>> Should Gore run? Let us know what you think here.
A stiff vice president campaigns on his
administration's legacy of unprecedented prosperity. Looks terrible
on TV. Bows out, following a disputed vote count. Then, two terms
later, with no incumbent in the race, he re-enters the fray.
Promises to change the course of a disastrous war founded on lies.
And charges to victory. I'm referring, of course, to the 1968
campaign of Richard Milhous Nixon. But four decades later, history
has a chance to repeat itself for Albert Arnold Gore.
If the Democrats were going to sit down and construct the perfect
candidate for 2008, they'd be hard-pressed to improve on Gore.
Unlike Hillary Clinton, he has no controversial vote on Iraq to
defend. Unlike Barack Obama and John Edwards, he has extensive
experience in both the Senate and the White House. He has put aside
his wooden, policy-wonk demeanor to emerge as the Bush
administration's most eloquent critic. And thanks to An
Inconvenient Truth, Gore is not only the most impassioned
leader on the most urgent crisis facing the planet, he's also a
Hollywood celebrity, the star of the third-highest-grossing
documentary of all time.
"He's perceived very differently now than he was six years ago,"
says Frank Luntz, the Republican consultant who advised George W.
Bush to dispute global warming during the 2000 and 2004 elections.
"He's an icon. Imagine that: Al Gore, Mr. Straight and Narrow, Mr.
Dull on Wheels -- now he's culturally cool."
Indeed, Gore is unique among the increasingly crowded field of
Democratic contenders. He has the buzz to beat Obama, the substance
to supplant Hillary, and enough stature to enter the race late in
the game and still raise the millions needed to mount a successful
campaign. "Very few people who run for president can just step in
when they want, with a superstar, titanic presence," says James
Carville, the dean of Democratic strategists. "But Gore clearly is
one of those. He's going to run, and he's going to be formidable.
If he didn't run, I'd be shocked."
Look at what Gore has been up to lately,
and it's hard to escape the impression that, on some level, he is
already running for president. Over the past few months he
has made high-profile appearances on the Today show, the
Tonight Show and Oprah, and he displayed his
trademark deadpan humor in a stint on Saturday Night Live.
"He's keeping himself viable by keeping himself in the public eye,"
says Donna Brazile, who served as Gore's campaign manager in
2000.
He has also been active under the media radar. In December, Gore
quietly took part in the year's largest event organized by MoveOn,
the grassroots group that helped make Howard Dean the front-runner
in 2004. After tens of thousands of MoveOn members gathered at
house parties across the country to watch An Inconvenient
Truth on DVD, Gore joined them in an Internet conference call.
Although global warming was the call's official topic, the
discussion was charged with electoral expectations.
As the Internet crowds submitted questions for Gore through an
online interface, the text of each query popped up on an animated
map of the United States for all to read on their computer screens.
There were hundreds of submissions -- and at least a third of them
dealt with regime change rather than climate change. "Would you
please run for president," wrote Rhonda in Poway,
California. "What are the circumstances under which you
would run for president again?" asked Doug in Marshal,
North Carolina.
Eli Pariser, who was moderating the call as MoveOn's executive
director, finally rose to the bait. "I have to ask this one because
it's come up so many times," he told Gore. "Carol from Indianapolis
says, 'Would you please, please run?'"
Gore, on speakerphone with Tipper from his home in Nashville,
offered his stock response. "I'm not planning on running
for president again," he said -- stopping well short of an actual
denial.
Email
Stumble
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!



- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.