Bush, Kerry Hitting Harder
Challenging President Bush on his home turf, John Kerry decried a "four-year trail of broken promises" that he said have left economic ruin and given free rein to corporate polluters.
"George Mr. Bush is a walking contradiction and a walking barrel of broken promises," the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate said Saturday, speaking to several hundred supporters at a community college.
Kerry was broadening his populist economic themes to challenge Mr. Bush on the environment and his handling of conflicts abroad as, not far away, the president sought to cast himself as a world leader in a summit with Mexico's president, Vicente Fox.
The two rivals traced early outlines of a coming economic fight that is likely to be central to the campaign.
Speaking with reporters at his Crawford, Texas, ranch, 206 miles from Kerry's event in Houston, Mr. Bush defended his handling of the economy, saying "our economy is getting stronger" and suggesting that Kerry's proposals would raise taxes.
"Raising taxes will make it harder for people to find work," Mr. Bush said. Kerry has called for repealing the portions of Mr. Bush's tax cut that went to wealthy taxpayers, a move that Mr. Bush characterizes as a tax increase.
Kerry casts his proposal in terms of using proceeds of a canceled tax break for the wealthy to pay for crucial education and health programs that have suffered under Mr. Bush's watch.
"The people I've met here in Texas and all across America aren't asking for much," Kerry said at a town-hall style meeting. "All they want is a government that honors their values and helps them build a better life."
The president's meeting with Fox comes as he tries to woo Hispanic voters, the fastest-growing voting bloc.
In what CBS News Correspondent Mark Knoller says "sounded like a challenge to Kerry, Mr. Bush said at the ranch that he looks forward to the debate about who is best to lead the country in the war on terror.
Knoller added, "Asked specifically about the objections to the 911 images in his campaign ads -- the president would not say if he would pull them off the air. Instead, he said he will continue to speak about the effects of 911 -- on both the country and his presidency.
In Houston, Kerry derided the new Bush ads that promote his re-election as the man who led the country safely through perilous times.
"About the only promise we can expect George W. Bush to keep this time around is his pledge of steady leadership," said Kerry. "He has no problem campaigning on the same failed economic policies that have steadily led America into economic decline."
Earlier on Saturday, Mr. Bush hailed a new interim constitution as "excellent progress" toward democracy in Iraq, painting an upbeat picture that ignored the cancellation of Friday's scheduled signing of the document.
An elaborate ceremony planned by U.S. and Iraqi officials for Friday was scotched after Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani, rejected portions of the charter. The enactment of an interim constitution represents a key step in the U.S. plan to hand over power to Iraqis on June 30.
Mr. Bush, delivering his weekly radio address, didn't mention the unwelcome developments at all.
"A year ago, Iraq's only law was the whim of one brutal man," he said. "When the new law takes effect, Iraqis will, for the first time in decades, live under the clear protections of a written bill of rights."
But Kerry argued in the Democratic weekly radio address that Mr. Bush has not given the troops sufficient logistical support.
"The first definition of patriotism is keeping faith with those who have worn the uniform of the country," he said.
That drew an immediate response from Mr. Bush campaign spokesman Scott Stanzel, who characterized Kerry's charge as "the latest example of his astonishing ability to say one thing and do another." He accused Kerry of voting against money to pay for the troops.
In Houston, Kerry sought to personalize his populist economic theme, listening to stories from local residents who said they've suffered because of deep cuts in programs Kerry argued have been battered under Mr. Bush's watch.
The Massachusetts senator sought to underscore his message by pointing out economic pressures that have hit Texas with a loss of 84,000 jobs.
"Houston, we've got a problem," he said.
While Kerry sought to make the economy the main focus of his four-day Southern swing, he also made it clear he'll challenge Mr. Bush on the president's conduct of the war in Iraq, using his background as a decorated veteran to claim credibility.
At a stop in San Antonio, Kerry was to meet with a woman who lost her son in Iraq.
Just days after forcing the last of his rivals from the race for the Democratic nomination, Kerry was seeking to show the flag in the South, probably his toughest region in which to build support. He was spending Saturday in Texas before flying to Mississippi.
While few argue seriously that the president's home state or reliably Republican Mississippi are up for grabs in the November election, campaign aides said Kerry was making the point that he'll compete everywhere. He was heading later to Florida, a crucial swing state.
Kerry argues that his focus on jobs and the economy will sell in all regions, but the issue of Iraq and the war on terror injected itself into the fray on Saturday.