A UPI editorial/analysis:
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (UPI) -- President George W. Bush's proposed immigration reform plan may prove to be a masterstroke from a maestro political strategist playing at the top of his game. It may backfire on him, but it probably won't.
....
So far, opposition to the plan from the right has been far stronger up in Colorado than down in Arizona, for example. Howard Dean may even hope to pick up a state or two in the West, where gun ownership is important but gay marriage less so. But at the end of the day, against either Dean or a
Wesley Clark, who is now picking up momentum pledging to soak the rich, conservative erosion against Bush will be very small and with the Religious Right mobilized to turn out its base for him, it will not hurt him very much.
The president has no Pat Buchanan lurking in ambush during the primaries as his father faced in 1992. And there appears virtually zero likelihood of a viable third-party figure like Ross Perot in 1992 and 1996 leaching key votes away from the Republican candidate. Nor does Bush risk the fate of Al Gore in seeing millions of votes from his base being leached off the way Ralph Nader sank Gore with his Green Party challenge three years ago.
Finally, the president's initiative is a classic example of the strategic "proactive" or "offense" politics that he and adviser Karl Rove love to practice. As well as playing excellent defense politics, the GOP's dynamic duo revels in winning major support from core constituencies of their flailing opponents.
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http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040108-125639-5422r>>>>>>>>
Interesting description of Clark's tax plan. I did not realize that it was that drastic a proposal. I like it! And it seems as though it has been many a year since that kind of phrase has been used in a presidential campaign.