A Bush landslide is called remote

He faces tough race, ex-White House aide says

Published: Sunday, Feb. 22 2004 12:00 a.m. MST

Americans expecting President Bush to be swept by a landslide of support back into office don't understand the gravity of the past two months, one of politics' top observers and a former White House insider told a small Salt Lake audience Friday.

"Bush is not home free; for the first time Bush looks vulnerable," David Gergen, an adviser to four U.S. presidents, PBS television network political sentinel and now Harvard professor, told a group of Zions Bank high-asset clients gathered for a seminar at the Little America Hotel.

"The White House is not as disciplined as it was a few months ago," said Gergen, director of communications for Ronald Reagan and an adviser to Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Bill Clinton. "The wheels are coming off a little and the president is off-balance," Gergen said, noting that Bush's State of the Union address was flat and his recent one-on-one interview with journalist Tim Russert was flatter. People's trust in Bush, "his biggest asset, is suddenly in question."

Nevertheless, the odds are that the Republican president will defeat Sen. John Kerry, his probable Democratic challenger, Gergen said, noting that only three of 10 incumbents seeking re-election since 1944 were turned out (Ford, Carter and Bush's father).

"Kerry should be mincemeat for Republicans," Gergen said, noting that the senator is from the liberal Northeast, which has produced one electable presidential candidate in 60 years (John F. Kennedy). He is the "son" of Mike Dukakis," who ran a wildly unsuccessful presidential bid and who pundits called "Zorba the Clerk." But Kerry is more qualified than his predecessors and is tougher than a lot of people expected, Gergen said.

"The big question is once people get to know Kerry will they like him?" Gergen said, adding that "you could easily count on two hands and probably on one the number of friends he has in the Senate. People want a likable guy. Say what you want about George Bush, he's likable. People in Massachusetts have a great deal of respect for Kerry, but they're not warm about him."

Gergen said he expects both the economy and the war in Iraq to brighten over the next several months, which will aid Bush. "And if Osama bin Laden were captured in October, that would change the election overnight."

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS