Home > Political Insider > Archives > 2006 > December > 04 > Entry

On the road in Iowa: Bayh on Iraq

Des Moines, Iowa— One of us, the one with only slightly less seniority, has been been sent here on the specious theory that journalists, like peas, travel best when frozen.

Iowa is not Georgia, nor vice versa.

For one, Iowa has a better class of roadkill. Possums here have been superceded by unfortunate pheasants, blown by icy winds from their hiding places in decimated cornfields into the line of traffic.

Seventy-mile-an-hour truckers on I-80 discourage those who would harvest birds lining the shoulders of the interstate.

Another, more important difference can be found in this newborn political season, the embryonic days of the ’08 presidential race.

In Georgia, few Republicans have openly parted ways with President Bush on Iraq. Even Democrats speak about the war in the Middle East with studied circumlocution.

People are not so kind in Iowa. It is a topic of fervent conversation among Democrats. The most loyal Republicans shake their heads.

Keep in mind that Iowa has a history of isolationism, and was an early source of opposition to the Vietnam War.

Evan Bayh, the U.S. senator from Indiana with ’08 ambitions, was here on Monday, talking to a small group of business leaders. It was Bayh’s ninth trip here in the last year, and followed the formal entry of Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack into the race by only a few days.

Nothing rivals the intimacy of presidential politics in Iowa and its sister harbinger, New Hampshire.

The Bayh event consisted of four tables, each seating eight, surrounded by five TV cameras, two still photographers, and yet another taking pictures with a cell phone. (The latter was a TV reporter who wanted to give his station a leg up on his station’s web site.)

Bayh spoke of education, energy dependency, bipartisanship, and the federal deficit. Bayh is not a passionate fellow — he is, after all, selling Midwestern restraint.

What ardor Bahy had, he reserved for Iraq. His money lines:

— “We can be both tough and smart. We tried tough alone. That’s not good enough.”

— On what Bush should be saying: “I’m not in the business, as President of the United States, of asking our brave boys and girls, to die for people who are unable or unwilling to get their own act together…I’m not going to ask people to die to prevent the inevitable.”

Here and here are two Iraq sound bites from his speech. Pardon the pen-scratching. It’s the sound of a reporter at work.

Permalink | Comments (1) |

Comments

Commenting is now closed for this entry.

By Jason Gerson

December 5, 2006 10:03 AM | Link to this

http://purplenewsnetwork.blogspot.com/

 

Kudzu.com: Mosquitos are breeding.  Ready for the bites?
Today's deal from DealSwarm.com
AJC Breaking News Updates