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Security Obsession Pushes Swing States Into 
Bush's Grasp
By Paul Harris in Clay County, Missouri 
The Observer - UK
9-26-4
 
The air was hot and the mosquitoes were biting as
Tom Brown sweatily trudged from house to house on
the leafy suburban street. An elderly woman
opened her door and eagerly took a leaflet from
the Republican campaigner. Her next words brought
a grin to Brown's face. 'I was going to vote for
you anyway,' she said, before adding: 'And I'm a
Democrat, too.' 
  
Brown is campaigning on the streets of Clay
County, Missouri, one of the most crucial
battlegrounds in the US elections. The message
was loud and clear: President George Bush is
winning in the swing states. 
  
That is a key development as the election enters
its final stretch. Most of America is starkly
divided into red and blue, but the swing states
are the only place where the political palate is
mixed. They are the places where the battle for
the White House will be won or lost. They mainly
stretch in an arc from the rust belt of
Pennsylvania through Ohio and down into the
Midwest. This is purple America, and nowhere is
more purple than Clay County. 
  
In the 2000 election Al Gore won Clay County by a
single vote, making it the narrowest victory in
the United States. But things do not look so
close this time around. Clay County's Republicans
are openly confident of victory. In fact, Brown
knows things cannot stay this good. 'It is going
so good right now it's scary. That will change.
There is no way Bush can maintain this level of
support,' he said. 
  
All across the swing states, Bush has moved ahead
as Republicans have begun to win the fierce
ground war of the election. Republicans have
taken leads in Pennsylvania and Ohio, which
should have been firm Democratic territory. At
the same time they have secured their own turf,
taking double-digit leads in states like Nevada
and Missouri. 
  
That is bad news for Democratic challenger John
Kerry. Missouri is the most reliable bellwether
state. It is a unique crossroads of American
demographics: where north meets south and east
meets west. Missouri has the same percentage of
black Americans as the US as a whole, the same
goes for union members, and its rural and urban
mix is also a reflection of the national average.
In all presidential elections but one since 1900
Missouri has backed the winning candidate. And at
the moment Missouri is backing Bush. He has an
11-point lead. 
  
The reason is simple: the 'war on terror'. It is
the centrepiece of the Bush campaign, and Clay
County's Republicans are ruthlessly on-message.
'The biggest issue is keeping America safe. It is
keeping our families safe,' said Kate Porter, an
attorney who is the Republican county chairwoman.

  
That echoes what the Bush campaign is saying
nationally. The threat to America from terrorism
has been used as the focus of the campaign.
Bush's stump speech, repeated each day, pumps the
terrorism theme relentlessly. Democrats have
accused the Republicans of scaremongering, but
the move has struck a chord. Even here, in the
pretty county seat of Liberty, seemingly so far
removed from any outside threat, fear of
terrorist attack is rife. 
  
America's heartland is afraid. As Maggie Boyd,
66, sat in the picturesque town square she spoke
of the recent school massacre in Russia as having
a direct relevance to life in Clay County. 'You
just don't know if someone is going to go into my
grandson's high school and do that here,' she
said. 
  
Boyd is voting for Bush. She sees the war in Iraq
as an integral part of the 'war on terror'. For
her, the pictures aired daily on TV news of bombs
in Baghdad are part of the same fight that
brought down the World Trade Centre. '11
September changed everything for me. Bush was
right to go into Iraq,' she said. 
  
For Democrats, however, there is now relief that
the war in Iraq has at last become an electoral
issue. After weeks of damaging insults over Kerry
and Bush's respective Vietnam records, America's
political debate has finally tackled the real war
that is happening today. Kerry has re-emerged as
aggressive on the war. Last week he openly
attacked Bush for creating the Iraqi mess. It is
now Kerry's mission to win the election by
slamming the Iraq war. It is no simple task. Bush
has consistently held healthy poll leads over
Kerry on issues of national security. But the new
Democratic strategy mirrors the ploy used by
Bush's campaign guru, Karl Rove: hit the
candidates on their strengths, not their
weaknesses. 
  
Certainly, anti-war opinion is out there. Both
campaigns in Clay County admit that the war has
polarised people like nothing else in a
generation. Mike Springer, a local businessman,
is not shy about his thoughts on Bush. 'I loathe
him,' he said as he drew on a cigarette outside
his office. 'I grew up in the Vietnam era. I see
a lot of the same stuff as then. The lies, and
you see all these boys coming home with no arms,
no legs,' he said. 
  
There is deep anger about the war in the swing
states and on the streets of Clay County. Phil
Willoughby is a local Democratic candidate. His
father, a lifelong Republican and a Korean War
veteran, is now about to vote Democrat for the
first time in his long life. 'He feels like he is
being sold out. He thinks his President lied to
him,' Willoughby said. 
  
But the Republicans are not just a one-trick
pony, hammering away on terrorism. They have
amassed a formidable campaign machine that
outguns and outspends the Democrats in most
states. They have been organised in Missouri far
longer than the Democrats, and have more staff.
The Democrats are relying on outside campaigning
organisations, like America Coming Together, to
do much of the crucial legwork of voter
registration. 
  
Republicans have also fine-tuned their campaign
to play on local issues. Much of the swing state
battlefield is rural or semi-rural. Clay County
is typical. At one end it bleeds into the
metropolis of Kansas City and at the other is
farmland and small towns. 
  
These are the 'exurbs': the new political front
line. Religious and moral issues play big here,
and Bush's folksy style and religious rhetoric go
down well. Kerry's liberal north-eastern manners
do not. 
  
'I believe Bush is a Christian man and that
pleases me. It is not fashionable these days to
say you are being led by a higher power,' said
Boyd. 
  
Much has been made of gay marriage, which Bush
has pledged to make a constitutional issue. The
swing states, even where they are Democratic, are
often conservative in their social values. Clay
County is no exception. Republicans in Missouri
organised a ballot in August on banning gay
marriage in the state. It passed overwhelmingly,
galvanising the local Republican party. 'Since we
got them out to vote once, it is easier to get
them out to vote again,' said Porter. 'There are
still some Democrats we haven't run out of Clay
County. But we are working on it.' 
  
Willoughby believes the Democrats can still win.
'Missouri is still a swing state. We are more
mobilised in Clay County than we have been in a
generation. It is still early. We have six weeks
left,' he said. 
  
That is true. As the election moves into its
final stages, many voters are starting to pay
attention for the first time. Messages that took
months to deliver earlier in the year can now be
got across in just days as every newspaper and
television station is full of election coverage.
With the crucial presidential debates about to
start, Kerry can still turn around the swing
state battle. 
  
But the backdrop is still one of fear and
terrorism. No one is immune. Margene Thorpe,
doing a volunteer shift in the Liberty local
museum, voiced her fears. 'We wish we could go
back to where we do not have to be so afraid. But
that will never happen again.' She, too, is
voting for Bush. Her husband, Derle, sat beside
her and echoed her thoughts. 'Freedom is not
free,' he said. 'It has high costs.' 
  
If the Democrats' new strategy of making the
election a referendum on Iraq is to succeed, then
the Thorpes' fear and support of the Iraq war as
part of the 'war on terror' will have to be
overcome. It will not be easy. 'How do you tell
someone not to be afraid of terrorism?'
Willoughby asked. 'We are all afraid of
terrorism.' 
  
Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited
2004
http://WWW.GUARDIAN.CO.UK/usa/story/0,12271,1312946,00.html
 

http://www.rense.com/general57/grasp.htm




                
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