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Bush blasts Dems during Missouri visit

President Bush, working a southwest Missouri campaign crowd like a yell leader, blasted Democrats on Friday, saying they have no plan to keep Americans safe from terrorists.
BUSH MISSOURI
President Bush speaks during a campaign rally at the Springfield Exposition Center in Springfield, Mo., Friday, Nov. 3, 2006.Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

President Bush, working a southwest Missouri campaign crowd like a yell leader, blasted Democrats on Friday, saying they have no plan to keep Americans safe from terrorists.

Bush said Democrats calling for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq aren't unpatriotic, just wrong. He said Democrats who voted against legislation to detain and interrogate suspected terrorists, the National Security Agency's eavesdropping program and the Patriot Act don't understand the stakes in the war on terror.

"If they say they want to win the war on terror, but call for America to pull out of what al-Qaida says is the central front in this war, ask them this question: 'What's your plan?' " Bush said at a rally for Missouri Sen. Jim Talent, who is seeking re-election in one of the tightest races in the nation.

'We have a plan for victory'
"The truth is the Democrats can't answer that question," Bush said. "Harsh criticism is not a plan for victory. Second guessing is not a strategy.

"We have a plan for victory. We have a plan to secure this country, and part of our plan is to send Jim Talent back to the United States Senate."

Bush, who is making two campaign stops in Missouri before traveling to Iowa and Colorado, is on a six-day campaign swing that ends on Election Day. Talent's re-election is critical to the Republican Party effort to retain control of Congress. Democrats need a net gain of six seats to reclaim control of the Senate.

Several thousand GOP supporters cheered Bush as he strode into the darkened Springfield Exposition Center where volunteers handed out signs that said "Cards fans for Talent" - a reference to the St. Louis Cardinals' World Series victory.

The politics of Iraq, stem cell research
Talent is facing a strong challenge from Democrat Claire McCaskill, the state auditor. The race is a statistical dead heat in most polls.

Missouri's Senate race is intertwined with a ballot measure that would engrave the right to conduct embryonic stem cell research into the state constitution. McCaskill supports it; Talent opposes it. Bush didn't mention it.

The president remained upbeat about a GOP victory next Tuesday, while Democrats are expressing growing optimism that their long season out of power might soon end.

Democrats say they are ahead in many races because of the public's growing dissatisfaction with the war in Iraq. And polls show that a clear majority of Americans see the war as a mistake and far fewer support the president's handling of it.

Violence against Iraqis has grown unabated in the past month, with more than 1,300 killed since Oct. 1. Fearing more bloodshed after Sunday's expected announcement of a verdict in the trial of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, Iraq's defense minister has canceled leave for all army officers.

Bush, undeterred, continued to argue that Democrats had no plan to win in Iraq.

"We're going to win this election because we have a record to run on," Bush said.

The McCaskill campaign disagrees.

"President Bush has never had a plan to win in Iraq, and now that Democrats and Republicans are all calling for change, he's desperately clinging to his stay the course," said Adrianne Marsh, a spokeswoman for McCaskill who was finishing a four-day statewide tour and plans to begin a 24-hour campaign blitz in St. Louis Friday evening. "It's unfortunate that Talent is one of the only Republicans who agrees."

Playing the judicial card
Bush also touched on an issue that resonates with the Republican base: Filling the federal bench with judicial conservatives.

Republican National Committee chairman Ken Mehlman, who has been touring Missouri to rally party volunteers, did the same on Thursday in Columbia, saying that it's important for voters to re-elect Talent to make sure that more people like Justices John Roberts and Samuel Alito are placed on the nation's top courts.

"When people go to the polls here in Missouri, you're not only voting for the United States senator, you're voting to determine what kind of judges will sit on the bench," Bush said. "And here's why: If the Democrats were to control the Senate, which they're not, they would prevent judges like Sam Alito and John Roberts from ever making it to the Supreme Court of the United States."