For all its repositioning, the Bush team was not going to abandon one of its best weapons — hitting Kerry from on high. On Air Force One the day after Kerry spoke in Boston, aides described for the President, who hadn't watched the address, the Democrat's line of attack, including his claim that he would always fund U.S. troops. Afterward, Bush asked to pump up the portion of his stump speech that lampooned Kerry's explanation of his vote against the $87 billion to fund the U.S. occupation of Iraq. "There is nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat," Bush said at stops in Missouri and Michigan. It was a double barb, attacking Kerry for his vote but also undercutting the assertion in his speech that what Republicans portray as a lack of constancy in him is really a more sophisticated view of the world.

That the Bush campaign had to act quickly to thwart Kerry's attacks on the President's record on fighting terrorism is a sign of just how hard the slog has become. Dowd prophesied months ago that the campaign would be behind in the summer and down by its largest margin after the Democratic Convention. But even Dowd's downer memos — a mix of prescient analysis, spin and innate caution (aides joke his screensaver should say THE END IS NEAR)--didn't foresee that Bush would lose so much of his advantage over Kerry on fighting terrorism. Even top staff members who went through the low points of the 2000 Bush campaign have had bouts of worry. "Some days I wake up and think that we're going to win big, and some days I think we're going to lose big," said a top Bush official during the darkest days a month ago. Says a Bush family intimate: "You'd have to be on Mars not to be worried." But now that Bush is launching his new offensive, the team is feeling brighter. "It's the happiest I've been in 18 months," gushed a top adviser seeing Bush on the stage last week. "Boy does he look like the happy warrior there." To win though, Bush will have to show that he's an effective warrior and John Kerry isn't.

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Cover:
In Victory's Glow
Campaign 2004:
Behind the Scenes
The Senator:
Obama Rising
The Priority:
Back to Iraq
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Table of Contents
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Joe Klein: The Uniter vs. the Divider >>
Charles Krauthammer: How Bush Almost Lost >>
Andrew Sullivan: Let's Have a Truce >>
James Poniewozik: On Media Bashing >>
Michelle Cottle: How Liberals Can Get Over It >>
Hugh Sidey: Savoring Victory, Family Style >>
In Victory's Glow
Voting and watching the returns with Democrats and Republicans
Candidates in the Wings
The G.O.P. race for 2008 starts now
Inside the War Rooms
TIME takes you behind the scenes of this year's campaign moments
Obama Rising
How do you leap from neighborhood activist to U.S. Senator to perhaps higher office?
More Campaign Photos >>
"I promise you, it's me."
— George W. Bush, to an Ohio voter on Election Day
More Quotes from the Campaign
The Morning After
Can America pick up the pieces after a divisive election?
The Battle For Every Last Vote
Inside the high-tech campaign that will really decide the election
The World According to George Bush
An exclusive look at the mind of a President
What Makes John Kerry Tick?
How the Democratic contender can win over the electorate

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