Al Gore's lucky breakGore's first weapon against George W. Bush is a freebie from the
G.O.P. Can gun control jump-start his campaign?By Karen Tumulty and John F. Dickerson
June 21, 1999
Web posted at: 10:33 a.m. EDT (1433 GMT)
Al Gore needed two things last week: a 10-ft. pole to distance
himself from Bill Clinton and an issue to distance himself from
George W. Bush.
He got both. Showing that he could be his own man was the
carefully planned theme of the Vice President's "Love Me for Me"
tour, but at an event capping the exercise, the Vice President
got a little something his campaign has recently lacked: a lucky
break. It came in the form of gun control, the first real fight
he can take to Governor Bush of Texas, and a fight that Americans
might even watch closely in this prenatal presidential campaign.
In Los Angeles, Gore was already prepared to talk about gun
control at the packed gymnasium of Fairfax High School, where a
student was shot dead in English class six years ago. But moments
before he was to arrive, the House of Representatives voted
280-147 against legislation to restrict access to guns and impose
safety locks on them. Gore had found his mojo. "What is the
Congress doing?" he asked, his arms whirring. "With your help, I
will personally lead the fight to pass [these laws] as President
of the United States."
Five weeks earlier, when Republican Senators misplayed a crucial
gun-control vote and allowed the Vice President to break the
50-50 tie in the Senate chamber, the moment had been a political
gift. House Republicans last week let him keep it. Gore can show
his best outraged face at congressional inaction, but privately
strategists in his camp are ecstatic. They hope that
Gore-the-gun-control-crusader will bore into the lead of front
runner Bush, whom they view as vulnerable because he opposes
mandatory child-safety locks on guns and supports the right of
Texans to carry a concealed weapon. Polls show that the massacre
at Columbine High School has increased the size of the majority
of Americans who favor gun control. Republican women in
particular are shifting because of the tragedy. "It is an issue
he intends to keep talking about," says Gore campaign chairman
Tony Coelho. "He will let the American people decide which
candidate for President will put kids ahead of guns."
Even more delicious, Gore allies point out, was that Bush gave
the Vice President a new opening. At almost the same time as
Friday's failed House effort, the Governor signed into law a bill
that requires a locality to get approval from the state
legislature or attorney general before suing a gun manufacturer.
Opponents of the law call it the National Rifle Association
Protection Act. Bush supporters argue that the act does not
interfere with legitimate gun lawsuits but rather curbs trivial
legal action. "If Vice President Gore wants to take the side of
frivolous lawsuits, we'll take that fight," says Karen Hughes,
Bush's communications director.
Most G.O.P. members of Congress, for their part, got what they
wanted. Arms-bearing rights were still intact, and an earlier
bipartisan maneuver--a vote for tepid gun control (backed by the
N.R.A.) joined by 45 Democrats--took some sting out of White House
charges that only Republicans were seeking to water down the
laws. The House G.O.P. also showed that they could actually pass
legislation. Their juvenile-justice crime bill included a few
favorites in the culture-war hit parade, notably an amendment
that allows states to put the Ten Commandments in the
schoolhouse. It was an opportunity for majority whip Tom DeLay,
the real power in the House, to turn preacher and fulminate
against the "liberal relativism that has hollowed out the souls
of so many."
But while DeLay fumes, the Republican Party has a national
election to worry about--and a six-seat House margin to protect.
Gun control may not play well in G.O.P. strongholds, but it may
help Democrats in swing districts, where their polling shows
nearly 80% support among independents for last week's most hotly
debated gun-control measure: background checks for purchases made
at gun shows. No wonder, then, that when a weaker version of gun
control passed on Thursday, Democrats gleefully chanted, "Six
seats! Six seats! Six seats!"
That's the kind of enthusiasm Gore has had trouble generating in
his campaign. Part of the reason is the man with whom he has
shared a stage for seven years. That's why, when he was not
talking about guns last week, the message was: "I am not Bill
Clinton." It was a trickier dance step for the man who had
declared Clinton "one of our greatest Presidents" just hours
after he was impeached. But Gore was practicing it everywhere
last week, in hotel ballrooms and on outdoor stages and in a
prime-time two-step with ABC's Diane Sawyer, when he called the
President's conduct inexcusable, awful, terrible, horrible. And
"the most upsetting thing about it," Gore told reporters in
Tennessee, was that Clinton squandered a year as a result of his
Lewinsky antics. Gore promised that he would be the one "to make
up for that waste of time."
After more than six years in the White House and 23 years in
public life, Gore finds himself in the exquisitely odd position
of having to introduce himself to the American people. His
surveys show he's a hologram, visible but vaporous, or as his
pollster, Mark Penn, puts it, "famous, but unknown." Even that
may be too generous a reading, given the poll that shows 45% of
Americans say they definitely won't be voting for him. The
challenge, says Coelho, is to "unshackle yourself from everything
else that's going on and become the candidate."
So at his campaign kickoff in his hometown of Carthage, Tenn.,
Gore talked of "my own values of faith and family" and how he
would marshal the "moral leadership" of the Oval Office. And at
every stop, he had on hand the sweetheart he met at his high
school prom, 34 years later proclaiming him handsome and sexy in
what amounts to a public-service announcement for the joy of
monogamy.
Gore never mentioned Bush's name but mocked the politics of
"eloquent words" and "pretty rhetoric." To play up the contrast,
he left behind everywhere a blizzard of policy proposals--delving
into the fine print of the tax code to propose new breaks for
research, and advocating expansion of the family-leave law to
cover parent-teacher conferences. But all the frolicking with
Tipper and the five-point plans could not match the week's
unscripted windfall from the House floor. This week Republicans
handed Gore a break, but for his campaign to succeed, he may have
to figure out how to make the next ones on his own.
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Cover Date: June 28, 1999
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