November 11, 2004,
9:34 a.m. President Bush is a uniter, not a divider, after all. Bush's convincing reelection should silence the Left's battle cry that he split America, pitting red states against blue, rich against poor, men against women, etc. Bush's solid win attracted Americans of many stripes into his billowing victory tent. Bush won a record 59,459,765 votes to Kerry's 55,949,407, and Ralph Nader's 400,706. Bush's 51.3 percent to 48.3 percent showing makes him the first candidate to secure a popular majority since 1988. While Al Gore won 544, 683 more ballots than Bush did, Bush's 3,510,358 lead over Kerry more than sextupled Gore's 2000 edge. Bush's coattails helped House Republicans gain at least four seats. GOP senators defeated challengers, added four to their majority, and dazed Democrats by exiling their leader, Tom Daschle, to South Dakota's ethanol patch. The president triumphed despite $73.9 million in spending by George Soros and other Bush-haters (versus $27.2 million among top Kerry foes identified by Political Money Line), plus a whirlwind of scathing documentaries, snarling protesters, and sneering celebrities. That Bush was not smashed into smithereens by this two-year hurricane is breathtaking. In Florida, Bush's 537-vote margin in 2000 zoomed to 377,509. While Bush clinched 269 electoral votes by early last Wednesday morning, he finally won when Nevada pushed him past the 270-vote threshold. How ironic that the home of Sin City returned the born-again president to the White House. But the evangelical executive united far more than just the Silver State's gamblers and hookers. Bush increased his support among key constituencies. According to the Edison/Mitofsky exit poll:
As unity spreads, Germany's socialist government now purrs over Iraq. "Despite the issue of our differing positions in the past, we all have to contribute to ensuring that the situation in Iraq stabilizes," German Interior Minister Otto Schily said last week. With almost 60 million voters behind Bush and a performance that should tame his fiercest critics, liberal pundits nonetheless argue that he should reach out to Democratic lawmakers to heal his first term's divisions. Instead, Democrats should reach out to Bush. The president has handed Democrats a symphony hall full of overtures: allowing Senator Ted Kennedy (D., Mass.) to write Bush's first education bill, accepting Democratic demands for Medicare drug benefits, approving a four-year, 25-percent domestic-spending spree, and more. Democrats should return the favor. With their program in flames, Democrats should help Bush enact his agenda. Both parties should let vigilance, freedom, and opportunity guide their actions.
As Manhattan public-relations consultant and Cato Institute alumnus David Quast advises, "Leave no free-market reform behind." When the Senate reconvenes, Kerry is unlikely to embrace many of Bush's proposals. Still, his heartwarming concession speech reminded Democrats, Republicans, and independents how much we share. "I leave this campaign with a prayer," John Kerry said. "And that prayer is very simple: God bless America." | ||||||||
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http://www.nationalreview.com/murdock/murdock200411110934.asp
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