-Caveat Lector-

You have been sent this message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] as a courtesy of the 
Washington Post - http://www.washingtonpost.com

 Now is this the "Newt" who was after Bill Jeff for "dolly-dilly-dallying" while 
placing some side bets of his own and supporting that other oxymoron (in two senses), 
LivingStone?  A<>E<>R

 To view the entire article, go to 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31610-2002Oct28.html

 Gingrich Accusations Come Under Scrutiny

 By Terry M. Neal

 Leading the GOP charge against likely Minnesota senatorial candidate Walter Mondale, 
former House Speaker Newt Gingrich accused the former vice president Sunday of 
supporting Social Security privatization and raising the retirement eligibility age, 
but it appears the allegations are false.


 Gingrich, who now runs a political consulting firm in Washington, suggested during an 
appearance on "Meet the Press" that Mondale supported Social Security privatization 
and raising the retirement eligibility age.   Mondale is the likely ballot replacement 
for Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone, who died in a plane crash on Friday.    Wellstone 
had made opposition to privatization or partial privatization of Social Security a 
major platform issue.


 "Walter Mondale chaired a commission that was for the privatization of Social 
Security worldwide," Gingrich said.  "He chaired a commission that was for raising the 
retirement age dramatically. He has a strong record of voting to raise taxes. . . . 
think that what you'll see on the Republican side is an issue-oriented campaign that 
says, you know, if you want to raise your retirement age dramatically and privatize 
Social Security, Walter Mondale is a terrifically courageous guy to say that."


 Apparently, the commission he was referring to was one sponsored by the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies, a bipartisan think tank that seeks solutions to 
emerging global problems.  CSIS's Commission on Global Aging, which issued the report 
last year, recommended raising retirement ages and converting "social protection 
schemes from pay-as-you-go to market based financing" in major industrialized 
countries around the globe as a way to deal with the crisis of depopulation and aging 
population crises.


 But Mondale, who served as the co-chairman of the commission, dissented from the 
majority position that supported raising retirement ages and privatizing government 
retirement programs.   Mondale co-wrote the commission's dissent with six other 
Americans:


 "Although we support the Commission's role in providing leadership in the global 
aging debate, we are strongly opposed to some of the Commission's findings and 
recommendations... Some of the Commission's findings and recommendations could be 
interpreted as mandates to fundamentally change Social Security and Medicare... 
Population trends should not be an excuse to renege on this commitment. Rather, we 
should rededicate ourselves to finding creative ways to meet the commitment, 
particularly because the United States does not face the same demographic challenges 
as other nations."


 The dissent continued: "We do not support the Commission's findings and 
recommendations that might result in the dismantling of social insurance programs and 
their replacement with funded schemes. Funded systems are not immune to financial and 
demographic fluctuations, as the recent stock market performance clearly demonstrates. 
Funded systems should remain an important supplement to existing guarantees, but they 
should not replace those guarantees."


 Reached on his cell phone this afternoon, Gingrich's spokesman, Rick Taylor, said: "I 
wasn't aware of the dissent. But I haven't had a chance to talk to the speaker about 
it." Taylor said he would seek an explanation and call back later. As of late Monday, 
Taylor had not called back


 With Election Day a little more than a week away, supporting privatization could be 
seen as a strong argument against Mondale given that it might damper enthusiasm from 
liberals - Wellstone's base.  And, Gingrich was not the only one pursuing the line of 
attack on Sunday.  Ramesh Ponnuru, a writer for the conservative National Review, said 
on CNN's Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer: "[Mondale] is a major advocate of President 
Bush's position on Social Security, which is something that I think, once it becomes 
more public, is going to alienate Wellstone Democrats."


 CSIS spokesman Paul Hewitt said of Mondale: "He pointedly disagreed. He had his own 
point of view."


 Hans Reimer, senior policy analyst for the liberal Campaign for America's Future, was 
more forceful:   "Republicans are lying when then say Mondale supports privatization, 
just like they are lying when they claim to oppose it," he said.


 One high-ranking Republican, who asked to remain unnamed, defended the Gingrich 
assault, arguing that he got the gist of it right.


 "He is associated with groups that have called for this," this person said. "He's 
going to have to answer for it. What are his positions on Social Security?"


 But Republicans probably aren't lying when they say this race won't be a cakewalk if 
Mondale decided to get in it.


 After Wellstone's death, Republicans initially were giving former St. Paul mayor Norm 
Coleman little chance to beat Mondale, if he is indeed the candidate. But Republicans 
operatives got their talking points together over the weekend, and by Monday were 
strenuously making the case that this race would not be a cakewalk for Mondale.


 A poll done over the weekend by the Public Opinion Strategies for the National 
Republican Senatorial Committee put the race at 45-43 percent in Mondale's 
favor-numbers that are within the margin of error.


 Republicans were busily reminding reporters about Mondale's political record, which 
included his landslide loss to Reagan in 1984. Mondale lost every state but Minnesota, 
which he only carried by about 4,000 votes out of more than 2 million casts. Given 
that he hasn't run for public office since the, there's little to suggest he can 
trounce Coleman.


 "I think that's a significant point," said NRSC spokesman Dan Allen. "The last time 
he was on the ballot was 1984, and he didn't win overwhelmingly. There's been a whole 
generation since then who has never had the opportunity to vote for him."


 .

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