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Battle of the Democratic Underdogs
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Running for president these days means convincing everyone that you're going
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to win until they don't believe you, at which point you must persuade them that
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you're behind.
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You can see this dynamic in the Gore-Bradley jockeying of recent days. Two
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months ago, the vice-president was thought to be so far ahead as to be
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unassailable. He was running against the putative Republican nominee, George W.
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Bush, not against his benign Democratic challenger. Gore did not acknowledge
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that the primary was a real contest. The name "Bill Bradley" did not pass his
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lips.
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But thanks to a steady stream of media negativity toward Gore and his
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campaign (and sympathy for Bradley), polls began pointing to a closer race. And
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once it became competitive, Gore needed to play the expectations game in a
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different way. By moving his campaign headquarters to Tennessee and challenging
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Bradley to a series of debates, Gore is trying to recast himself in the
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position that has served Bradley well: as a scrappy challenger and an outsider
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rather than the front-runner. He is trying to build down expectations for
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himself far enough that winning the Iowa caucuses or the New Hampshire primary
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by a slim margin will count as a victory, rather than as failure to meet
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expectations.
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You might think that Bradley would be pleased by his opponent's
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acknowledgement that it's a horse race. In fact, Bradley hates being called the
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front-runner. At a press conference last week, he bristled at the notion that
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he was expected to win the New York primary, even though he is ahead there in
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the polls. What Bradley is hoping for is a surge to lift him up early next
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year, carrying him to victory in the big primaries in New York, California and
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the Midwest. A wave that crests now could be a ripple by early March.
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All this is happening so early that we might well go through a few more
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turnarounds before voters actually pick the nominee. Now that Bradley is deemed
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viable by the press, he's beginning to receive harsher scrutiny. A few
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skeptical stories about him have already appeared. Next will be articles
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suggesting that Gore is far from done for--he has the wonder-economy on his
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side, is more moderate than Bradley, has the superdelegates locked up, etc. And
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the whole expectations cycle will replay itself.
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This dynamic has not set in on the Republican side--yet. George W. Bush is
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still running as if he lacks any serious opposition. But at some point, expect
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the press to start treating some other candidate as a plausible and promising
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contender. Polls will show a challenger "closing the gap" in Iowa or New
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Hampshire. He (or she) will make the cover of Time . At that point, Bush
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will appear with Al Gore's script before him. He will call for early debates,
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embrace "change," and say he welcomes the challenge.
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P.S. I will try to start this groundswell for John McCain on Monday.
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(Read more about Gore's attempt to become the media underdog in this week's
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Pundit Central.)
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