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September 02, 2004,
1:37 a.m. New York, N.Y. It has been one of the soft underbellies of the Kerry candidacy: He’s been in the Senate for 20 years, but few of his colleagues can remember him doing anything. On a conference call with reporters, shortly before the Michigan Democratic primary, Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow endorsed Kerry. I asked them what single piece of legislation stands out as Kerry’s signature accomplishment in the U.S. Senate. Levin and Stabenow hemmed and hawed about how there were so many that it was hard to choose just one. When asked for a couple of examples, they gave it their best shot. “One of the things I’ve learned is that we each put in bills and amendments, and they're often wrapped into larger pieces of legislation,” Stabenow said. “I appreciated his comments and his fight for Medicare. He stood with us, spoke out against this legislation that passed recently that was so bad for seniors. [Presumably, she was referring to the legislation adding a prescription-drug benefit to Medicare.] He has a passion for protecting natural resources, and preventing the drilling in Alaska and so on. He supported our legislation that would ban oil and gas drilling in the Great Lakes. I could go through a whole range of things.” “He’s been a real fighter in the areas of education and health care, frequently as part of a coalition,” Levin said. “Two more things on minimum wage, he’s been a real fighter for increases on that. And another area is school modernization funds. He fought real hard for those schools. And he has been a staunch supporter for the tax incentives to make it possible for the automotive industry to produce these advanced technologies.” As noble an effort as that was, the senators had to dance around a stark fact about Kerry’s legislative career: When John Kerry says, “I led the fight” on any particular issue, he usually means, “I gave a speech on the floor of the Senate.” As FactCheck.org put it: John Kerry is fond of saying "I led the fight" on a lot of things against Arctic drilling, against Bush's Medicare prescription drug legislation, for federal grants for 100,000 new police officers, against Newt Gingrich's attempts to lessen environmental regulations. This is not a partisan interpretation. Howard Dean decided to whack this particular piñata in the January 29 Democratic primary debate in South Carolina: Dean: Senator Kerry is the front-runner, and I mean him no insult, but in 19 years in the Senate, Senator Kerry sponsored nine 11 bills that had anything to do with health care, and not one of them passed. Now, Kerry campaign strategists had to know this was a glaring weakness since they signed on, and the importance of this has been clear since he won the primary. (Mickey Kaus wrote on March 1, “Kerry has been a conspicuous non-performer in the legislation department.” What is baffling is that despite pro forma argument in this area, the campaign has done surprisingly little to address this Achilles Heel of the candidate. Pretend, for a moment, you’re a Kerry campaign strategist. (Consider this exercise to be valuable practice; at the current rate, Joe Lockhart may be calling you soon.) There are a couple of ways you could paper over the thin legislative record. You can substitute votes for leadership, and emphasize his past votes in favor of welfare reform. You can have him talk at length about his work with John McCain on a select committee investigating the whereabouts of missing soldiers in Southeast Asia. You can have Massachusetts’s senior senator, Ted Kennedy, whose status as a legislative leader no one would dispute, to talk at length about how vital Kerry has been in past Senate fights. But the Kerry team didn’t do this. And as the Bush campaign observed, he discussed his Senate career for 26 seconds during his convention address. And Zell Miller, the Republican party’s favorite Democrat, focused on this particular chink in Kerry’s armor, and just swung away with a sledgehammer: Listing all the weapon systems that Senator Kerry tried his best to shut down sounds like an auctioneer selling off our national security but Americans need to know the facts. A stronger defense of Kerry’s legislative record earlier in the campaign would have helped minimize the political damage. With no senator elected president since Kerry’s idol, John F. Kennedy, we know it’s hard for a legislator to get a promotion to the Oval Office. If you’re going to make the jump to commander in chief without executive experience, you had better bring a solid record in the legislature. * * * YOU’RE NOT A SUBSCRIBER TO NATIONAL REVIEW? Sign up right now! It’s easy: Subscribe to National Review here, or to the digital version of the magazine here. You can even order a subscription as a gift: print or digital! |
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