Libby indictment adds to White House woes (AP) Updated: 2005-10-29 19:41
Massachusetts' junior senator, John Kerry, put a more
cynical spin on the Miers' withdrawal. "Caught up in a wave of scandal and
concerns about the war in Iraq, the president has allowed right-wing interest
groups to decide the fate of his Supreme Court nominee rather than stand up to
his ultraconservative base," he said.
Kerry would love to see Bush labeled a quick-to-yield politician. Part of the
reason Kerry lost to Bush in the 2004 race was that voters said they knew where
the president stood even when they disagreed with him — and that he rarely
wavered.
Now the president has given up on a woman he said was the most qualified in
the nation.
Where else has Bush gone wrong? His credibility, an asset just a year ago,
was undercut when the Iraq war failed to live up to his promises and it was
further damaged by his flat-footed response to Hurricane Katrina, according to
strategists in both parties.
Even some Republicans believe that Bush made a mistake at the beginning of
the year by spending so much postelection political capital on Social Security
reform, an issue that few voters cited as a reason for backing him.
Others point to his staff, a talented and loyal group of fellow Texans and
their friends who came into the second term bone-tired and short on fresh ideas.
Many helped Bush through the Sept. 11 attacks, two wars and a re-election.
Their intense loyalty may have led some advisers to challenge Joseph Wilson's
credibility when he questioned Bush's evidence on Iraq and nuclear material. The
question Fitzgerald was appointed to explore is whether anybody crossed the line
and purposely revealed that Wilson's wife was a spy.
"The bad news tends to breed bad news and oftentimes there is no way to get
out of it other than to just wait it out," Lockhart said.
The best thing about bad news is it might get better.
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