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Kerry has an enormous task ahead of him--to avoid falling off the balance beam. In this election, the beam may turn out to be the width of one electron. :)
He has to campaign towards the center. All his political strategists will tell him this, because no one buys that the left can win elections on their own. Bush will do this as well, and Kerry will follow suit. The main difference from Gore's campaign (thus far) is Kerry's willingness to respond to Bush's criticisms and statements. Even the 'innocent' and 'positive' ads Bush ran (doubtless expecting zero flak) have come under attack, and it's a damn good thing they have. When Karen Hughes is already being trotted out from her supposed 'soccer mom' existence, it's a positive sign.
Secondly, Kerry will try like crazy not to alienate the left. He already has three big strikes against him, not least the IWR and Patriot Act votes. I don't believe Nader caused Gore to lose (and please don't debate that here), but since he is running, he will inevitably draw some Democrats to him that would have voted for Kerry. It is Kerry's responsibility to make sure these people don't abandon ship--so he may need to shift left for this reason. But people here should look at the campaign and think of strategy as well as what's right. Use your own judgement, but remember that any politician who runs for president while being perfectly honest about what he's going to do and how will lose the election. History bears that out perfectly.
If, however, he does shift left, he has to avoid galvanizing the more conservative centrists who are tired of Bush. He also has to capitalize on the relative unease of Bush's hardcore base. They don't like the deficits, the immigration policy, the big government, or the invasions of privacy. If Bush moves center and Kerry stays center, the crazies may well stay home in some numbers. If Kerry moves left, they may be galvanized and turn out to vote for the moderate 'campaign' version of Bush in record numbers.
So what does this mean? First, like every presidential candidate in US history, he will make campaign promises that he won't deliver, and will take positions that go against his personal beliefs. The guy voted against DOMA, as one of only fourteen senators who did so. He called it 'legislating bigotry'. Guess what? He was exactly right. Unquestionably, gay marriage is part of equal rights and therefore protected by the Constitution. It is the right thing to do to allow gays to marry.
Kerry will NEVER say this, whatever he believes on the subject, because of the balancing he has to do. DuctapeFatwa and others have brought up how when Kerry softened his stance by promising to give all federal marriage benefits to legal same-sex marriages, he flies in the face of DOMA, which passed and is law. This is how he is balancing on the issue--he has the real potential to get screwed over on both sides and be revealed as the pandering campaigner he is (though all presidential candidates are this way).
Remember, JFK ran on being vehemently anti-Commie in the sixties. Was he really Joe McCarthy's biggest fan? I don't think so, but he recognized the issues he had to defuse in order to capture the voting population's support. He didn't run on equal rights either, though he was a proponent of civil rights in his presidency. Why? Without the voting population's support, he wouldn't have been able to do anything with civil rights since he would have been a failed candidate.
So it's really hard to say what campaign promises are meant and which are not. But if it's an incredibly divisive issue, and little is to be gained from picking the just position, I fully expect any presidential candidate to weasel out of it. Unless the nature of democratic politics changes, you have to pander and crush your values to get elected.
If he really abandons the cause of gays in office, then I will be pissed off, because it is the most basic issue of equal rights. But in a campaign, I can recognize the strategy, and the dodging of the wedge. But of course he runs the risk now of alienating the left, not to mention the miniscule chance that he actually is saying exactly what he believes on gay marriage--in which case I will be going after him once in office as will many other DUers.
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