SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Al Gore vs George Bush: the moderate's perspective -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Hawkmoon who wrote (7948)11/28/2000 8:30:01 PM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10042
 
One of the qualities of being a leader is knowing when to face facts. Gore just doesn't seem to get it,..... that, well, he just ain't goin' "get it"...

Gore Faces Emotional Election Saga

By Sandra Sobieraj
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2000; 6:43 p.m. EST

washingtonpost.com

WASHINGTON –– For Al Gore, the daily roulette wheel of election-saga emotion seemed to teeter Tuesday on the line separating red from black.

Publicly, the vice president showed a steely ire as he sought to place blame for the drawn-out presidential election in George W. Bush's lap.

Gore called a news conference – a rare event – on the lawn of the vice presidential residence. He rapped Bush for rejecting his proposed expedited schedule for resolving his court challenge of the Florida presidential vote.

Gore fumed that the result would be "two weeks of additional court proceedings and additional hearings.

"I believe this is a time to count every vote and not to run out the clock. This is not a time for delay, obstruction and procedural roadblocks." He noted pointedly that Bush was the first to file lawsuits over the Nov. 7 balloting.

But some of Gore's closest associates said he privately battles frustration and dread that time will run out before his arguments against the accuracy of Florida's count are fully heard and weighed in court.

One person who has been with Gore as he oversees legal and political strategy from his mansion within the gated Naval Observatory described the senator's son and career politician as "a lost soul" consumed by the struggle for his political future.


Gore, a longtime Washington loner who does not schmooze, has strained at times to project a sociable geniality.

He and running mate Joseph Lieberman and their wives had lunch Monday at a restaurant popular with tourists. The week before, they double-dated over margaritas.

Other times, he tries to show a businesslike confidence that he has an administration to assemble.

Gore extended Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers an unusual last-minute invitation to lunch on Tuesday, inviting news cameras in for just the slice of time between the pouring of the iced tea and the serving of the hamburgers. (Ron's note: While Lieberman was having lunch at the Palm Restaurant)

Gore is widely expected to ask Summers to stay on in any Gore administration. But after setting up the Cabinet-making image, he contradicted it.

It was only lunch and a chitchat on the economy with "a close friend and close adviser," he said. "I don't think it's right for me to be offering people jobs."

Heartened by election night numbers that showed he won the popular vote nationally by some 200,000 votes, Gore has become emboldened as that margin has grown to exceed 300,000 votes. He believes those numbers give his contest legitimacy, said another close adviser, also speaking on condition of anonymity.

The adviser said Gore is flabbergasted that Americans show "no outrage over an election being stolen" in Florida. (RR: Yeah Right!!!....And we're FLABBERGASTED that you would be willing to drag everyone's portfolios through the dirt)

Instead, several polls suggested Monday that people want the ordeal to end and Gore to concede.

But Gore said Tuesday: "I'm quite sure that the polls don't matter in this, because it's a legal question." (HEEEELLLLLOOOOOO!!!!!!!!....... GET A CLUE AL!!!)

Hours later, an NBC poll, the first to measure reaction to Gore's televised speech Monday night defending his vote challenge, offered a mood tonic: The country was evenly split on whether Gore should give up or fight on.

He squinted into the sun to field other questions. He said he was contesting the tally in Florida's heavily Democratic Miami-Dade county – and two others – but not Republican-leaning areas because that's where the counting mistakes were concentrated.

"One thing to remember is that the old and cheap, outdated machinery is usually found in areas with populations that are of lower income, minorities, seniors on fixed incomes," Gore said.

He declined to weigh in on the Rev. Jesse Jackson's contention that black Florida voters were intimidated in violation of the Civil Rights Act.

The last question Gore took: "Are you going to win?"

"I hope so," he said.



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (7948)11/28/2000 8:30:23 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 10042
 
Just posted this on another board....Gore and Team are trying everything....and yes, wish you had told him that....

Message 14900238



To: Hawkmoon who wrote (7948)11/28/2000 9:33:08 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10042
 
<<Alan Greenspan is doing the real harm to the economy which is now heading toward,if not already in,a RECESSION>>

You do understand the good Dr. can not move until AFTER the election is over. That makes it the fault of whom? Gore you say?

btw - After this long a time wouldn't one think the S.I. spellchecker could spell "Greenspan"?