Saturday, November 08, 2003

Job Figures Buoy Bush, but Democratic Hopefuls See Room to Attack: "'Good luck in using statistics to convince working Americans that the Bush administration has their economic interests at heart,' Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts said in Salem, N.H., in remarks typical of all the potential challengers. 'The deep unfairness of the Bush economy is real to Americans.'" Economic matters have long been the Democrats' strong suit. Now, although the jobs numbers suggest that the economic recovery may be genuine and that the issue may not be the sure winner it seemed a few months ago, the party's strategists said the candidates had no choice but to continue to play this hand. "I still think the race will be run on the economy," said Bruce Reed, president of the Democratic Leadership Council, an organization of moderate Democrats. "But it won't be so much on the recent past as on the outlook for the future." Another tactician who is not affiliated with any candidate, Howard Wolfson, said the improving jobs picture made "the argument on the economy tougher to make but still not impossible." Mr. Wolfson added, "What we have to argue is that he bought a short-term uptick in jobs at the expense of structural deficits as far as the eye can see." http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/08/politics/campaigns/08CAMP.html