Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bush sends mixed message


President Bush listens to a reporter's question during a news conference in the White House on Wednesday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Peter Wallsten Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON – Mixing contrition with defiant optimism, President Bush sought Wednesday to dispel questions from anxious voters and Republican candidates about the GOP’s wartime leadership in Iraq.

His White House news conference demonstrated that the president intends to remain a central participant in the midterm election, even though his approval ratings have slipped and most voters are unhappy with his Iraq policies.

But the appearance also underscored the challenge facing endangered Republicans less than two weeks before the Nov. 7 election as they look to the White House for a clear message on the war. Throughout the hour, the typically plain-spoken Bush offered descriptions of his plans for the waging the war that were complicated and at times appeared contradictory.

In his opening remarks, for example, Bush conceded, “I know many Americans are not satisfied with the situation in Iraq. I’m not satisfied, either.” But asked moments later to assess war, he adamantly insisted, “Absolutely we’re winning” the fight against terrorism.

He took full responsibility for the war, saying, “If people are unhappy about it, look right to the president.” Later, he said it was up to the generals to ask for more troops if they need them and said he would take advice from a bipartisan commission.

And after months of ridiculing Democrats who want a timeline to end the war, he expressed support for “benchmarks” that would lead to U.S. troop drawdowns.

With uncharacteristic nuance, Bush explained that there is a “significant difference between benchmarks for a government to achieve and a timetable for withdrawal.” Yet later he said benchmarks would allow the Iraqi government to tell its people: “Here’s what we intend to do, and here’s when we intend to do it.”

While Bush is not on the ballot, the election for control of Congress has shaped up largely as a referendum on him and the war – a formula that once worked in the GOP’s favor but has grown shaky.

Aides said Bush will maintain an aggressive schedule until Election Day, attending public rallies across the country designed largely to mobilize the conservative voters that form the party’s usually reliable base.

Wednesday’s appearance in the White House’s East Room was intended not for those conservatives, but for moderate voters in competitive House districts. These voters have backed Bush and Republican incumbents in the past, but polls indicated they are now wavering because of the war.

The White House has struggled in recent days to turn that tide – even abandoning the “stay the course” slogan that had been a staple of Bush speeches in which he accused Democrats of trying to “cut and run.”

The challenge facing Bush and GOP candidates was evident in a series of Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg polls conducted last weekend in five pivotal states – Missouri, Ohio, New Jersey, Tennessee and Virginia. The polls showed that most likely voters in those states think Democrats can be counted on to do a better job in Iraq.

But Bush hopes to reach the plurality of likely voters in those states who still say they are willing to stay in Iraq as long as it takes.

“They just want someone to tell them that there is a plan, what the plan is, and that we’re going to win,” said one Republican strategist.

Bush tried to do just that, saying that the administration was forging “new steps to help secure Baghdad, and constantly adjusting our tactics across the country to meet the changing threat.” Five times in his brief introduction, Bush noted that the U.S. was adjusting its tactics against insurgents.

“We cannot allow our dissatisfaction to turn into disillusionment about our purpose in this war,” he said in an apparent effort to strike a contrast with Democrats. “We must not look at every success of the enemy as a mistake on our part, cause for an investigation, or a reason to call for our troops to come home.”

Bush seemed to be telegraphing advice for vulnerable Republicans who, for months, have struggled to defend the war.

“They can take a look at what he’s saying, and it will help people express and frame what the president is trying to do,” said White House press secretary Tony Snow.

With Bush’s comments Wednesday, candidates suddenly have more to tell voters about the administration’s plans in Iraq. “The more he can talk about this and allay fears and anger, it’s helpful,” said Florida-based GOP consultant David Johnson, who is involved in several campaigns.

Bush all but begged voters to blame him for the war’s problems – and to spare their local Republican congressional representative. But he also said he believed that the elections would turn on local matters, not the war.

“This campaign has obviously got national implications to it, no question about it – the Iraq war, the security of the country, economic vitality and growth,” he said. “But each of these elections turn out to be local in their scope and in their character. And we’ve got good candidates running hard. And we’re going to win.”