Gore's Leap Of Faith
Gore needed a bold Veep move--and got it. Is it a turning point or
just a nice moment?
BY ERIC POOLEY
As Al Gore winnowed his list of prospective running mates last
month, at least one prominent Democrat was less than thrilled
with the idea that Joe Lieberman might get the nod. Bill Clinton
praised the choice after it was made, but before the fact, he
railed privately about how much Lieberman's latest book, In
Praise of Public Life, ticked him off. ("The Clinton-Lewinsky
saga," Lieberman writes, "is the most vivid example we have of
the virus of lost standards.") Clinton told friends he was sick
and tired of Lieberman's sanctimony. The Senator's famous 1998
speech condemning Clinton's behavior was one thing, the
President suggested, but wasn't it about time the guy gave it a
rest?
Clinton can't seem to give it a rest either. Last Thursday he saw
to it that a week of glowing press reports about the
Gore-Lieberman road show would end with a return to
Monicaville--thanks to Clinton's 75-minute rumination on his
"terrible mistake" at an evangelical ministers' conference in
Illinois. Blindsided just four days before the start of the
Democratic Convention, the Gore campaign managed to stay on
course, emphasizing Clinton's remark that "no fair-minded person
would blame [Gore] for the mistakes I've made." But to Gore and
his advisers, the incident only highlighted the wisdom of
choosing Lieberman. Before long, they'll probably be mailing free
copies of his book to swing voters.
The Connecticut Senator's reputation for thoughtfulness and
rectitude bolsters Gore in much the same way Gore bolstered
Clinton eight years ago, before two terms alongside the President
tarnished his shield. Lieberman's past and present denunciations
of Clinton's "immoral" behavior help insulate Gore from the
country's disgust with Clinton ethics. (The implicit argument:
Lieberman said what Gore felt but as Vice President could not
permit himself to say.) The fact that Lieberman is the first Jew
on a major party ticket makes Gore's choice historic, courageous
and potentially transformative, although it was hard not to feel
that Gore congratulated himself a bit too much for helping to
"tear down an old wall of division." Above all, Lieberman's faith
tells people that there's something in life more important to him
than politics--a message Gore needs badly to convey.
But the best measure of the success of Gore's pick may be that
it caught George W. Bush so completely off guard. The day before
the choice was made public, Bush and his vice-presidential
nominee, Dick Cheney, were talking about Gore's options while
flying back to Texas after a whistle-stop tour of the Midwest.
Bush asked Cheney what he thought of Lieberman, and Cheney
replied with Bushspeak's highest praise: "He's a good man." Bush
agreed--but neither he, Cheney nor any of their top advisers
thought Gore would have the guts to pick him. "It's his best
choice, but he won't do it," a Bush aide told TIME a few days
before the news broke. "Gore's too political." Since Bush and
his men see Gore as a craven pol, they were sure he would make a
choice based on cheap electoral considerations--maybe Senator
Bob Graham, who might help deliver Florida. Or they saw him
picking one of the party's smooth stars, like the liberal John
Kerry of Massachusetts or the untested John Edwards of North
Carolina--people Bush could easily slam. But in selecting
Lieberman, Gore came up with a choice that spoke of tolerance
more than tactics. And so for a while Bush's people didn't know
quite how to react. They were reduced to releasing statements
saying Bush and Cheney "respect" Lieberman and to pointing out
the issues on which he has differed with Gore. That argument
didn't play so well, however, because Bush was making it while
traveling through California alongside his old rival, John
McCain--who is closer to Lieberman than to Bush on issues like
campaign-finance reform.
In conceding Lieberman's strength, the Bush campaign undercut the
message it had been sending for the past several weeks: that Gore
is an unprincipled Clinton clone whose Veep pick will be just
another example of low-road behavior. Bush's team said he
wouldn't be calling a halt to his talk of "restoring honor and
integrity" to the White House, but both his advisers and
Republicans in Washington are worried that they have been robbed
of one of their central themes. They concede that choosing
Lieberman is the smartest thing Gore has done in this campaign,
and what happened to Bush on the trail last week helps explain
why--because Bush came close to calling a truce in the character
war.
After his Clinton-attacking convention ended and he set out on
his "Change the Tone" tour, Bush tried to claim that he never
attacked in the first place. Using Clintonian weasel words, he
tried to pretend that his oft-repeated "dignity and honor" vow is
somehow not a reference to Clinton. (Bush likes to have it both
ways. He'll begin speeches with "Give me a chance to tell you
what's in my heart," but when people criticize him, he says,
"Don't you judge my heart.") And on his campaign plane Friday, he
let himself get tangled in the internal contradictions of his
message. Talking to reporters about Clinton's Monica musings, he
said, "There's no question the President embarrassed the nation,"
and that Gore "ought to speak out on it" if he agrees. With that,
he was suddenly conceding that Gore and Clinton aren't the same
guy. A reporter asked him if Gore could also restore honor and
integrity to the office. "I think he can," Bush said, pulling the
rug out from under his own argument. And to top it off, he said,
"I don't think President Clinton is an issue as we go forward."
That will be news to the Bush strategists and speechwriters who
spent a week in Philadelphia trying to punish Gore for Clinton's
sins. Nine days after Cheney said that "somehow, we will never
see one without thinking of the other," his boss all but called
the message inoperative.
That must have had them high-fiving in Nashville, Tenn., where
Gore aides began trying to downplay the idea that the reason
Lieberman was chosen was that he's a life-size can of air
freshener to clear away the scent of Clinton. "Truth is, it
wasn't," says campaign chairman Bill Daley, who insists his team
wasn't spooked by the G.O.P. Convention. "We knew that all that
negative stuff on Clinton had very little impact on undecided
voters. It didn't register with them, based on the research we
saw. It was just politics. Clinton bashing doesn't move the
voters."
The choice of a Vice President is always most interesting for
what it tells you about the man who made the pick. In this case,
it tells you Gore knew he needed to make a choice that would
invite voters to take another look at him--and that he had the
nerve to pull it off. A source close to the selection process
says Gore concluded, in defiance of his hired-gun consultants,
that Lieberman's observant faith could be a strength, not a
weakness, because it trumped the Republicans on values and
religion. Many of Gore's advisers were worried that Lieberman's
religion would backfire--and even as the accolades were rolling in
after Tuesday's announcement, they stayed worried. "We still
don't know for sure," said a top aide 15 hours after the big
event. "It could still hurt us."
To settle on Lieberman last Sunday night, Gore had to navigate
the competing claims of advisers who in some cases were pushing
their own clients for the job. Media consultants Bob Shrum and
Tad Devine were arguing hard for their client, John Edwards,
saying he would be a "rock star" on the trail. Some top Gore
people thought that Shrum and Devine's advocacy crossed the line
toward conflict of interest, but Gore knew about their ties to
Edwards--and skewered their enthusiasm with a remark about how
much of his own money Edwards had spent to get elected. "For $6
million, a lot of people could be a good politician," he cracked.
Until that final night, Gore kept his political team out of the
decision-making process, vetting his short list with an outside
army of lawyers led by former Secretary of State Warren
Christopher. The consultants had their opinions, but until
Sunday, Gore wasn't talking to any of them about it. And by then
he had pretty well made up his mind. In effect, he was humoring
them--which may be reassuring to those who believe the Vice
President lets his sharks call the shots.
At the Lieberman announcement rally Tuesday afternoon, Gore was
clearly pumped by his choice. There's only one thing the Vice
President enjoys more than seeming bold and principled, and
that's seeming bold, principled and politically effective. His
speech was scripted, but his enthusiasm was not. Sweating through
his shirt in the Nashville heat, he broke into big, goofy guffaws
at his running mate's gibes--especially when Lieberman said that
claiming he and Bush are alike on the issues is "like saying that
the veterinarian and the taxidermist are in the same business
because either way, you get your dog back." That's a line Gore
uses regularly, yet he seemed to be hearing it for the first
time--a real breakthrough, since his smiles on the stump so often
feel digitized. All week long he appeared looser, happier and
thus more plausible as both candidate and potential President.
And Lieberman--in the same way that Cheney with his coolly
effective convention speech surprised people who took him for a
tree stump--displayed an unexpected knack for campaigning. "You
know, there are some people who might actually call Al's
selection of me an act of chutzpah," he said in Nashville, using
the familiar Yiddish word for audacity. Lieberman has chutzpah
too. At first glance you figure he will bore you silly, but he
grows on you--his voice is a decent instrument, and he obviously
enjoys playing it. His basic tune, about an immigrant's grandson
who was the first in his family to attend college and now might
be Vice President, is an American classic. He makes no effort to
conceal how tickled he is to be on the ticket, and the result is
charming.
Lieberman is so friendly, in fact, he may turn out to be perfect
for a running mate's most important role: attack dog. "I think
Joe will be very tough," says Daley. "He has the ability to be
aggressive without being nasty"--something Gore, with his
reputation for low blows, doesn't share. "Anything [Gore] says
about Bush, Texas or the record gets one of these, 'Oh, there he
goes again, being mean and nasty and dirty,'" Daley says.
"Lieberman can be as direct and as aggressive and will be viewed
differently because he is not considered a negative campaigner. I
think that's a big advantage."
Lieberman and Gore were having so much fun last week that it was
hard not to wonder if the other shoe was going to drop. Could
those nail-biting Gore advisers have been right when they were
worried that Lieberman's faith, which seems such an asset today,
might still turn out to be a liability?
The Democrats know they're walking a fine line. In 1960, John F.
Kennedy took pains to assure voters his religion would play no
part in his politics. Gore and Lieberman (like Bush) are
unabashed about flaunting their faith. For Americans concerned
about politicians' exploiting religion for electoral gain, it was
a bit troubling to see the ticket using Orthodox Judaism to
counter Bush's born-again, Jesus-Day Christianity. But if this is
the way politics is played these days, Gore seems to be saying,
at least we're in there working it, refusing to give an inch on
moral fervor. (Gore, said Lieberman, "has never wavered...as a
servant of God Almighty.") But the Gore campaign knows it's all
too easy to overplay the religion thing, which is why Lieberman
dialed back the devotion later in the week--no prayers or
invocations of God on the stump, just some remarks about Gore's
"courage" that didn't explain what he'd been courageous about.
In the end, will Lieberman's religion affect the race? Democratic
national chairman Ed Rendell had it about right when he said,
before the choice was announced, "I don't think anyone can
calculate the effect of having a Jew on the ticket." But that
hasn't stopped people from opining that the most virulent
anti-Semites don't vote (or will vote for Buchanan), that many
live in Southern states Gore probably wouldn't win anyway, or
that pro-Jewish sentiment could help him in key states like
California, Florida and New York.
According to Christopher, Gore refused to poll the question. He
said, "That's not part of me...I exclude that," Christopher told
the New York Times. But other Gore advisers are cagier on the
subject. "We do a lot of research about a lot of different
people," says one, "but it wasn't like, Will they vote for a
Jew?" It's a minor issue, because even if the campaign did poll
the question, it wouldn't necessarily trust people to respond
honestly. The latest TIME/CNN poll asked voters if Lieberman's
Judaism will "make people in your area" more likely or less
likely to vote for the Democratic ticket. A majority of 67% said
it would have no effect, but clear regional differences emerged.
In the Northeast, 21% of those polled thought his faith would
make people more likely to vote for the ticket, and only 9% said
it would make people less likely. In every other part of the
country, those percentages were basically reversed. In the South
and West, for example, 17% thought Lieberman's religion would
make people less likely to vote for him and Gore. And in another
question, 49% of Christian conservatives said they were "very
concerned" that Lieberman "does not believe that Jesus Christ is
the Son of God," which casts some doubt on recent speculation
that Lieberman's staunch morality might win him a following on
the religious right. Taken together, the poll results serve as a
cold reminder that Gore really did take a risk.
But even his most cynical hired gun would admit that win or lose,
it was a risk worth taking. Worth it for the old wall that fell
last week, worth it for the bold Al that went on display just as
the voters got ready to take a good hard look. If Gore's
convention goes the way he hopes, the choice could turn out to be
the beginning of a new public attitude toward him--one that will
make this a new race. Or it might end up being nothing more than
a nice moment in a losing campaign, a name on a list in the
record books, somewhere on the same page as Geraldine Ferraro's.
Either way, it's a choice Al Gore can live with. --With reporting
by Jay Branegan and James Carney with Gore, John F. Dickerson
with Bush and Karen Tumulty/ Washington
For daily convention updates and political coverage, go to
time.com/Campaign 2000
For more photographs of the Gore campaign by Diana Walker, go to
time.com
For more photographs from the Gore campaign, go to time.com/Gore
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