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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ColtonGang who wrote (54051)10/29/2000 4:08:12 AM
From: ColtonGang  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769667
 
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.



To: ColtonGang who wrote (54051)10/29/2000 9:03:52 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
NYT Editorial today.........

Al Gore for President

Despite all the complaints about the
difficulty of falling in love with either Al
Gore or George W. Bush, these two very
different men have delivered a clean,
well-argued campaign that offers a choice
between two sharply contrasting visions of the future. Even though Vice
President Gore is a centrist Democrat and Governor Bush has presented
himself as the most moderate Republican nominee in a generation, they
have sketched very different pictures of the role of government and how
actively the president should help families secure adequate education,
health care and retirement. This is also the first presidential campaign in
recent history centered on an argument over how best to use real,
bird-in-the-hand resources to address age-old domestic problems while
also defining the United States' role in a world evermore dependent on it
for farsighted international leadership.

Having listened to their debate, we today firmly endorse Al Gore as the
man best equipped for the presidency by virtue of his knowledge of
government, his experience at the top levels of federal and diplomatic
decision-making, and his devotion to the general welfare. We offer this
endorsement knowing that Mr. Bush is not without his strong points and
that Mr. Gore has his weaknesses. But the vice president has struggled
impressively and successfully to escape the shadow of the Clinton
administration's ethical lapses, and we believe that he would never follow
Bill Clinton's example of reckless conduct that cheapens the presidency.
Like Senator John McCain, Mr. Gore has been chastened by personal
experience with sleazy fund-raising. He has promised to make campaign
finance reform his first legislative priority, whereas Mr. Bush is unwilling
to endorse the elimination of special-interest money from American
politics.

We commend Mr. Bush for running a largely positive, inclusive
campaign. He has not reviled government like Ronald Reagan in 1980 or
played on divisive social themes as his father did in 1988. But on
women's rights, guns and law-enforcement issues, he has a harsh agenda,
and the centerpiece of his domestic program is a lavish tax cut for the rich
that would negate the next Congress's once-in- a-century opportunity to
move the country toward universal health care and stabilization of Social
Security and Medicare.

Leadership

Mr. Bush has asked to be judged by something more than his positions.
He offers himself as an experienced leader who would end the culture of
bickering in Washington and use wisdom and resoluteness in dealing with
domestic social problems and international crises. But his résumé is too
thin for the nation to bet on his growing into the kind of leader he claims
already to be. He does have great personal charm. But Mr. Bush's main
professional experience was running a baseball team financed by friends
and serving for six years as governor in a state where the chief executive
has limited budgetary and operational powers. His three debates with
Mr. Gore exposed an uneasiness with foreign policy that cannot be
erased by his promise to have heavyweight advisers. John F. Kennedy,
as a far more seasoned new president, struggled through the Cuban
missile crisis while his senior advisers offered contradictory advice on
how to confront a Soviet military threat on America's doorstep. The job
description is for commander in chief, not advisee in chief.

The vice president has admitted to his limitations as a speaker. But Al
Gore has a heart — and a mind — prepared for presidential-scale
challenges. When it comes to the details of policy making, he will not
need on-the-job training.

Taxes and the Economy

Preserving the nation's remarkable prosperity must be considered the
thematic spine of this election. Mr. Gore helped stiffen Mr. Clinton's
resolve to maintain the budgetary discipline that erased the federal deficit,
stimulated productivity and invigorated the financial markets. Now, Mr.
Gore and his running mate, Senator Joseph Lieberman, promise to
maintain fiscal rigor while using the surplus on spending programs and tax
breaks for the working families that profited least from the biggest boom
in American history. More specifically, Mr. Gore would seize this
opportunity to improve the environment and spend more money to hire
teachers and build schools. We like his capitalism with a conscience
more than the trickle-down sound of Mr. Bush's compassionate
conservatism.

To be blunter, Mr. Bush's entire economic program is built on a stunning
combination of social inequity and flawed economic theory. He would
spend more than half the $2.2 trillion non-Social Security surplus on a tax
cut at a time when the economy does not need that stimulus. Moreover,
as Mr. Gore has said repeatedly and truthfully, over 40 percent of the
money would go to the wealthiest 1 percent of taxpayers. Mr. Bush
would expand some programs for schools, but he also embraces the
Republicans' ideologically driven approach of using vouchers to transfer
money from public to private schools. There is nothing compassionate or
conservative about blowing the surplus on windfalls for the wealthy
instead of investing it in fair tax relief and well-designed social programs.

The nation's biggest domestic need remains universal access to health
care. Neither candidate would move as fast as we would like. But Mr.
Gore has outlined steps that would start us down the road to covering the
45 million uninsured Americans. He would expand Medicare, guarantee
prescription drugs for seniors and provide more opportunity for the
uninsured to obtain coverage. Mr. Bush favors a bipartisan approach on
these issues, but his proposals have seemed reactive rather than driven
by an inner passion.

Mr. Gore's commitment to Social Security is deeply rooted, too, and
more responsible. His proposal to supplement the system with personal
investment retirement accounts is superior to Mr. Bush's plan to privatize
part of the system. The governor's scheme would siphon money out of
Social Security at the very moment when both seniors and younger
taxpayers want to see long-term fixes to ensure its solvency.

Foreign Policy

Upon his arrival in Washington more than two decades ago, Mr. Gore
set out to master the intricacies of arms control and foreign policy. He
broke with his party to support the war against Iraq in 1991. He was an
advocate of military force in the Balkans, and today he calls for a more
muscular approach to using American forces to protect the country's
security interests and prevent genocidal conflicts abroad.

We have expressed concern here that Mr. Gore might sometimes be too
eager to project power overseas. But it is also true that Mr. Bush's
repeated objections to using troops for peacekeeping and nation-building
do not add up to a mature national- security vision. Neither does his
promise to rely on his running mate, former Defense Secretary Dick
Cheney, and his likely secretary of state, the retired general Colin Powell.

Mr. Gore will have advisers, but he will not need a minder. He
understands that in order to influence the allies an American president
must lead from the front. He has already been eye to eye with the world's
leaders. While Mr. Bush has a contracting definition of national security,
Mr. Gore has been in the forefront of redefining it to include issues of
health and environment and the containment of regional conflicts that can
metastasize into threats to world peace.

Rights and Values

Mr. Gore has said that abortion rights are on the ballot in this election. So
are other issues such as civil liberties, environmental protection and gun
control. The next president may appoint up to five Supreme Court
justices and thereby exercise a lasting impact on the daily lives of
Americans. A court tilted by conservative Bush appointees could
overturn Roe v. Wade and assert a doctrine of states' rights that would
take environmental protection out of federal hands. Ralph Nader and his
supporters are not simply being delusional when they say there is no real
difference between these candidates. They are being dishonest, and
dangerously so.

Mr. Gore brings a lifelong record of protecting basic rights for women,
minorities and gays, while Mr. Bush has almost no record at all. The vice
president has been the driving force in this administration's environmental
successes, and he understands the need for federal regulation for
environmental tasks like saving the Everglades and for American
leadership to combat global warming. Mr. Bush is for an unrealistic
regimen of negotiating with industry on air and water problems and for
letting the oil companies loose in sensitive areas.

The Real Choice

Most citizens know that Mr. Gore wins any comparison with Mr. Bush
on experience and knowledge. Yet many voters seem more comfortable
with Mr. Bush's personality and are tempted to gamble on him. We do
not dismiss this desire for someone who they feel does not talk down to
them and would come to the White House free of any connection to Mr.
Clinton's excesses. But it is important to remember that the nation's
prosperity, its environmental progress and its guarantees of civil rights
and reproductive freedom took years to build. They could be undone in a
flash by a pliable and inexperienced president driven by a highly
ideological Congress.

Mr. Gore does have a tendency to be patronizing and to exaggerate. But
he has a career of accomplishment that can stand on its own without
exaggeration. Despite his uneven performance in the debates, the content
of his campaign in these final days demonstrates how much he has grown
in the last year. Voting for him is not a gamble on unknown potential.

We support Albert Gore Jr. with the firm belief that he will go just as far
in bringing "honor and dignity" back to the White House as Mr. Bush,
and that he will bring an extra measure of talent and conviction as well.
His seriousness of purpose, his commitment to American leadership in
the world and his concern for those less fortunate in American society
convince us that he will lead the country into a creative, productive and
progressive era at the beginning of the 21st century.