http://smirkingchimp.com/article.php?sid=18536&mode=&order=0

David Corn: 'The great divide continues'
Posted on Wednesday, November 03 @ 09:52:13 EST 

The red-blue battle - a war of culture, ideology, politics and psychology - 
will not end with the final tally in Ohio.

By David Corn, AlterNet

It's 3:30 AM. Ohio looks bad for John Kerry. He's down 180,000 votes. There 
may be 175,000 provisional ballots. But can Kerry win practically every single 
one and find other votes there? Kerry is losing by 1700 votes in New Mexico 
and 15,000 in Iowa. John Edwards appeared before Kerry supporters in Copley 
Square and promised that the Kerry campaign will fight to count every vote. But 
the Kerry ticket is behind in the national numbers, on the short end of a 51-48 
split, trailing Bush by almost 4 million votes, with 93 percent of the 
precincts reporting. The election was close, achingly close. There may be an odd 
bounce or two yet to come. But the safe assumption is that George W. Bush will 
emerge the winner of the electoral vote and the popular vote. It's a sad morning 
in America.

The electorate almost engaged in a much-needed political correction. It 
almost undid the asterisk of 2000. Instead, voters legitimized the fellow who 
gained the White House against the will of the majority and who then pretended he 
had a mandate and subsequently pushed tax cuts for the well-to-do and launched 
a war predicated on untrue assertions. 

So there will be no good-bye to reckless preemptive war, an economic policy 
based on tax breaks tilted toward the wealthy, a war on environmental 
regulations, a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, excessive secrecy in 
government, unilateral machismo, the neocon theology of hubris and arrogance, a ban 
on effective stem cell research, no-bid Halliburton contracts, John Ashcroft, 
Donald Rumsfeld, and much more. Did I mention Dick Cheney?

Bush lied his way into office and lied his way through his presidency. His 
reelection campaign was based on derision and disingenuousness; he 
mischaracterized Kerry and his positions and touted successes that did not exist. And 
now, 
it seems, he got away with it. He was not punished for leading the country 
into a war that was not necessary. He was not booted for having overstated the 
WMD threat from Iraq. He paid no price for failing to plan adequately for the 
post-invasion period. Iraq remains his mess. And the United States and the world 
remains at the mercy of a gang that, no doubt, will feel even more emboldened 
to pursue their misguided policies.

The good news: America is a divided nation. Despite the pundit hand-wringing 
over this fact, it is a positive thing. Nearly - nearly - half of the 
electorate rejected Bush's leadership, his agenda, his priorities, his falsehoods. 
>From Eminem to the chairman of Bank of America to 48 Nobel laureates to 
gangbangers who joined anti-Bush get-out-the-vote efforts in swing states. Nearly half 
of the voting public concluded that Bush had caused the deaths of over 1100 
American GIs and literally countless Iraqis (maybe 100,000) for no compelling 
reason. Nearly half saw the emperor buck naked and butt ugly. Nearly half said 
no to his rash actions and dishonest justifications. Nearly half realized that 
Bush had misrepresented the war in Iraq as a crucial part of the effort 
against al Qaeda and Islamic jihadism. Nearly half desired better and more honest 
leadership. Nearly half knew that Bush has led the country astray.

Other good news: Second-term presidents often hit the skids. The last three 
second- terms were marked by scandal (Watergate, Iran-contra, Monicagate). And 
as top officials sprint through the revolving door to snag high-paying jobs 
(while their contacts are fresh), the job of running the government during the 
second administration often falls to the B Team. In the post-9/11 world, this 
is not all that reassuring. But the historical trend does suggest that Bush 
will have trouble enacting his various schemes. Yet - let's be realistic - the 
Senate results indicate that the GOP will expand its majority in the Senate, 
which means Bush will have more allies for his wrongheaded missions.

More good news; Bush will not be able to hand off his own wreckage - Iraq and 
the gargantuan deficit - to a new man. But this does not mean he will accept 
responsibility and deal with it. Bush has the ability to deny and defy 
reality. And if he cannot see that the trash has piled up, he will not be hauling it 
to the curb.

Okay, no more good news. I can't stand all this good news. Bush has 
bamboozled and frightened just enough Americans to gain the opportunity to flimflam 
them for another four years. And the rest of the country - and the globe - will 
be along for the dangerous ride.

As for John Kerry, he and his advisers looked like geniuses early on Election 
Day, when exit polls showed him ahead in the critical states There will be 
time - plenty of time - to critique Kerry and his crew and second-guess their 
various decisions. Had he swatted down the Swift Vets earlier would that have 
saved him just the right number of votes? Had he voted against granting Bush the 
authorization to launch an elective war against Iraq anytime Bush damn well 
pleased, perhaps Kerry would have presented a clearer picture for the 
electorate and inoculated himself from the trumped-up flip-flop charge. Perhaps. He, 
too, will have years to ponder all of this.

Kerry was no top-gun campaigner. His rhetoric often meandered. More than once 
he shot himself in the foot with inartful language. But he did vigorously 
criticize Bush for misleading the country into war and for screwing up (big 
time!) the planning for the post-invasion period. He called for expanding health 
care coverage and for dramatic investments in alternative energy. He slammed 
Bush for ignoring the middle class crisis. He advocated raising the minimum wage 
and vowed to take on such special interests as the prescription drugs lobby. 
He excoriated Bush's assault on environmental safeguards and defended abortion 
rights. And he effectively used the three debates to counter the Bush camp's 
claim that he was a finger-in-the-wind pol and a weak-kneed opportunist with no 
convictions. Those encounters hurt Bush. Of those voters who say they decided 
in the past month, Kerry led 60 to 37 percent. All of this - it almost worked.

There was a clear difference between the two candidates. They disagreed on 
many basic issues. But - perhaps more importantly - they represented vastly 
different ways of engaging the world. One has adopted an ask-no-questions, 
nevermind-the- nuances, don't-look-back, tough-guy style of leadership. The other 
promised to consider and reach out before leaping. One said - practically boasted 
- that he read no newspapers. The other came across as a man who absorbed 
much information before rendering a decision. The voters chose the wrong man.

But not all is lost. The Red-Blue battle - a war of culture, ideology, 
politics and psychology - will not end with the final tally in Ohio. The forces of 
Bushism appear to have triumphed this day. But life - if we are lucky - is 
long, and history never ends. Let the great divide in America continue.

David Corn is the Washington editor of The Nation and author of "The Lies of 
George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception." He writes a blog at He 
writes a blog at davidcorn.com.

(c) 2004 Independent Media Institute.

Reprinted from AlterNet:
http://www.Alternet.Org/election04/20391/ 


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