Philadelphia Inquirer, a conservative news organization BACKS GORE...........Sunday, October 29, 2000
Editorial
Al Gore for president
It's no lie. He wins any fair comparison on experience, insight and issues.
Americans should elect Al Gore as their next president.
The vice president is the better choice because his vast experience and earnest intelligence outstrip what Gov. George W. Bush has to offer.
Yes, Al Gore has pursued this office awkwardly at times. Never will he match Bill Clinton for charm or guile. For discipline and moral compass, though, he far surpasses the president he so ably served.
Along with the president, Al Gore deserves fair credit for the deficit-closing policies that trimmed interest rates, freed up capital and helped unleash the tide of productivity that buoys the U.S. economy.
He shares with Mr. Clinton a sophisticated grasp of the many forces - from global trade to digital technology to genetic science to the imperatives of human rights - that will propel this nation into this new century.
His Republican opponent has run a shrewd, upbeat campaign, with flashes of eloquence and wit. He has elevated his party's outlook on education and diversity in ways that ought to endure past Nov. 7.
But there is no way around it. George W. Bush's resume remains remarkably thin for a man at the threshold of the Oval Office. His likable manner should not lead voters to gloss over the shaky grasp of policy and the petulance about criticism - indeed, the general lack of depth - that he has shown in the campaign.
With trust in the vice president's basic desire to do right, with admiration for his command of issues and with confidence that he will govern more impressively than he campaigns, The Inquirer endorses AL GORE for president.
Much has been prattled this fall about how insipid is this presidential choice, how indifferent this electorate. To be sure, the sordid money-grubbing and incessant posturing of modern presidential politics are dispiriting.
But these are two serious men, Al Gore and George W. Bush. They have talked this year about issues that truly matter to the bulk of Americans - what one generation owes the next, how to help children learn, how to make health care affordable, how to promote American ideals in a dangerous world, how to uphold values in the face of pell-mell technology and careless pop culture.
Their search for swing voters at times clouds their differences. But the two really have offered distinct choices that update the ancient arguments between Democrat and Republican. Gov. Bush's charm and social concern soften but don't erase his party's schizophrenic distrust of government and blind faith in markets. Mr. Gore works to blend his longtime centrist focus on results and responsibility with the populist tradition of fighting for the less powerful.
Of course, that's not what the talk is along the soccer sidelines on these crisp fall weekends. There you hear Americans, trained into cheap cynicism by too much scandal, mouthing the pundit's cliche: No really compelling issues.
Decades from now, people will look back at the shrug with which so many Americans responded to this pivotal moment of prosperity and possibility and slap their foreheads: How could they not have seen the stakes?
They'll look back at the nasty frame that's been incessantly forced upon this choice - Gore, liar; Bush, dumb - and see it for what it was: a big, dumb lie.
Gov. Bush, while leery of intellectualism, is not dumb. No one who has seen the discipline and ingenuity with which he has worked his shattered party back into the sunlight could claim that. His rep as an amiable dunce, however, has helped him get away with telling quite a few whoppers on the campaign trail.
Meanwhile, the so-called liar, Mr. Gore, does indeed have an irksome penchant for exaggeration.
But the real tissue of lies has been the one inflicted upon him by his partisan detractors. Desperate to lay a "character" indictment on Mr. Gore that neither his private life nor public acts could justify, they have recklessly distorted his words. One example among many: Al Gore never claimed to have "discovered" Love Canal; the students who heard what he actually said have produced the tape.
Did Mr. Gore sully his good name by adding to the fund-raising sins of the 1996 campaign? No question. But he has offered the most practical penance: a vow to push the McCain-Feingold reform. Gov. Bush, by contrast, having driven John McCain ruthlessly from the field, has shown no inclination to follow the senator's inspirational lead in cleaning up the money mess that so many Americans see as a fatal breach of faith.
That is but one issue where Mr. Gore has staked out higher ground. A quick tour of other key issues:
The surplus: No, it may not happen. No, Congress won't just enact either guy's plan. But their priority lists say a lot. Al Gore's stress on paying down the debt is classic fiscal prudence that would enable flexible government in coming decades. His complicated tax breaks are less laudable. Gov. Bush's $1.3 trillion tax cut would be reckless and perhaps inflationary; it undercuts every fine promise he makes on education or health care. He falsely describes the way his plan loads up tax relief for the wealthy as some kind of mathematical necessity. No, it is a moral and political choice.
Social Security: Gov. Bush would deserve more credit for addressing its taboo problem of generational equity, if he hadn't refused coyly to offer key specifics of his plan for partial privatization.
Health care: Each man is too incremental in helping the uninsured. But Gov. Bush's abysmal record on this issue in Texas explodes his credibility.
Gun control: Gov. Bush has done little to suggest he would not be a lapdog for the NRA. Mr. Gore's record is sound.
Environment: Mr. Gore has a 20-year record of commitment mixed with pragmatic solutions. Gov. Bush didn't even enforce well his father's Clean Air Act.
Supreme Court: Gov. Bush minces no words: His nominees would tip the court toward ideological activists like Justices Scalia and Thomas. These two cloak their push to overturn 50 years of progress on racial and social justice in the false raiment of "strict construction." The potential damage here is vast.
Gov. Bush speaks to great effect about ending a sour season of partisanship. He doesn't mention that it was some Republicans' visceral hatred of Bill Clinton that mired Washington in partisan strife from 1992 on.
A key question is how a President Bush would work, not with Democrats, but with those Hill Republicans. Can he restrain the ideological triumphalism of the DeLays and Lotts? Their eager support of Gov. Bush suggests they see someone who won't much get in their way.
Al Gore is a veteran of both houses and of eight years in a White House that ended deficits by dealing cleverly with an antagonistic Congress. Give him the clear edge in experience here.
Any choice for president hinges in part on a gut assessment of what cannot be known: How an individual will cope with the stresses of the world's toughest job, how he will react to perilous crises or momentous trends yet to unfold.
In Bosnia and elsewhere, Al Gore has shown backbone and wisdom amid the white heat of foreign crisis. Gov. Bush can only reassure us that he'll keep Dick Cheney and Colin Powell near at hand.
Al Gore's zeal for thinking creatively about the future is well known. The Bush approach is to reduce the job to a few basic goals and maxims.
If you think the world America leads in the early 21st century will be a simple, predictable place, Gov. Bush's blithe style may seem fine to you. But if you recognize that running the world's greatest democracy and economy will take great foresight, flexibility and knowledge, then Al Gore is your choice. |