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The Quayling of Al Gore
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If to "bork" means to tar someone as a political
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extremist, and to get a "lewinsky" means, well, you know, then to "quayle"
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someone means to make some personal limitation seem so overwhelmingly
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ridiculous that the victim becomes a permanent national laughingstock. The
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question of whether Dan Quayle was, in fact, significantly denser than a lot of
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other politicians (I'd argue he was only somewhat denser) became irrelevant in
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the face of an entertaining cliché. Try as he might, Quayle couldn't get anyone
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to take him seriously as a presidential candidate, because all that the
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national press corps and the national joke-writing corps wanted from him was
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material that confirmed his dumbbell stereotype.
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The same thing appears to be happening to Quayle's
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successor as vice president. In Al Gore's case, the drubbing is for a slightly
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more vague constellation of qualities such as dullness, starchiness, aloofness,
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pomposity, condescension, privilege, and political klutziness. There's an
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element of truth to these criticisms. But by becoming a shtick, the observation
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of these qualities threatens to obliterate not only Gore's corresponding
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virtues but also any hope of his becoming president. Every minor misstep that
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Gore makes becomes grist for the Gore-abuse mill. And whatever Gore does to try
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to correct these flaws, whether it's playing along by mocking himself or trying
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to demonstrate his authenticity and ordinary-guy-ness, only digs the hole
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deeper. When Gore hires a bunch of inside-the-Beltway political hacks and
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pretends there's no contest for the nomination, he's a risible Washington
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stiff. When he upends his campaign, yanks off his necktie, and engages his
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opponent, he's a risible Washington stiff trying to be what he's not. (For an
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argument that Gore's makeover may be taking, see William Saletan's "Frame Game.")
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Here are a few examples of what Gore is up against,
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culled from The Hotline over the last few days.
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Jeff Greenfield of CNN: "There is that problem that Gore
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has always had as a candidate, and so that when he doesn't wear a tie--and this
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may be unfair, but I don't think so--you have the sense that somebody, some
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clothing-engineer-consultant, said, 'Al, you know, use--we need the softer
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tones,' and then they take a focus group: 'You like the shirt buttoned or not?'
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" ( Imus , 10/14)
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Howard Fineman of Newsweek :
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"He's sort of turning himself into a combination of Walter Mondale and Dick
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Gephardt, the lunch-bucket, street-corner Democrat--the guy who grew up on
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Wisconsin Avenue." ( Hardball , 10/13)
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R.W. Apple of the New York
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Times : "Now, he says, he is trying to 'let it all hang out.' The very
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phrase sounds unnatural coming from a man whose shoes are always polished,
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whose hair is always combed, whose shirts and suits are always crisply pressed.
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All? He doesn't even let his shirt-tail hang out." ( New
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York Times , 10/11)
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Jay Leno of the Tonight Show :
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"The folks in Nashville are thrilled that Al Gore has moved his campaign
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headquarters back there. ... Because with him there, that automatically
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qualifies them for disaster-relief funds. ... Now, did you see Gore yesterday?
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He asked people to join his new, this is what he called it, his new,
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'rip-tootin' campaign. ... If you believe he is going to win with that slogan,
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you're either ripped or you've been tootin'." (10/7)
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On the campaign trail, this mockery translates into a
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damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't dynamic. Take Gore's endorsement
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yesterday by the AFL-CIO. Had Gore failed to secure this prize, the story would
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have been played as "more woe for the troubled Gore campaign" (or possibly,
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"last straw for troubled Gore campaign"). Gaining the endorsement, however,
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merely made Gore into Walter Mondale II, a Democratic establishmentarian whose
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ability to lock up the party's offiical interest groups won't translate into
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rank-and-file enthusiasm. Here's how Peter Jennings played the AFL-CIO
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endorsement on ABC last night: "In Los Angeles, good news--mostly--for Vice
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President Gore, depending on how the political media spin it, in part." Memo to
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Peter Jennings: You are the political media.
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But there's a silver lining for Gore: If the public
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really demands candidates with a flair for schmoozing, smooth talk, and ersatz
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empathy, then "Clinton fatigue" must be something of a myth.
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