Tomorrow is not yesterday. There will be no deadlock in the Electoral College, no divergence between the winner of the popular vote and the Electoral College, no Kerry v. Bush before the Supreme Court, no repeat of 2000. Senator John Kerry will win decisively because Americans need a President with a mandate. If there is an election from the past that provides an analogy, then it isn’t 2000. Tomorrow’s election is more likely to resemble the 1980 contest, when all the pre-election polls predicted a tight race, but the challenger beat the incumbent with a landslide. Only this time, the Democrat will prevail.
Doubtless the media-crowned pundits will scratch their heads, trying to make sense of a decisive Kerry victory. They’ll pin the election result on the war in Iraq, the economy, the Bush Administration’s failure to admit mistakes and trouble with the truth. They’ll pin it on Osama, George Soros, the young people, the old people, the Hispanics, the Blacks, the smart people, the lawyers, the rich, the poor, the Christian Coalition that stayed home, GOTV, cellular phones, and the “Internets.” They’ll pin it on everything, of course, except the point: John Kerry, the man.
John Kerry will win this election simply because he is a better man than Bush.
From the moment Kerry prevailed in the Democratic primaries, the Bush campaign set out to destroy him. Mercenaries for the President - “527” organizations – came out of the woodwork and attacked Kerry’s record and persona. These mendacious rogues took on new names, such as “Swift Boat Veterans for the Truth,” but they’re the usual suspects who brought down Governor Ann Richards, Senator John McCain, and Vice President Al Gore. After the surrogates took their pot shots at Kerry, Bush et al gleefully joined in the orgy of character assassination.
Their relentless attacks painted a surreal image of a man. Kerry was a fop. He was an elitist effete, a “metrosexual” who sips Chablis in a smoking jacket while receiving a pedicure. Kerry was a flip-flopper, indecisive, a political opportunist. Kerry was a tax-and-spend liberal, Ted Kennedy without the charisma, a gold digger, a whipped husband, a wimp. Kerry was a hippie war protester and Hanoi Jane Fonda was his paramour. Kerry was French. Kerry was weak.
In the end, the GOP unabashedly made Kerry a caricature. They prepared Americans, most of whom knew nothing about Kerry, for the lowest of expectations. But in doing so, they committed political suicide. Because in the end, Kerry proved to America that he was none of the things the GOP accused him of being. And Kerry appeared all the more stronger.
In the first debate, Kerry shattered the image that Bush had created. By the third debate, Kerry had created a new image: that of a superior Commander in Chief. While Bush stumbled out of the gates in the first debate, turned shrill in the second, and grinned like a drugged mental patient