The Los Angeles Times December 12, 2003
Bush Camp Cautiously Favors Dean
By Edwin Chen and Maura Reynolds, Staff Writers
WASHINGTON — Howard Dean's continuing momentum in the Democratic presidential race is forcing President Bush's political strategists into a tough balancing act: nourishing their hope of a Bush-Dean race while guarding against overconfidence. "No matter who the Democratic nominee is, any competent Democrat starts out with 46% or 47% of the vote," Charles Black, a veteran Republican strategist, quoted Karl Rove, the president's chief political advisor, as telling him.
But that cautionary mantra contrasts sharply with the public glee with which many on the political right view the prospects of Bush-Dean contest. "Please nominate this man," says the current cover of the conservative magazine National Review, under an unattractive picture of an angry Dean, fists clenched in mid-rant. Many Republicans subscribe to the theory that Dean would be Bush's dream opponent. Their reasoning: Dean, largely untested in the national crucible, opposes the Iraq war, wants to roll back the Bush tax cuts and, as governor of Vermont, signed legislation allowing civil unions between gays. They believe he is so far to the left that he will leave the vast center of the American electorate ripe for Bush's plucking.
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Republicans eager for a Bush-Dean campaign point to polls showing the president faring better against Dean than against any other major Democratic candidate. For instance, in a recent Time/CNN poll, Bush beat Dean 52% to 40% among registered voters nationwide, while Bush's theoretical vote dropped to 49% to 42% against either Sen. John F. Kerry of Massachusetts or retired Gen. Wesley K. Clark.
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-bush12dec12,1,5014118.story?coll=la-home-headlines