The Father of the Internet Once Slopped Hogs
Gore Pushes Down-Home Image in Iowa
By Calvin Woodward Associated Press Writer Wednesday, March 17, 1999; 2:28 a.m. EST
WASHINGTON (AP) -- When Vice President Al Gore opened his Iowa campaign this week, his privileged upbringing as the son of a senator was nowhere in sight. Instead, he talked about how he slopped hogs, drove mules, built homes and cleared land -- by hand and with a double-bladed ax, no less.
The man running for president was a boy who lived and was schooled in the rarefied air of Washington, spending summers and congressional breaks on the family farm in Tennessee. But as far as Iowans could tell, it was all sweat and no refinement.
Solid and savvy by reputation, Gore goes into his presidential campaign with a thus-far small but nagging question -- is he also one to embellish his past?
To his defenders, a misstep here and there is inconsequential in such a long run under the public eye. To critics, he has shown a vain streak likely to become increasingly exposed in the rough and tumble of the emerging campaign.
If Gore has a tendency toward puffery, it has yet to register with the public. When pollster Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center asks people for quick characterizations of the vice president, he gets a mix like 'good,' 'boring,' 'OK,' 'unexciting,' and 'stable.'
Gore laid it on thick in Iowa, contending in a round of appearances and interviews that he was a small-business person and a homebuilder -- experiences for which he has not been known. ''I lived on a farm,'' he went on, and learned how to plow a ''steep hillside'' with mules, hose out the hog waste and ''take up hay all day long in the hot sun.''
His ruminations were meant to contrast himself with rival Bill Bradley, the former pro basketball player. The last time Gore tried to draw distinctions with Bradley, a week earlier, he overstepped.
Republicans threw gleeful barbs when Gore suggested then that he'd created the Internet, that huge, amorphous communications vehicle that got rolling long before he entered politics. More than a year ago, he claimed he and his wife were models for the romantic novel ''Love Story,'' leaving the author of that book ''befuddled.''
The ribbing over the Internet claim was playful, but the GOP obviously senses future opportunity to hammer the early favorite for the Democratic nomination.
''Earnest boastfulness does not play well,'' said William Kristol, editor of the conservative Weekly Standard magazine. As former chief of staff for Vice President Dan Quayle, Kristol has painful personal knowledge of how a public figure's blunders can blow up in one's face.
''Certain gaffes hurt when they fit into a stereotype,'' he said. ''I think Gore's comment taking credit for the Internet is an example of that. I think it's a damaging gaffe because it reinforces something out there.''
Andrei Cherny, senior speechwriter for Gore in 1997 and 1998, disputes that view. He also contends Gore, whose stiffness is the stuff of self-parody, won't become even more so out of fear of saying something silly.
''He's been in public life for almost a quarter century now and has been under a great deal of scrutiny for at least the past seven years,'' said Cherny, now editing a magazine of Democratic ideas called Blueline. ''I think in many ways he is who he is, and that's not going to change because of a bit of a good-natured ribbing because of one stray remark.''
Gore's claim to have coined the phrase ''information superhighway'' has not been seriously challenged, and he was an early and enthusiastic supporter in Congress of communications technology. But a father of the Internet? Histories of cyberspace barely mention him, if at all.
In December 1997, Gore told a reporter he and Tipper Gore were models for the characters in ''Love Story,'' Erich Segal's 1970s bestseller. A surprised Segal said Gore, whom he knew at Harvard, inspired one side of his male hero's personality -- the one controlled by a domineering father -- but his book had nothing to do with Mrs. Gore.
Back in his 1988 campaign for the presidential nomination, Gore defended his use of a brochure with a picture of him carrying an M-16 rifle in Vietnam, denying he was trying to make people think he served in combat. He had also appeared in TV ads wearing an olive-green field jacket and saying: ''I'm a Vietnam veteran -- one of the lucky ones.''
Gore spent five months in Vietnam as a military information officer, a noncombat role that he says included brushes with enemy fire.
© Copyright 1999 The Associated Press
>>>Must be tough growing up and inheriting a Congressional seat. |