Kerry predicts character attacks from Bush camp

Democratic White House candidate Mr John Kerry predicted today Republicans would try to "tear down" his character and said some…

Democratic White House candidate Mr John Kerry predicted today Republicans would try to "tear down" his character and said some foreign leaders had told him they hoped he would beat President George W. Bush.

The four-term Massachusetts senator and decorated Vietnam War veteran told supporters at a fund-raiser in Fort Lauderdale that he expected a tough eight-month campaign in which Republicans would make an effort to malign himself and his wife,  outspoken heiress and philanthropist Mrs Teresa Heinz Kerry.

"I am convinced that we have the ability to win this race,"  he said. "It's going to be hard fought, they're going to do everything possible to tear down my character personally (and) Teresa. That's the way they operate."

Mr Kerry cited how Republicans turned on one of their own in 2000, when Arizona Sen. John McCain, another decorated Vietnam War veteran who survived six years as a prisoner of war, ran against Bush for the party's nomination.

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"They even tried to challenge John McCain's tenure as a prisoner for six years ... they tried to besmirch his character, so I expect everything," he said.

Mr Bush and his Republican allies have already tried to portray the Yale-educated son of a diplomat as a Northeastern liberal elitist, a chronic waffler and a fence-sitter.

Mr Kerry rejected what he has called the old style politics of divisiveness and said he would not let the finger-pointing distract from the issues of jobs, health care, the economy and national security.

"I'm a fighter," he said. "And I'm ready for it, and I'm not going to let them change the subject. The subject is America, the oneness ... our kids, our future, all of the issues that are staring us in the face."

Without naming anybody, Kerry said he had received words of encouragement from leaders abroad who were eager to see him defeat Bush on November 2nd.

"I've met foreign leaders who can't go out and say this publicly, but boy they look at you and say, 'You've got to win this, you've got to beat this guy, we need a new policy,' things like that," he said.