by the media and RW'ers, plus, of course, Dems weren't exactly sticking up for any of their own. They just wanted to avoid the issue and get beyond it.
By Sam Parry
October 8, 2002
George W. Bush's doctrine of "preemptive war" -- the elimination of foreign governments he deems a threat to U.S. security interests -- is quickly developing a domestic corollary. Any politician who questions Bush’¡Çs strategy can expect to be confronted by a rapid-deployment force of pro-Bush operatives who counterattack using weapons of ridicule and distortion.
In a kind of test run, this army swung onto the offensive immediately after former Vice President Al Gore on Sept. 23 delivered a comprehensive critique of Bush's radical departure from decades of American support for international law. Rather than welcome a vigorous debate on the merits and shortcomings of the so-called "Bush Doctrine," conservative commentators treated Gore and others raising questions as dishonest, unpatriotic and even unhinged
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As a direct result of these attacks, Gore's favorables fell dramatically:
Before the speech (8/6-7/02): Gore 51% favorable, 38 unfavorable
After the speech (10/22-23/02): Gore 37% favorable, 51% unfavorable
i.e. Gore suffered a swing of 27 point in net favorables (fav-unfav).
Now, he has been vindicated thoroughly on the war. But, people do need to be reminded that he opposed the war as strongly as he did back before it began.
http://www.mydd.com/comments/2007/1/26/183616/573/9#9