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View Full Version : Harshest Attacks on Kerry Come From Democrats



John Ashcroft
03-07-2004, 09:48 AM
WASHINGTON – John Kerry has been described as a waffler who blathers, a son of privilege who won't stand up to millionaires, a Washington insider who's a handmaiden to special interests and an inconsistent candidate whose word is no good.

All of that comes from fellow Democrats.

They ran against Kerry in the presidential primary race but now are pledged to help elect him president. The also-rans in the race for the party's presidential nomination have supplied plenty of rhetorical ammunition that Republicans could refire in the fall campaign, although the strategy is not without risks.

It happens every primary election season, to one degree or another: Rivals for their party's nomination criticize one another, then drop out, shake hands, plaster a smile on their faces and close ranks behind whoever ultimately gets the prize. All those nasty sound bites are forgotten, unless somebody from the other side decides to dredge them up.


'Never Plays It Straight'


Here is what Wesley Clark had to say about Kerry (and fellow rival John Edwards) on Feb. 5: "The American people don't want another Washington insider who never plays it straight. They don't want a follower who makes decisions by licking his finger and sticking it up in the wind."

This is what Clark had to say about Kerry eight days later, after abandoning his own quest for the presidency: "I believe John Kerry has the right experience, the right values and the right leadership and character to beat George W. Bush."

More comments from Clark:

"We need leadership that will take responsibility in this country, and I'm very disturbed that John did not do that." – on Kerry's comments related to racial preferences.

"With all due respect, he's a lieutenant, and I'm a general."


Maybe Because They Are Millionaires


"Senator Kerry and Senator Edwards are good men, but they don't have the leadership to stand up to millionaires."

"I don't think people understand in this country how politicians in Washington can say one thing and do something else."

"Part of the Washington way of doing things." – again on Kerry and Edwards.

Edwards, known as the nice guy in the campaign, soft-pedaled his criticisms, but nonetheless was happy to cast the four-term senator from Massachusetts as "somebody who spent most of their life in politics" and unlikely to bring about needed changes. Stressing his own working-class upbringing, Edwards argued on Feb. 24, "this is something that crowd in Washington just doesn't get."

But it's something the American public gets, and that's why we don't notoriously elect Senators as President

One week later, when he dropped out of the race, Edwards praised Kerry as a man who has "fought for and will continue to fight for the things that all of us believe in. ... The truth of the matter is that John Kerry has what it takes, right here in his heart, to be president of the United States."


Tool of Lobbyists huh huh... He's a "Tool" alright...


More comments from Edwards:

"What he's saying now [on trade] is different than what he did in the past."

"Do you believe that change is more likely to be brought about by someone who has spent 20 years in Washington or by someone who is more of an outsider to this process?"

"I don't take contributions from lobbyists. He obviously does."

"I think he's said some different things at different points in time. So I think there's been some inconsistency."

Some of the harshest criticism of Kerry came from former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who pledged to support the Democrat nominee when he pulled out of the race. Despite a considerable amount of bad blood between the two candidates, Dean said Wednesday that he'll be visiting Kerry in Boston next week to help map strategy for beating President Bush.


'His Word Is No Good'


Here's a sampling of what Dean had to say about Kerry in earlier days:

"President Kerry. Please, spare us." I wonder if Dean realizes that exactly what the voters said about him?

"He's going to turn out to be just like George Bush."

"John Kerry is part of the corrupt political culture in Washington."

"It appears that his word is no good."

"I'm just incensed by his hypocrisy."

"This is not the person we need to head the Democratic Party. I think Senator Kerry is clearly not the person to carry the banner of the Democratic Party because he has acted so much like a Republican."

"Senator Kerry apparently supports the kind of corrupt fund raising, politically corrupt fund-raising mechanisms that George Bush has also employed."

"We are not going to beat George Bush by nominating someone who is the handmaiden of special interests."

"A special-interest clone."

"A candidate of no principle."

"Just another inside-the-Beltway guy who's played the game for 15 years."

Other Democrat also-rans now backing Kerry include Rep. Dick Gephardt and Sen. Joe Lieberman. That would be the same Gephardt whose mailings said Kerry is "no friend to family farmers" and the same Lieberman who called Kerry a "waffler."


'Cheap Sound Bites'


More comments from Gephardt:

"We can keep pursuing George Bush's tired, old, failed economic policies like Senator Kerry and other Democrats in this race have suggested. Or we can learn from the policies that worked for us."

"Kerry's explanation of how he'll pay for his [health] plan doesn't add up. He's trying to have it both ways."

"I don't think cheap sound bites hiding expensive plans are the answer." – on health-care proposals from Kerry and Dean.


'Waffler'


Comments from Lieberman:

"This is about the votes [on Iraq] that he's cast that I believe are inconsistent."

"We also don't need a waffler in charge of our country's future."

"I do think that Senator Kerry was sounding an uncertain trumpet about that particular battle." – on the Iraq war resolution.

By historical standards, this year's Democrat primary was a relatively tame affair, absent some of the harsher rhetoric of campaigns past. And presidential historian Henry Graff said voters were so used to the ritual they would not take the negative words too seriously. In the words of Democrat consultant Paul Begala, "So what?"

Even so, the list of attack lines goes on and on. And you can bet the Republicans are keeping track.

Political analysts caution there are risks to reviving such rhetoric in the fall campaign, particularly this year.

"The problem with the Republicans using it is that the Democrats agreed in every debate that anyone on the stage was better than George Bush," said Kathleen Hall Jamieson of Annenberg Public Policy Center. Any time the Democrats' critical words are revived, the author of the words can step forward to explain them away and speak in praise of Kerry. And naturally the ignorant voting public will believe them, right? :rolleyes: And yet they still wonder why they lose elections.

Still, Rich Bond, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said the Democrats "can't erase the record, and they said some awful things."

For the Republicans, he said, "it is certainly worth reviewing and using their words against John Kerry against John Kerry."

Link: here (http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/3/5/162753.shtml)

ELVIS
03-07-2004, 09:55 AM
Hahahaha!

FORD
03-07-2004, 10:13 AM
Leave it to Newshax to blow things entirely out of proportion. Granted, I'm no fan of Judas, and probably agree with half the above statements myself. But it's damn hypocritical of these right wingers to insist that only "Democrats" criticize one another in this fashion, and then say something else after the primaries.

Do the names Bush Jr and McCain ring any bells?

I seem to remember McCain being very critical (and correctly so) of Junior as a candidate. I also remember some nasty lies and rumors being thrown at McCain from Team BCE, Yet after the convention, they seemed like old drinking buddies, at least in public.

It's called politics, boys. They all do it, and it's not anything new. And for the record, I stand by every statement I've made about Judas IsKerryot, AND every statement I've made about Bush Jr. I can do that, because I'm not running for office ;)

steve
03-07-2004, 06:40 PM
My sentiments on the cantidate can be summed up as so...

"Sammy Hagar Returning To Van Halen is Like Poop Returning Back into the Butt
Sammy Hagar is not a Rock Star. He was shit when he was in the band, and now he is trying to return into the band, Which is like poop returning into the butt. Except this poop weights about 230 and has a size 42 inch waist. Fuck You Sammy hagar!" - DickFace McSlapnuts 3/5/04.

John Ashcroft
03-07-2004, 07:58 PM
Heh heh heh... Good one. That's one big fuckin' poop!

rustoffa
03-07-2004, 08:03 PM
Anyone catch the Kerry love fest on meet the press today?I kept waiting for Herman Munster to walk out.

John Ashcroft
03-07-2004, 08:06 PM
Nope, but I saw parts of the speech to the black congregation. Almost made me puke (and I wish I were kidding!)

How many times do you think a guy like Kerry makes it down into a predominantly black neighborhood?

ELVIS
03-07-2004, 11:48 PM
Check this out! (http://www.prisonplanet.com/010104kerryadmits.html)

:elvis:

FORD
03-07-2004, 11:52 PM
Everyone knows Judas is Skull & Bones. And both he and Junior refused to answer Russert's questions on the subject.