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Denver Post: It's the $4 Gas, Stupid
Op-Ed By Dan Haley, Denver Post
August 4, 2008
Article Excerpts:
This is supposed to be a lousy year for Republicans.
After eight years of President Bush, the country is in a sour mood.
Energy prices are soaring. The economy is almost as bad as we nattering nabobs of negativity in the
media claim it to be. We're still mired in two wars, and let's not forget the ever-growing national
debt that won't be paid off for years and years, long after the last iceberg has melted.
Oh, we're sour all right. Welcome to malaise, 21st-century style.
A poll last week suggested that fewer than a quarter of all Americans think the country is moving in
the right direction. Only 24 percent of Americans have a positive outlook for the country, while 76
percent say things are on the wrong track, according to a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll.
That 24 percent is the lowest since 1980, during our last malaise period, and it's only the third time
in four decades the number has sunk that low. . . .
Yet John McCain, the Republican who should be taking it on the chin, just pulled even with Barack Obama
in one major national opinion poll and just edged ahead of the Boy Wonder in Colorado. The race is even
tightening in pivotal Florida and Ohio.
How can that be? . . . Something is happening.
Pundits spent the better part of last week speculating. It could be, some suggested, that independent
voters are looking at Obama in a different light now that the primaries are over and questioning whether
he has the experience to serve. It could be that McCain, who still brandishes some of that old "maverick"
image, is more palatable to moderate, independent voters than an otherwise far-right conservative heir
to the Bush throne might be.
It could be that Americans weren't as impressed with Obama's World Tour 2008 as the media and many
Europeans were.
Or it could just come down to our gas pains.
Republicans, for now, have the best strategy for dealing with the one thing, besides this ridiculously
hot weather, that we can't stop talking about: $4 a gallon gas.
Democrats have tried to blame Bush's failed energy policies for high fuel prices, but it's not working.
No one wants finger pointing, they want solutions.
So Republicans say drill here, drill now.
It won't significantly lower gas prices any time soon, as the Democrats constantly counter, but as a
political strategy it's simple and tangible. . . .
Editorial page editor Dan Haley can be reached at dhaley@denverpost.com.
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entire article.
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