Is Bush making a comeback? Why two Democrats mention him uncritically.
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| Washington
Don鈥檛 look now, but President George W. Bush is making a comeback of sorts 鈥 in the service of two Democratic candidates for the Senate who are emphasizing bipartisanship.
There is the affable Dubya smiling with former Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine (D) in a recent TV advertisement in Mr. Kaine鈥檚 race against another former Commonwealth governor, Republican George Allen.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 agree with any president all the time, but I know that when our nation succeeds,聽Virginia succeeds,鈥 Kaine says in the ad, called 鈥,鈥 that the campaign released last week.
鈥淎s governor, I worked with the Bush administration to build Rail-To-Dulles,鈥 Kaine says of a long-awaited public transit line to the busy northern Virginia airport as a picture of Mr. Bush and Kaine flashes on screen.
Then, moving to an image of Kaine and the current president, he continues, 鈥渁nd with the Obama administration to stop an aircraft carrier from moving out of Virginia.鈥
Richard Carmona, the Democratic challenger for an open Senate seat in Arizona, has not one but two pictures with the second President Bush on his 鈥淩epublicans for Carmona鈥 . Therein, Mr. Carmona touts being nominated for his tenure as US surgeon general by Bush back in 2002. (He was confirmed unanimously by the Senate.)
Carmona, like Kaine, isn鈥檛 afraid to deviate from the party line 鈥 in one , Carmona says both parties have helped foul up the nation鈥檚 health-care system.
Both candidates are casting the 43rd president for clear reasons. In Virginia, Kaine has repeatedly contrasted his pragmatic approach with what he sees as the more bruising style of his opponent, Mr. Allen.
In Arizona, Carmona is fighting an uphill battle against the state鈥檚 GOP tilt and a savvy opponent in Rep. Jeff Flake and will likely need more than a few voters who vote for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney to also cast their lots with him.
What is striking, however, is that the 43rd president of the United States is invisible to Mr. Romney鈥檚 presidential run, nor does he get a whiff of a mention in campaign ads for incumbent Republicans scrambling to distance themselves from a toxic Washington.
When Bush does show up in ads in those races, it鈥檚 usually for聽Democrats, but for reasons very much at odds with those of Kaine and Carmona. Instead of stressing bipartisanship, the ads trash Republicans for unpopular wars or the 鈥渇ailed policies of the past.鈥
The presidencies of both Bush presidents (41 and 43) were all but absent from the Republican National Convention, too, save for a video montage shown well out of prime time.
By drafting Bush 43 into their political service, both Carmona and Kaine are trying to back up a sentiment Kaine articulates clearly at the end of his ad: 鈥淚 approve this message because Washington needs more partners and fewer partisans.鈥