Down to the Wire

By David Corn

This article appeared in the November 13, 2000 edition of The Nation.

October 26, 2000

Showoff argumentation or dime-store vision--which will win out? After more than $300 million in spending and millions of words of spin, the presidential campaign of 2000 is concluding as a fifteen-state face-off between a son-of-a-senator who ardently presents a multifaceted case for his election (I'm smarter, I'm more experienced, I gave you good times, my policy initiatives are better) and a son-of-a-President who relies on down-home bromides to show he's the fella who can represent and safeguard the values of America (I trust people, not government; I'm a people person; a uniter, not a divider; we need a leader who leads). Issues are being hurled back and forth--Social Security, tax cuts, prescription drug benefits, budget plans, education programs, the Middle East, peacekeepers in the Balkans--but this give and take is occurring within a mano a mano context, which, if polls are to be believed, has benefited the aw-shucks George W. Bush over the tries-too-hard Al Gore.

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In the final dash, the Gore and Bush camps, zeroing in on voters in the up-for-grabs states, have boiled down their messages to easy-to-repeat catch phrases. Gore aides say his case can be summed up in one word, "prosperity," meaning, as Democratic Party general chairman Ed Rendell puts it, "No more BS--prosperity for all or back to what it used to be like. It's a big choice." That is, the Democrats have to do two things to win over undecided and swing voters: convince the holdouts that the election is truly a question of prosperity-or-downturn, and then persuade them that Gore is the man who can insure happy days. But the campaign has had trouble depicting the race in such life-or-death terms--perhaps because Gore has shifted his line of attack so often. His scattershot campaign veered toward populism at the convention, but that message faded; he then attempted to score points by whacking away at Bush proposals on Social Security, healthcare and tax cuts. Next he started a series of single-topic speeches on various subjects, like the Internet and privacy. "People agree with us on the issues," insists Donna Brazile, Gore's campaign manager, "and now it's time for them to agree that Al Gore will inspire us to greater heights in the twenty-first century. It's very important that they hear Al Gore." Such a statement is an admission that Gore has not yet figured out how to connect with a sufficient number of voters or how to make this election an issue-centered contest.

Karl Rove, Bush's chief strategist, seems more confident than his Democratic counterparts when he describes Bush's closing pitch: "The dominant theme is, trust people, not the government." Beyond that, Rove explains, Bush's claim is that "he can best change Washington and work across partisan lines." Beneath these meta-messages, Bush has a five-point plan: Reform education, reform Social Security, reform Medicare, rebuild the military and cut taxes. Simple enough--and wily, in a Clintonian fashion, for Bush marries a classic Republican attack strategy (big government--bad) to a traditional Democratic tactic (express concern for Social Security, Medicare and education). Compassionate conservatism has brought him far. Bush's intelligence became a campaign issue. But, with discipline, he has stuck to the tightly drawn script crafted by his advisers and taken advantage of Gore's inability to define effectively the race, himself or his opponent.

As Bush recently barnstormed through swing states, he delivered a homily-laden stump speech aimed more at illuminating what he (supposedly) believes than at proving he's a master of policy. At an airport rally in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, he told a crowd of several hundred that Gore "believes in Washington, we believe in the people." Down the road, at an office-equipment factory, he blasted Gore for wanting "to grow the size of the federal government" and for claiming that tax relief should be targeted to the "right people." His voice rising, Bush declared, "Everybody is the right person in America." Before a cheering gathering of several thousand at a civic center in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Bush vowed to address the "gap between the affluent and the nonaffluent" without resorting to divisive "class warfare." He observed that "the greatness of America exists because our country is great," and he promised to unleash "armies of compassion" to assist less-fortunate Americans. (The Bushism of the day: "Families is where our nation takes--where our wings take dream.")

In Macomb County, Michigan--home of the legendary Reagan Democrats--Bush celebrated entrepreneurs and fired shots at government: "Our new economy was not created in a Senate subcommittee or a vice-presidential commission." He continued to boost his shy-on-specifics plan to privatize a chunk of Social Security and said the $1 trillion in Social Security surplus he wants to place into private, personal accounts for younger voters over the next ten years will turn into $3 trillion by 2016. (That's some return.) And he swiped Gore's key word. "These are my priorities: to extend our prosperity, to spread our prosperity and to give our prosperity purpose."

On the campaign trail, Gore and his Democratic comrades have resorted to a shrill tone. This was evident when Gore popped into Philadelphia for an "empower our base" rally at Martin Luther King Jr. High School, in the northwest section of the city. In Pennsylvania, a Democrat who can outpoll a Republican by 325,000 or so votes in Philadelphia--as Clinton did in 1992 and 1996--has a chance of winning the state. Thus it made sense for Gore to drop by to rev up one of the last functioning Democratic machines--though it would be more reassuring to Democrats if the base didn't need a kick in the rear this late in the game. After the school's gospel choir performed for a racially mixed crowd of 2,000 in the gym, Representative Bob Brady shouted that Gore "deserves to be President, he paid his dues.... The other guy just has a daddy who used to be someone." A fired up--or panicked?--Representative Ron Klink, who is waging an uphill challenge against Senator Rick Santorum, denounced Bush for running a "me-too campaign," and he decried Republicans for wanting to end school-lunch programs: "They're pro-life, but once [children] are born, they'll starve them to death." Some Democrats have already adopted a resentment toward Bush akin to the attitude held by many Republicans toward Clinton: How can a guy like that end up as President? And, what's worse, he stole our issues!

In his shirtsleeves, a pumped-up Gore, nearly yelling, asserted that the election is "not about me or Governor Bush, it's about you...about prosperity." Education, healthcare, Social Security, the environment--all of this, he proclaimed, is on the ballot. Gore was, again, making an argument. And he was promising to work hard, really hard, for Americans. As good as the economy has been, he said, as he always does, "You ain't seen nothing yet." He did not refer to Ralph Nader, who may end up posing a threat to Gore in several crucial states, such as Minnesota, Michigan, Maine, Wisconsin, Washington and Oregon. (Nineteen days prior to the election, Gore trailed Bush in a Minnesota poll 44-41 percent, with Nader at 8 percent.) To show how important the choice is, Gore ran through his policy goals: a balanced budget every year, a Patients' Bill of Rights, a reduction in the national debt, preservation of Medicare and Social Security, middle-class tax cuts, cleaning up the environment, a ban on permanent striker replacements, stronger right-to-organize laws, a bolstered military, daycare, after-school programs, universal preschool, more pay for teachers, smaller class sizes, vigorous enforcement of civil rights laws, hate crimes legislation and campaign finance reform. A Gore campaign speech--which does gear up the faithful--is more of a to-do list than an inspiring call to arms for those beyond his core supporters.

About David Corn

David Corn is Mother Jones' Washington bureau chief. Until 2007, he was The Nation's Washington editor and is co-author, with Michael Isikoff, of Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War.

Corn's work has appeared in the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Harper's Magazine and many other publications. His books include The Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception (a New York Times bestseller), Blond Ghost: Ted Shackley and the CIA's Crusade and the novel Deep Background.

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