MANCHESTER- Democratic Sen. John Kerry, a potential
White House candidate in 2008, said on Friday the Iraq war had worsened
terrorism and that the Bush administration had squandered the nation's moral
authority.
"They tell us we're making progress in Iraq and
that there is no civil war. That is a lie. There is a civil war and it is
costing American and Iraqi lives every single day and we must change course in
Iraq," said Kerry, who lost to President George W. Bush in the 2004
election.
His remarks came at a fund-raising dinner for
about 650 New Hampshire Democrats. The state holds the first presidential
primary and Kerry's scathing criticism of Bush and senior Republicans underlined
growing speculation he would take another shot at the White House.
Kerry and other top Democrats are crisscrossing
the country to boost Democratic congressional candidates in tight races less
than four weeks before the November 7 elections in which Democrats hope to
regain control of Congress.
Speaking to Reuters after the speech, he said
he would make a decision on a 2008 White House bid after November elections. "I
want to help elect a Democratic congress," he said.
The Massachusetts senator said Republicans
could no longer preach moral values after a Capitol Hill cybersex scandal
involving lurid e-mails sent by former Republican lawmaker Mark Foley to teenage
congressional assistants.
"Those from the party that preaches moral
values that covered this up, have no right to preach moral values any more,"
said Kerry. "What we have in Washington is a house of lies and in November we
need to clean house."
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, facing calls by
Democrats and some Republicans to resign, said this week his staff should be
fired "if there was a cover-up"' in the handling of complaints about Foley's
behavior toward teenagers.
In recent speeches, Kerry has positioned
himself to the left of New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the widely
considered Democratic front-runner in 2008, by calling for a near-withdrawal of
U.S. troops from Iraq by year end.
He now says his 2002 vote to authorize the Iraq
invasion was a mistake and has taken stands on hot-button policy issues, such as
proposing in August that all Americans be required to have health insurance by
2012.
Although Kerry has visited New Hampshire nine
times since the 2004 election -- more than any other putative Democratic White
House candidate -- a poll by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center this
week showed voters ranked him fourth among possible Democrat presidential
candidates.
Thirty percent of Democrats in New Hampshire
favored Clinton, 16 percent preferred 2004 vice presidential candidate John
Edwards, 10 percent supported former Vice President Al Gore and just 9 percent
supported Kerry, the poll said.
"Kerry has dropped off significantly in recent
months," pollster Andrew Smith said in the survey.
Jennifer Duffy, a political analyst at the
nonpartisan Cook Political Report, said: "There's not an enormous amount of
enthusiasm out there for Kerry right now. The feeling is that he has had the
opportunity and now it may be time to give somebody else a chance," she added.