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Tuesday, July 27, 2004

GOP to track Kerry's 'extreme makeover'

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By

BOSTON -- The Democrats will be giving Sen. John Kerry "an extreme makeover" at their party's national convention to cover up the candidate's 20-year liberal voting record, Republican leaders charged yesterday.

Beginning a daily critique of Mr. Kerry's record throughout the four-day Democratic gathering, Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie and a high-level GOP support team vowed that they were not going to let the Democrats get away with what they called a "cosmetic convention."

The Republicans dubbed their weeklong effort Extreme Makeover 2004 from the hit television reality show on which participants are given a dramatic change in appearance, including plastic surgery.

"We believe that, for the next four days, the Democrats are going to attempt an extreme makeover of John Kerry's record," Mr. Gillespie said at a press conference within a block of the FleetCenter convention arena, where Mr. Kerry will be nominated for president later this week.

"We doubt that the Democrats will take the stage to highlight John Kerry's 350 votes for higher taxes, his votes to cut intelligence and important weapons systems and his vote against the death penalty for terrorists," the Republican chairman said.

Mr. Gillespie and four other Republican officials then ran down the list of key votes that Mr. Kerry has cast, in most cases voting down the line for the liberal agenda or, in several instances, voting for President Bush's policies, only to turn around in the primaries to denounce the legislation he had supported, they said.

"If you are a hard-core, extreme Democrat, they should be proud of his record to raise taxes, cut defense spending and impose more government regulations. John Kerry should stand up and be proud of this record," said Rep. Henry Bonilla, Texas Republican.

Instead, Mr. Bonilla said, Democrats were going to great lengths to discuss anything but Mr. Kerry's Senate voting record.

Going into this week's convention, Democratic leaders have said that the senator's campaign strategy would be to recast himself as a political centrist, as Bill Clinton successfully did at the 1992 convention.

But Republican strategists think the election will be won or lost on how well they can define Mr. Kerry by his Senate votes and the left-of-center positions he took in his presidential primary fight against liberal rivals such as Howard Dean of Vermont.

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