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From: "Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Dave Kuehne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Why Gore lost in Tennessee
Date: Sunday, December 10, 2000 12:04 AM

Looks like Al Gore's own invention, the Internet, is what
caused him to lose in his own state. This is the first time
a presidential candidate has failed to win his own state
since George McGovern lost his native South Dakota in 1972.
Let the word ring out: The New Media has arrived! Never
again will the old liberal news networks hold a monopoly.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WorldNetDaily.com: http://www.worldnetdaily.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source:
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001205_xex_why_gore_los.shtml

Tennessee cops, media credit Al's defeat in home state to
WND investigative series

ELECTION 2000, Day 29

By Charles Thompson
and Tony Hays
� 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

SAVANNAH, Tenn.  -- Vice President Al Gore is tortured by the fact that he
lost Tennessee, say friends.  After all, had he won his home state -- the
state he represented all his years in Congress -- he would now be
President-elect Gore, with or without Florida.

"I know that's one thing bothering him the most, that he lost Tennessee,"
said close friend Steve Armistead, who spent his summers with Gore while
growing up in Tennessee, according to a New York Times
report.

http://partners.nytimes.com/2000/12/01/politics/01GORE.html?Partner=AltaVista&RefId=ly_WLmY_WEFnnnuFnu

"The other night he asked me, 'What happened in Tennessee?'"

Although the media have accurately reported that Tennessee's 11 electoral
votes would have put Gore at 271 and thereby made him the next president of
the United States, most have missed the reason Gore suffered his first-ever
defeat in Tennessee.

Indeed, 24 years ago in his first run for Congress, Gore won an
overwhelming 94 percent of the vote.  His dominance was such that he ran
unopposed for his next two House terms.  And when he ran for his second
term in the Senate a decade ago, Gore became the first statewide candidate
in Tennessee's history to take all 95 counties.

So why did Gore lose Tennessee on Nov.  7 -- the first time a presidential
candidate has failed to win his own state since George McGovern lost his
native South Dakota in 1972?

The usual press analysis is that Tennessee's demographics have changed,
sending the once-Democratic stronghold tipping to the Republican
Party.  Sen.  Fred Thompson and Gov.  Don Sundquist have echoed this idea,
while Rep.  Bill Jenkins, from historically Republican upper east
Tennessee, noted in an Associated Press report that "Tennessee didn't leave
Gore.  Gore left Tennessee." He pointed to Gore's changing stance on gun
control and abortion as bellwethers.

Yet, while these issues may have played a role, the answer is far more
fundamental than that.

"It was the character issue," says popular Nashville radio talk host Phil
Valentine.  "Thanks to talk radio and sources like WorldNetDaily getting
out the truth, I believe it tipped the state to Bush."

Valentine initially broke a story on Gore's ties to alleged criminal
figures in Wilson County, Tenn.,

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_poole_news/20000901_xnpol_gore_tied_.shtml
next door to Gore's home county.  Shortly after that, WorldNetDaily ran a
series of investigative reports detailing Gore's involvement in and
interference with criminal investigations linked to his uncle, retired
judge Whit LaFon
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000918_xex_al_gores_bru.shtml
and top campaign fundraisers like Clark Jones,
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001205_xex_why_gore_los.shtml
of Savannah, Tenn.
According to Valentine, it was stories like those that spelled Gore's
defeat.

"They [the stories] stayed under the radar nationally," he said, "but
around here they were on everyone's lips."

Charlotte Alexander, editor of the Decatur County Chronicle in Parsons,
Tenn., agrees.

"Absolutely, it was the integrity issue," she affirms.
Alexander's paper ran the WorldNetDaily series of articles profiling Gore's
seamy political dealings in Tennessee.

"We sold out of every edition that carried those stories.
People literally drove in from hundreds of miles away to buy 25, 50, 100
copies, whatever they could afford, to take back with them," she said.  "We
had well-known Democrats come in here after reading those stories and say
out loud that they couldn't be associated with somebody that behaved as
Gore had." Alexander even had additional copies printed, but the public
soon gobbled those up as well.

"Those [WorldNetDaily] stories coming out about Gore involving himself in
criminal investigations were just too much," says former Tennessee Bureau
of Investigation agent Milton Bowling.  "I'm a Democrat, but I couldn't get
past that.  I know plenty of people who felt the same way.
It was never a matter of party in Tennessee; it was always about character
and integrity.  Gore flunked that test."

The WND articles clearly had a major impact in Tennessee's legal community,
especially those reports dealing with Gore's ties to Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation Director Larry Wallace.  According to former TBI director and
now District Attorney General John Carney, at a recent meeting of the
Tennessee District Attorney Generals Conference, the articles were widely
discussed, yet only one DAG took issue with them, and that was longtime
Wallace friend and Gore supporter Gus Radford of the 24th Judicial
District.

"Gus was the only one trying to undermine them [the WND articles]," said
Carney.  Carney is now looking beyond the election toward bringing reform
to the Tennessee law enforcement community after eight long years of
Clinton-Gore influence.  "Something needed to be done," Carney said
flatly.  "That's the message that went out in the communities.  It's time
this mess got cleaned up."

Is Tennessee turning Republican?  Not really.  Tennesseans have been
conservative politically for decades.  Since
1968, Tennessee has been a swing state in presidential politics, usually
voting Republican, but giving its electoral votes to Democratic neighbors
like Jimmy Carter in 1976 and Bill Clinton in 1996.  The fallacy of the
establishment media's argument -- that the state's political demographics
have changed -- becomes clear upon examination of the way Tennesseans voted
in their congressional races this year.

Historically, the mountainous regions of east Tennessee were staunchly
Republican, while middle and west Tennessee were Democratic strongholds,
with only Memphis holding a substantial Republican bloc.  Any Republican
candidate for state office had to come out of east Tennessee with a huge
margin to overcome the Democratic totals in the western two-thirds of the
state.

Despite Thompson's and Sundquist's claims to the contrary, the people of
middle and west Tennessee have not changed their politics.  In what was
basically Gore's old congressional district, Democratic incumbent Bart
Gordon trounced his Republican opponent, and outpolled Gore in every county
including Gore's home county, Smith.

In Nashville, long a Democratic base, Rep.  Bob Clement, son of a populist
Democratic governor, outpolled the vice president by more than 28,000
votes.  And Clement's district does not include all of the city.

But the 6th District was no exception.  In upper and central west
Tennessee, home of the 8th District, Democrat incumbent John Tanner carried
every county against a credible opponent.  In Madison County (Jackson,
Tenn., and hometown of Gore's uncle, Whit LaFon), Tanner outpolled his
party's standard-bearer by more than 8,000 votes.  By the media's
yardstick, Tanner, Gordon and Clement should have felt some of the same
heat as Gore
-- but not only did they win convincingly, they outpolled their party's
presidential candidate in his home state.

Republican Rep.  Ed Bryant and Rep.  Van Hilleary hold seats that span
historically Democratic counties, but in both cases, more than half of
their victory margins came from the traditionally Republican territories in
their districts.  Moreover, Tennessee has a habit of returning incumbents,
no matter the party.

Gore carried west Tennessee, but only marginally, and then only because of
the Ford political machine in Shelby County (Memphis).  The large
African-American family has controlled Democratic politics in Memphis for
decades, and Harold Ford Jr., who currently holds the congressional seat in
that district, was Gore's choice to deliver the keynote speech at the
Democratic National Convention.  But even the Ford machine couldn't make up
the losses Gore sustained in what should have been his strongholds, middle
and west Tennessee.  And it was voters in those two regions, observers say,
that brought concerns about Gore's character and integrity to the ballot
box with them.

The Gore campaign was evidently concerned about the influence of the
WorldNetDaily stories early on.  Doug Hattaway, one of Gore's primary
campaign spokesmen, personally called media outlets across middle and west
Tennessee in late September and early October, pleading with, and in some
cases reportedly threatening, news directors to keep the stories off the
air and out of print.

"Doug Hattaway called me," said freelance TV reporter Tommy
Stafford.  Stafford had produced a story for WMC-TV in Memphis on the
Thompson-Hays articles in WorldNetDaily.  "He hammered at me," said
Stafford, "but I told him, 'Look, I interviewed these guys.  They're
credible.'" Hattaway then turned his attention to the news director at the
Memphis station and the story was put on indefinite hold.  "It was that
kind of arrogance, plus the credibility issues, that beat Gore in
Tennessee," said Stafford.  "Political parties didn't have anything to do
with it."

"It was an uphill battle against news sources like the Tennessean, who
refused to tell the true story," said Valentine.  "I think people began to
question Gore's character and integrity here in Tennessee.  I think the
truth came back to bite Gore in Tennessee, and I find it ironic that, if
Florida holds for Bush, it will be Tennessee that was Gore's downfall."

"Whether the mainstream media believed the WorldNetDaily stories were
credible or not," said Alexander, "the voters did.  I've never seen
articles that attracted the kind of attention these did.  They cost Gore
the margin he needed in middle and west Tennessee.  They cost Gore
Tennessee's electoral votes.  That's a fact."



If you would like to sound off on this issue, please take part in the
WorldNetDaily poll.



Related stories:

Gore tied to 'Hillbilly Mafia'

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_poole_news/20000901_xnpol_gore_tied_.shtml

Al Gore's Uncle Whit
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000918_xex_al_gores_bru.shtml

Gore plays fixer to 'crooked' uncle
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000919_xex_gore_plays_f.shtml

Officials say Gore killed drug probe
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000920_xex_officials_sa.shtml

Gore rep tries to keep media off WND stories
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000925_xex_gore_rep_tri.shtml

Gore condoned Russian mafia?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001002_xex_gore_condone.shtml

Gore's, Talbott's Red Russian roots
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001003_xex_gores_talbot.shtml

Gore's WWI uncle AWOL
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001006_xex_gores_wwi_un.shtml

Lawsuit, violence rumors over WND stories
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001009_xex_lawsuit_viol.shtml

Al Gore protects local corruption?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001012_xex_al_gore_prot.shtml

CIA official: Gore compromised by secret past
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001016_xex_cia_official.shtml

Al Gore, polluter?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001020_xex_al_gore_brpo.shtml

Experts fear Russia to blackmail Gore
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001025_xex_experts_fear.shtml

Gore brings back $640 toilet seat
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001027_xex_gore_brings_.shtml

Gore book author withdraws support
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001030_xex_gore_book_au.shtml

Al framed councilman for newspaper scoop?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001031_xex_al_framed_co.shtml

Gore protected military thieves?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001107_xex_gore_protect.shtml

Newspaper threatened over WND articles
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20001124_xex_newspaper_th.shtml
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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