-Caveat Lector-

   Environment [25]ENS -- Environment News Service

   By Brian Hansen

   WASHINGTON, DC,
   January 24, 2001 (ENS) - Al Gore, the self-styled environmental
   candidate in the 2000 Presidential election, lost his bid for the
   White House because he campaigned on an outdated "populist" platform
   that was too liberal for most Americans, according to a new report
   drafted by the Democratic Leadership Council.

   The report, titled "Why Gore Lost, And How Democrats Can Come Back,"
   was unveiled this morning by Democratic Leadership Council (DLC)
   officials at a news conference at the National Press Club in
   Washington. The DLC's 40 page report concludes that the Democratic
   Party must move towards the political right - towards the Republicans
   - if it wants to regain control of Congress in 2002 and the White
   House in 2004.

   Gore

Democrat Al Gore, who ran on an environmental platform, lost his bid for the
White House because he cast himself as a liberal, concludes a new report
released by the Democratic Leadership Council (Photo courtesy Office of Vice
President Al Gore)

   Al From, the DLC's founder and CEO, opened the freewheeling discussion
   forum this morning by arguing that Democrat Al Gore made a huge
   tactical mistake by continually emphasizing that he would "fight for
   the people and not the powerful" as the nation's first president of
   the 21st Century.

   "Gore chose a populist rather than a new Democrat message, and as a
   result, voters viewed him as too liberal and identified him as an
   advocate of big government," From said. "By emphasizing class warfare,
   [Gore] seemed to be talking to industrial age rather than information
   age America."

   From said that in order to be successful in future elections, the
   Democratic Party needs to forge a "new progressive majority for the
   information age."

   Such a coalition, From said, must "expand beyond the Democratic base"
   that was borne out of the progressive movements that arose during the
   first half of the 20th Century. The Democratic Party, From said, must
   reach out to moderates "and even some conservatives" if it hopes to
   regain power in Washington.

   "Al Gore failed to put together such a new progressive coalition,"
   From said. "The result [was] what should have been a comfortable Gore
   victory became a virtual tie."

   DLC: GORE SHOULD HAVE WON EASILY WITHOUT FLORIDA

   The extraordinary 2000 presidential election was a virtual dead heat
   between Gore and Republican George W. Bush, the two term governor of
   Texas. Though Gore narrowly won the popular vote, the two term Vice
   President lost the electoral college count, and thus, the White House.

   While experts have attributed Gore's loss to a host of factors, much
   of the attention was focused on the state of Florida, where the vote
   count was debated for weeks in the courts. In a controversial move,
   the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately halted all recount efforts in the
   state, leaving Bush with a razor thin margin of victory that propelled
   him into the White House.

   Despite lingering allegations that Gore, in fact, carried the state of
   Florida, the election should not have been so close, said From.

   "Given the fundamental conditions in the country, the outstanding
   record of the Clinton/Gore administration and the Vice President's own
   record of achievement, I believe Al Gore should have won a solid
   victory," said From, noting that a host of political science models
   projected that Gore would prevail by some 10 percentage points.

   Democrats

Gore, right, on a campaign stop with Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, the
number two man on the Democratic Party's 2000 Presidential ticket. Lieberman
is the current chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council. (Photo
courtesy Gore/Lieberman 2000)

   From noted that Gore lost every income category of voters who earned
   more than $50,000 a year - the most rapidly growing part of the
   American electorate. Moreover, Gore lost middle class voters by one
   percent, and upper class voters by an even wider margin, From said.

   Gore carried "moderate" bloc voters by eight points, but that was not
   nearly enough to offset Bush's margins elsewhere, From said. Bill
   Clinton, From noted, won moderate bloc voters by a whopping 24 points
   in 1996.

   DLC DISPUTES SIGNIFICANCE OF NADER'S VOTES

   From rejected the argument that the so called "populist" message was
   vindicated by adding Gore's vote total to that compiled by Ralph
   Nader, the insurgent Green Party Presidential Candidate. Nader,
   vilified as a "spoiler" by many DLC Democrats, won about three percent
   of the popular vote nationwide and more than 97,000 votes in the state
   of Florida - more than enough to have won the White House for Gore.

   From said that a combined Gore/Nader vote total does not justify the
   soundness of the populist message, which he said was crafted to evoke
   an unrealistic and imagined "specter of class warfare."

   "The assertion that Nader's marginal vote count hurt Gore is not borne
   out by polling data," From wrote in the DLC's report. "When exit
   pollers asked voters how they would have voted in a two-way race, Bush
   actually won by a point. That was better than he did with Nader in the
   race."

   Nader, a Harvard educated attorney and a nationally known consumer
   advocate, was especially critical during his campaign of the power
   that corporations now wield over American citizens and the American
   political system. He blasted then Texas Governor Bush as "nothing but
   a big corporation disguised as a person running for President."

   But Nader was no kinder towards Gore, who he repeatedly attacked on a
   host of issues - including the environment. Nader campaigned on the
   theme that were would be virtually no difference between Gore and Bush
   in terms of their respective environmental policies - a move that
   infuriated the nation's major conservation organizations.

   NADER: NO REGRETS

   Nader, who has long blamed the DLC for "abandoning" the Democratic
   Party's progressive roots, looked on with interest today as From and
   other DLC officials talked about what went wrong in the 2000 election.
   Asked why he thought Gore had lost the election, Nader quipped, "He
   didn't lose. He really didn't lose. The real question is, 'Why wasn't
   he more victorious than he was?'"

   Nader said that Gore "didn't project authenticity" during the
   campaign, and that he "didn't project conviction and take a real
   stand" on issues that mattered to American citizens.

   "He talked populism in a very general way, but he never filled the
   blanks in," Nader said.

   "They're not getting the message," Nader said of the DLC, which has
   become the prominent wing of the Democratic Party. "The message today
   is you've got to be more like Republicans and take away their issues."

   Nader maintains that for the most part, the environmental initiatives
   that will be undertaken by Bush will not be substantially different
   from those that would have been put forth had Gore ascended to the
   White House. Spencer Abraham, Bush's new Energy Secretary, "cannot do
   worse than Al Gore did by giving the auto companies eight years
   holiday from fuel efficiency standards," Nader told ENS.

   A Gore Presidency would have made little difference in terms of
   biotechnology issues, pesticides and herbicides, and environmentally
   unsound trade policies such as the North American Free Trade Agreement
   (NAFTA), Nader added.

   Nader acknowledged, however, that "there is a difference" between the
   two parties regarding public lands issues. The Democrats, Nader said,
   do not share the public lands views advocated by Gale Norton, Bush's
   nominee for Interior Secretary.

   Still, Nader told ENS that he harbors no regrets about his entry into
   the presidential race, explaining that "our goal was a long range
   political reform movement, and you build that in steps. It doesn't
   come overnight."

   Nader said that the Green Party will provide millions of disaffected
   progressive voters with a "political home," and he promised a
   "geometric increase" in the number of candidates that the insurgent
   party will run in coming elections.

   JACKSON: IGNORING GREENS WILL "SPELL DISASTER" FOR DEMOCRATS

   That is exactly what worries Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr., a Democrat
   from Illinois and one of the most progressive lawmakers on Capitol
   Hill. Jackson, in an exclusive interview, told ENS that he "could not
   disagree more" with the DLC's assertion that Al Gore's failed
   presidential bid means that the Democratic Party needs to move to the
   political right.

   "Their comments appear to be ahistorical, and ignore a significant
   reality in this past election," Jackson said. "The present DLC
   attitude and disposition as evidenced by the [report] ... will only
   strengthen the Green Party in 2002 and 2004, and will therefore spell
   certain national disaster for the Democratic Party once again."

   Jackson blamed the DLC for pushing policies such as NAFTA and the
   passage of Permanent Normal Trade Relations for China, both of which
   he said strengthened Nader's position in the past election.
   Conservation groups were largely united in their condemnation of those
   initiatives, maintaining that they would foster an economic "race to
   the bottom" that would lead to widespread environmental degradation.

   "Almost all of [the DNC's arguments] appear to ignore the reality that
   Ralph Nader did well in Florida, and that he did well in a number of
   other states," Jackson said. "So it was not Al Gore's populist message
   that did him in, but it was the proven history and legacy of
   conservative democrats that created a split within the Democratic
   party that manifested itself in the Nader campaign."

   Asked if a combined Gore/Nader vote count was indicative of a hidden
   "populist majority" in the country, Jackson said, "I think it
   represents an electoral victory, but I'm not totally convinced that it
   represents a progressive majority - and there is a difference."

   JACKSON: BOTH PARTIES TOO FAR RIGHT OF CENTER

   Jackson said that both the Democratic and Republican Parties are
   "right of center" in terms of their appeal to the nation's population
   as a whole. More than 100 million eligible voters, he said, neglected
   to go to the polls on election day because "the political options
   afforded to Americans were right of center" in the campaign.

   That is why Jackson sponsored a Congressional resolution to allow
   Green Party Candidate Ralph Nader to participate in the Presidential
   debates, he said.

   "I thought [Nader] had a very important voice that was being locked
   out of the process," Jackson said. "Given Mr. Gore's performance in
   the debates, and given Mr. Bush's intellectual capacity, maybe the
   most thoughtful person in the debates might have been Ralph Nader."

   Not one of Jackson's 534 colleagues on Capitol Hill signed on to his
   resolution to allow Nader into the debates. Nader filed a lawsuit
   against the corporate sponsored debate commission after he was denied
   permission to observe the first round in Boston, even though he
   maintained that he had a valid ticket to attend the event.

   "Nader in debates would have brought the country closer to the real
   political center," Jackson said. "The millions of people who did not
   vote might have heard something different than what they were hearing
   from Mr. Gore and Mr. Bush."

   Jackson decried the conservative DLC Democrats who are "rushing to the
   illusion of bipartisanship" with Bush and the Republicans on Capitol
   Hill. It is that conservative bipartisan coalition, he said, that
   allows Nader to say that the nation has "one corporate party with two
   different names."

   "They're giving the country the illusion of bipartisanship, but the
   reality is that millions of Americans ... are greatly disenchanted,
   disturbed and disappointed with Mr. Bush's election and his cabinet
   choices so far," Jackson said.

   "Mr. Bush has not reached out the Congressional Black Caucus, or to
   the Progressive Caucus, or to the left wing of the Democratic Party,"
   Jackson said. "And it's going to require two wings to fly."

   Jackson told ENS that he plans to undertake a number of actions during
   this Congressional session to advance a progressive agenda, including
   introducing a Constitutional amendment designed to ensure a clean,
   safe and sustainable environment for all Americans.

   The full text of the DLC's "Why Gore Lost" report is available on the
   organization's website at: [26]http://www.ndol.org

  36. http://ens.lycos.com/

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