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ANALYSIS: Bush still optimistic, but aides, GOP strategists
worried about McCain

Copyright © 2000 Nando Media
Copyright © 2000 Scripps Howard News Service

By MURIEL DOBBIN, Nando Washington Bureau

DULLES, Va. (February 26, 2000 2:00 a.m. EST
http://www.nandotimes.com) - While GOP front-runner George W. Bush
proclaimed his optimism about the storm clouds gathering over his
presidential campaign as he heads into the most critical phase of the
primary season, aides and Republican strategists admitted that they are
seriously worried about John McCain.

Making a quick stop Friday in Virginia, a conservative base where he is
expected to sweep Tuesday's primary, Bush spent much of a press
conference alternating between explaining that McCain's success was
based on his temporary appeal to Democrats who would eventually vote for
Vice President Al Gore, and radiating confidence about his chances in the
upcoming slew of primaries from Virginia to Washington state, California,
New York and Ohio.

"I never thought this would be easy," Bush said. "It's hard, very hard. But it's
a marathon race. I feel great, and I'm enjoying it."

But at times his jovial mood became snappish, as when he reprimanded a
reporter for "butting in when I'm just pausing in what I'm saying."

However, Republican officials and insiders disputed Bush's contention that
McCain was succeeding only because of mischief-making Democrats who
tilted the recent Michigan primary vote, and his belief that McCain would fail
in his drive to add Republicans to his independent followers.

They warned that a primary danger posed by the Arizona senator was his
successful claim to the role of outsider and reformer that once formed the
base of the Texas governor's candidacy.

A California Republican official, speaking on condition of anonymity,
warned that the combination of Bush's once-formidable campaign war
chest and his overwhelming support by the party hierarchy had turned him
into the candidate of the establishment. The worst possible scenario facing
Bush, suggested the official, was that as a result of the state's voting rules,
McCain would win the popular vote in California's March 7 primary while
the Texan captured the Republican vote and the delegates.

That, the official suggested, might lead not only to "a public-relations
disaster for the Republicans" but to a potential conflict over seating at the
GOP national convention in Philadelphia.

Another official, Barbara Alby, a Republican National Committeewoman in
California, warned, "California is very tough. The magic of McCain is that
he has come to represent the anti-status quo and the nonestablishment. He
has managed to annex that territory. Bush's people aren't pushing him out
on the stump enough, and his strength in the party has made him vulnerable
to a charge of being establishment."

In another warning sign for Bush, there has grown what New Hampshire
Republican strategist Tom Rath called "a gnawing sense of unease"
behind the scenes about the outcome of March 7, "Super Tuesday," when
GOP voters in a dozen states - including California and New York - hold
primaries and caucuses.

A few months ago, Rath said, it was the conventional wisdom that Bush
would cap a triumphal march to the nomination by sweeping to victory over
the next few weeks in states where more than 1,000 delegates are at
stake.

That was before the specter of McCain began to haunt Bush, before his
defeats in the New Hampshire and Michigan primaries. It was also before
Bush campaign funds slipped from $70 million to $10 million, arousing
complaints by Republicans about his wasting money on McCain territory
like the Arizona primary, which Bush lost by a wide margin Tuesday.

"The trouble was that the McCain phenomenon was allowed to fester and
take root in New Hampshire," said Rath. "The Bush people let McCain
become 'Saint John,' and that's what he still is."

He noted that Bush had the consolation of successes in Iowa, Delaware
and South Carolina, as well as statistics indicating that had Democrats not
entered the Michigan race on the side of McCain, the Texan would have
won.

"Bush shouldn't panic," said Rath. "But he has to recapture the focus."

The GOP still has a heavy commitment to Bush, Rath said.

"Bush is the candidate the party has invested in," he said. "But every time
he doesn't put McCain away in a primary, it's trouble."

Steve Duprey, Republican state chairman in New Hampshire, said, "This
has become a wide-open race between an organized establishment
candidate and a momentum candidate. The challenge to Bush is to show
he can get independents as well as Republicans. If McCain has any
success in his pursuit of Republicans, that could be a problem."

Duprey added that Bush was right in calling the race a marathon, but he
noted that until a few weeks ago it was a marathon expected to be wound
up by the primaries of March.

"If it's not over by March," he observed, "keep in mind that you can bleed to
death in a marathon."

Robert Teeter, a veteran Republican pollster who was campaign manager
for the candidate's father, former President George Bush, suggested that
the Texas governor had problems "perceptually," although he remained
likely to win the GOP nomination.

Urging that Bush get back to the kind of grass-roots campaigning that got
him elected twice to the Texas governor's mansion, Teeter said, "McCain
turned out to be the wild card that nobody expected, and that's tough,
because as a combination of a war hero and a good campaigner, he's the
perfect anti-Clinton candidate."

He advised Bush to "stop doing his message by rote, and relax more."

Teeter was also one of several Republicans - including Karen Hughes,
Bush's campaign director - who voiced concern about how much the loss of
the outsider's mantle to McCain had damaged the governor's effort to
portray himself as the only candidate of reform.

Bush's victory in South Carolina was heavily attributed to the support of the
religious right, led by broadcaster Pat Robertson. His strategy of
organizing anti-McCain telephone calls led to criticism of Bush for negative
campaigning and forced the governor to deny approving such tactics. The
Bush campaign has asked Robertson to stop making the calls.

Responding to another issue that has dogged him since the South Carolina
primary, Bush made a point Friday of emphasizing that although he "said
what he had to say" at Bob Jones University, he had made it clear to
officials there that he opposed their ban on interracial dating. "I can't make
that any clearer," he said.

Bush's campaign schedule will take him from Virginia to Washington state
next week, then to California, with trips to New York and Ohio also planned.
A new poll showed Bush leading McCain in conservative Virginia by 11
points, which local political analyst Larry Sabato, a professor of
government at the University of Virginia, described as only a "moderate"
lead.

"Bush should swamp the opposition here," he said. "If he can't win in
Virginia, where can he win?"

Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.


"Reptilians make good barbeque."

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