http://www.msnbc.com/news/637532.asp
Gore Loyalists are Relieved That Bush is the Man
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Republican has more room to maneuver, less
baggage |
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Oct. 3 — It’s not merely that
they want to rally ’round our leader — though they do. It’s not that they think
their man wasn’t up to the job — they think he was. But with almost audible
sighs of relief, some top people who worked for Al Gore privately tell me they
are glad (relieved might be a better word) that George Bush — not Bill Clinton’s
veep — is in the White House now. |
THE REASONS are complex, but the bottom line is not: “I’m
glad Bush is in there and Gore is not,” is the blunt way one former top Gore
lieutenant put it to me. As Bush returned this
week to a Democratic bastion—New York City—he remains, at least in pure
numerical terms, the most popular president in modern history. More interesting,
to me, is that—for now, at least—Bush’s successes and the nature of the war
against terrorism have combined to erase the corrosive sense of bitterness left
behind in the hearts of Democrats by the 2000 election. |
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Since his home-run speech of Sept. 20—which solidified
confidence in him—his sure and patient coalition-building (and noose-tightening)
has impressed the Democrats, too.
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First, it’s fair to say that Bush’s
performance since Black Tuesday has impressed Democrats, even, if not
especially, those who thought he was dumber than Will Ferrell’s amiable dunce on
“Saturday Night Live.” Since his home-run speech of Sept. 20—which solidified
confidence in him—his sure and patient coalition-building (and noose-tightening)
has impressed the Democrats, too. MORE ROOM TO MANEUVER
The Democratic strategists also have realized
that Bush has far more political room to maneuver at home than Al Gore would
have had. With his reasonably good ties to the conservative, pro-military wing
of his party, the president has been able to both talk tough and take his time.
Bush can issue threats, and then wait while the world helps us by other
means—financial, diplomatic, investigative—to prepare the ground for whatever,
presumably surgical, use of force he orders. Gore may not have had the time to
execute a waiting game. “The Republican Right would have been all over us,” said
one Gorean. |
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But it’s more than that. While they won’t say so publicly, former Gore
lieutenants think their man might have been seriously hampered as a war leader,
at least in this war at this time, by the controversies and personalities of the
past. Even now, former aides to Clinton are
fighting a rear-guard action against accusations that they did too little too
late to stop Osama bin Laden as he ramped up his global jihad against America.
The papers these days are full of stories from the Clinton era about what was,
or was not, done to make the country more secure—or to capture or kill bin Laden
and his terrorist cells. |
As
usual, The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward got the goods, quoting the lament of a
top Clinton administration defense official: “I wish we’d recognized it
then”—the Bin Laden threat—“and started the campaign that they have started now.
That’s my main regret. In hindsight, we were at war.”
Well, duh. Had Gore won, many of those now defending their past
efforts—or lack of them—would still be in place, part of what inevitably (if
unfairly) would have been seen as the third term of “Clinton-Gore.” To be sure,
transition to an “All-Al” government would have been under way by Labor Day, but
probably not complete, given the slow, contentious pace of nominations on the
Hill. “We would have had a ton of Clinton folks to deal with,” said a former
Gore adviser, “and they would have been part of the problem.”
THE CLINTON
BAGGAGE Not the least of Gore’s
burdens would have been Bill Clinton who, it turns out, was far more actively
engaged in trying to find and kill Bin Laden than we knew. Other than inviting
Clinton to the National Cathedral for a memorial service on Sept. 14, Bush has
kept the former president entirely at arms length. Would Gore have been able to
do the same? Would he have wanted to? |
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Another part of the equation is diplomatic. Democratic presidents, using the
trust they have built up with Israel, have specialized in trying to bring peace
between Jews and Arabs in the Middle East. Jimmy Carter made considerable
progress, and Clinton tried to do the same. Republicans, by and large, have
tended to focus both their public and private efforts on the oil-rich Persian
Gulf. The plain fact is, the Republican war
commanders — from Dick Cheney to Donald Rumsfeld (in the region now) — have
wider and deeper contacts than the Democrats in that region, especially in Saudi
Arabia, whose support is indispensable to the success of any anti-terrorism
effort. Bush’s commanders undoubtedly have a better sense of the sentiment of
Saudi CEOs in air-conditioned ballrooms than of impoverished fellaheen in the
dusty streets. But at least the GOP has some ties
to go on, and Democrats generally admire Colin Powell. “Frankly, I feel a whole
lot better with Bush’s team in there,” said a top Gore guy I know. “We’d have
had less experience, and a harder time.” |
-- Anonymous, October 03, 2001