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- NATION, Page 23Barking Like an Underdog
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- Prodded by a right-wing challenger, a folksy, feisty Bush hits
- the campaign trail with a vengeance
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- By MICHAEL DUFFY/PORTSMOUTH -- With reporting by Laurence I.
- Barrett/Manchester
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- In politics, as in sports, George Bush never fights
- harder than when he is behind. Though he would bristle at the
- suggestion, he actually likes to be dismissed as a loser so he
- can pull off an upset. Thus he arrived in New Hampshire last
- week acting more like a scrappy underdog than an incumbent
- President. For 15 hours he scrambled around the southeast part
- of the economically devastated state, shaking hands, patting
- cows and assuring residents that he understood their worries.
- "I know I've got a lot of problems here," he told them, "but
- we're going to take care of those by demonstrating what I feel
- in my heart."
-
- Bush and campaign manager Robert Teeter worked out their
- New Hampshire game plan after the President returned from his
- hapless trip to Japan. Their strategy: take some blame for the
- economy, stress Bush's longtime ties to the state and, except
- for some well-placed reminders about the Desert Storm triumph,
- avoid foreign policy. Masking his patrician demeanor beneath a
- folksy veneer, Bush began dropping his final g's and r's with
- a vengeance, substituting "fixin' ta" for "going to" and quoting
- the lyrics of country-music songs.
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- Bush oozed economic empathy at every stop. Rejecting
- suggestions that he was out of touch with the plight of average
- Americans, he repeatedly insisted, "I care very much about the
- people that are hurting in this state." He noted seven times in
- nine appearances that the first floor of his ancestral summer
- home in nearby Kennebunkport, Me., had been clobbered in a freak
- hurricane last October. "When a storm hits the seacoast here,"
- he said in Portsmouth, "it hits me."
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- Previewing his State of the Union message next week, the
- President promised to create new jobs, prop up real estate
- values, help Americans with health-care costs and make the
- nation more competitive. His apology for declaring the recession
- over last summer was perhaps the shrewdest stroke. "I probably
- have made mistakes in assessing the fact that the economy would
- recover," he said. Such statements are designed to disarm voters
- who blame both Bush and Congress for the economic problems but
- blame Bush more. As one leading New Hampshire Republican put it,
- "Voters here are so unaccustomed to hearing a mea culpa from a
- politician that when they do, they love it."
-
- But they have also been hearing a lot from Republican
- challenger Pat Buchanan, who has made five trips to the state
- since announcing his candidacy last month. Taunting Bush for
- breaking his famous no-new-taxes promise of 1988, Buchanan
- signed a written pledge to that effect and challenged the
- President to do the same. Asked about the dare, Bush brushed it
- aside with a facetious two-word dismissal: "What pledge?"
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- G.O.P. analysts have been publicly predicting that
- Buchanan will win more than 40%. These are inflated estimates
- intended to make Bush look impressive by doing better than
- expected; privately, Bush aides admit that Buchanan's real
- ceiling is probably closer to 25%.
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