washingtonpost.com  > Politics > Elections > 2004 Election

In 2 Key States, Kerry Focuses on Economy

By David S. Broder and David Nakamura
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, August 26, 2004; Page A06

GREEN BAY, Wis, Aug. 25 -- Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kerry pushed his economic message in two more swing states Wednesday, arguing that his policies will let working families "pay your bills, send your kids to college, buy a house, save a little for retirement, and go out to dinner or a movie once in a while."

At a backyard gathering here and earlier at a union hall in Philadelphia, Kerry promised to "bring quality, high-paying jobs back to America."


In Wisconsin, John F. Kerry urged people to tell conservative neighbors that "there's nothing conservative about piling up debt" as President Bush has done. (Laura Rauch -- AP)

_____Live Discussions_____
Live, Noon ET: John E. O'Neill, co-author of "Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry," will discuss the book.
Live, 2 p.m. ET: John Hurley, national director of Veterans for Kerry, will discuss the recent allegations surrounding Kerry's Vietnam service.
_____Kerry in Philadelphia_____
John Kerry Video: Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry called for Defense Secretary Rumsfeld to resign after a panel investigating prisoner abuse in Iraq faulted Rumsfeld's leadership.
Transcript: Kerry Calls for Rumsfeld to Take Responsibility (FDCH E-Media, Aug 25, 2004)
spacer
2004 Campaign
___ Compare Bush and Kerry ___
spacer
Bush and Kerry Candidate Positions
A side-by-side comparison of the stands taken by President Bush and Sen. John F. Kerry.

___ More Election Coverage ___
spacer
Electoral College Map: Post analysis, polls and recent voting history from 16 swing states.
spacer
Live Discussions: Q&A With Post Reporters, Newsmakers and Pundits
spacer
News From the Trail: Updates and Analysis on Presidential, Senate and House Races




Friday's Question:
It was not until the early 20th century that the Senate enacted rules allowing members to end filibusters and unlimited debate. How many votes were required to invoke cloture when the Senate first adopted the rule in 1917?
51
60
64
67


_____  The Economy _____

Interactive Graphic: Economy Over History
Report: The U.S. Economy



_____Free E-mail Newsletters_____
• Politics News & Analysis
• Campaign Report
• Federal Insider
• News Alert

His campaign released a letter signed by 10 academic economists, all winners of the Nobel Prize in their discipline, asserting that President Bush and the Republicans have embarked "on a reckless and extreme course that endangers the long-term economic health of our nation."

Among the better-known signers are Paul A. Samuelson and Robert M. Solow of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Joseph E. Stiglitz of Columbia, and Kenneth J. Arrow of Stanford.

Their letter says that the Bush administration's tax cuts "were poorly designed and therefore have given insufficient stimulus to job creation."

It continues: "The principal effect of its fiscal policies has been to turn budget surpluses into enormous budget deficits. That fiscal irresponsibility threatens the long-term economic security and prosperity of our nation."

"At the same time," the Nobel winners said, "his policies have exacerbated income inequality, failed to address the real wage declines and rising health care costs beleaguering American families and ignored the need for critical investments to spur long-term growth."

In his morning meeting with the labor audience, Kerry sought to put the same argument in more colloquial language, while rebutting GOP assertions that he is "a pessimist" on the economy. "There's nothing more pessimistic than saying this is the best we can do," said the senator from Massachusetts. "We can do better, and we will."

Standing before a large banner with the words "Jobs-Jobs-Jobs," Kerry said, "We're going to put America back to work." The first question came from a single mother of three who said she had been fired from her factory job without notice and had received no severance pay or temporary health care benefits. Kerry told her that his health care plan would include coverage for all children and that he would provide new job-training benefits for workers in her situation.

Kerry's overnight visit to Philadelphia also included a fundraiser aimed at adding $2 million to Democratic Party campaign funds and a breakfast meeting with African American ministers.

Here in Green Bay, a quiet neighborhood was transformed by Kerry's drop-by into the site of a verbal war between Bush supporters shouting "Four more years" and a larger number of Democrats bellowing "Two more months."

In arguing for different budget priorities than Bush's tax cuts, Kerry quoted legendary Green Bay Packers football coach Vince Lombardi as saying: "Who you are depends on what you do with what you have." He urged his listeners to tell conservative neighbors that "there's nothing conservative about piling up debt" as Bush has done.

Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are states carried in 2000 by Al Gore that have been targeted by Republicans this year, with multiple visits from Bush and Vice President Cheney.

In Ohio, Sen. John Edwards (N.C.), Kerry's running mate, told audiences in an inner-city Cleveland neighborhood and in a more rural community in Warren that a Democratic administration would reinvest in working-class communities.


CONTINUED    1 2    Next >

© 2004 The Washington Post Company