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Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective

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To: American Spirit who wrote (3223)10/20/2000 1:19:20 AM
From: Slugger  Read Replies (2) of 10042
 
Gore: A Candidate In Trouble?

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, October 16, 2000; 8:48 AM

You know a candidate is in trouble when the Los Angeles Times is already mulling explanations for his possible defeat.

You know a candidate is in trouble when USA Today is reporting on internal backbiting in his campaign.

You know a candidate is in trouble when The Washington Post questions which version of the man will show up for tomorrow's
debate, when the New York Times says his party is nervous, when Newsweek has his own advisers saying he couldn't win a
popularity contest.

Al Gore is in trouble, at least according to the media measurement of such matters with three weeks to go. (Yes, we know, George
W. Bush was in trouble a couple of weeks back, but that was several story lines ago.)

Here's part of Ron Brownstein's potential funeral notice in the L.A. Times "If Al Gore can't overcome George W. Bush's
mid-October surge, the vice president's campaign aides already have a ready explanation for his defeat. It's two words: Bill
Clinton. Through millions of dollars in polling, Gore's camp has concluded that many voters have a deep, impenetrable, almost
irrational hatred of the president."

Duh.

"But the same polls that show most voters disliking Clinton personally also show that a solid majority of Americans like his
policies. Clinton's job approval rating remains higher than Ronald Reagan's late in his presidency. In Los Angeles Times surveys
all year, only a small minority of voters have expressed a desire for major changes from Clinton's policy direction. Even Bush
lately has conspicuously praised Clinton. ... So here's a provocative thought: If Gore loses it may not be because he resembles
Clinton too much, but too little."
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