A shocking Zogby Poll this week had former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean at a giant 21-point lead over former New Hampshire primary front-runner Sen. John Kerry. That's more than two-to-one with a 38 percent to 17 percent margin. Dean is the clear front-runner and may well lead the Democrats next year. So, this is a wake-up call for the Bushies. It's time for all the president's men to aggressively defend Bush's policies and attack Dean's extreme left-liberal positions.

So far, Dean has been relying on a relatively narrow base of voter support -- largely Bush-hating, anti-war liberals who make up about half of the Democratic Party and a third of the electorate. But Dean is well-funded, and he has quickly become the darling of the liberal media.

Following his successful rally in New York's Bryant Park this week, The New York Times saw fit to run a huge front-page story with a color picture of the candidate. Meanwhile, a story on Bush's excellent speech at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention -- where he emphasized a stay-the-course commitment in Iraq -- was placed below the Dean story with a much smaller headline.

In the long Times piece on Dean, you had to go 23 paragraphs deep to find a statement on the candidate's basic policy positions: universal health insurance, opposition to the Iraq war, balanced budgets, tax-cut repeal, affirmative action and gay rights. This is not a winning combination, as numerous moderate Democrats point out. Still, if Dean's the one, administration spokespeople should start underscoring the extremism that defines his campaign.

For example, Dean's universal health care is Hillarycare. It's the same government-paid health insurance that's been a disaster in Western Europe and Canada. And it's the same socialist proposal that was defeated handily in a Democratic Congress 10 years ago.

True patient power requires health-insurance choice and market competition along with tax reform. It will be incumbent on the administration to state this clearly. That means coming out in favor of the House bill on Medicare and prescription drugs and strongly opposing the all-government-all-the-time Ted Kennedy version in the Senate. Linking Dean to Sen. Kennedy makes sense -- not only on health care but also on taxes and the war. The Vermont liberal is very much in Kennedy's far-out orbit.