howler

Daily Howler: John O’Neill lied in George’s face. He knew George was weak and unprepared

Did Kerry try to “gut intelligence” in 1995? Bush said so back in March, and today we get another look at how cosmically phony that claim really was. In today’s Post, Dana Milbank reports that Rep. Porter Goss (R-FL) also proposed a cut in intelligence services that year—a cut that was massively larger than Kerry’s. But is Bush disturbed by Goss’s bad judgment? Hardly! Goss is now the president’s choice to head the CIA!
—-
DOLE (1988): As we approached the enemy, there was a brief exchange of gunfire. I took a grenade in hand, pulled the pin, and tossed it in the direction of the farmhouse. It wasn’t a very good pitch (remember, I was used to catching passes, not throwing them). In the darkness, the grenade must have struck a tree and bounced off. It exploded nearby, sending a sliver of metal into my leg — the sort of injury the Army patched up with Mercurochrome and a Purple Heart.

Laughable, isn’t it? As Dole explained when he was being more honest, his own Purple Heart was the result of a superficial wound — a superficial wound that was self-inflicted! It takes a special kind of man to say what Dole said to Blitzer on Sunday — and it takes a non-existent press corps to look the other way when he does.

No More Duhbya in NM

Kerry Maintains Lead Over Bush Among Likely Voters in New Mexico

John Kerry continues to have a slight lead over George W. Bush among likely voters in New Mexico according to a survey by the American Research Group. A total of 49% of likely voters say they would vote for Kerry if the presidential election were being held today and 42% say they would vote for Bush. … These overall results are unchanged from a survey conducted in early July.

In a race between just Bush and Kerry, Kerry leads Bush 52% to 42%, with 6% undecided.

New Mexico Politics with Joe Monahan

Bush’s big NM problem remains the Democrats. …

The stop in ABQ, like the one in Dona Ana, is a swing vote move, with the vote in the areas outside of the city limits still seen as vital and laden with possibility. Bush was beaten by Gore by about 4,000 votes four years ago in Bernalillo and needs to at least tie here and probably win it if he is to get our five electoral votes, say our Prez pros.

“This is a good playbook. With Bush here for a full day he demonstrates his seriousness about capturing the state. His earlier stops have been short hops that did not give him the exposure he needed,” observed our insider R analyst. …

Again, in future polls watch that D number. That’s the key. It’s essential the Prez win over moderate D’s or else he is dead money. It will be interesting to see from his speeches in ABQ and Cruces Thursday how he will go about getting the job done.

Republican National Deception, Part II

The New York Times – Bush Promises to Offer Detailed Plans at Convention

Republicans said they would seek to turn any disruptions to their advantage, by portraying protests by even independent activists as Democratic-sanctioned displays of disrespect for a sitting president. … [mjh: so much for freedom of speech and association]

Republicans are pressing for a quick and quiet adoption of a platform to minimize dissent over issues that have divided the party, in particular immigration restrictions and a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.