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The Gore-Bradley Debates: Talk to the Hand
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In their two televised debates this weekend, the Democratic candidates both
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showed substantial improvement since their previous
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encounter in New Hampshire back in October. Al Gore has calmed down. While
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still hyperactive, he seemed much less desperate and hysterical than in the
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first debate. Bill Bradley was much more keyed up. He's no longer practicing
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passive resistance in the middle of a food fight.
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You got a sense of how Bradley has recalibrated his approach in the first of
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the two events, a dull, 90-minute Nightline special that kept East Coast
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political junkies up until after 1 a.m. on Friday night. Bradley finally made
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an effort to seize the offensive on health care, asking Gore repeatedly, "Who
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would you leave out?" In response, Gore just kept repeating his ineffectual and
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inaccurate answer that his plan would leave no one out.
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But it was during the much feistier encounter on Meet The Press
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this morning--the most contentious of the primary debates so far--that Bradley
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finally came into his own. He performed a sort of political jujitsu I have
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never really seen from him before, waiting for Gore to charge at him, and then
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turning the assault back on his attacker. Bradley used this technique to
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devastating effect, and he did so repeatedly through the hour-long broadcast.
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Bradley's best moment came in response to a series of questions from Tim
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Russert about campaign finance reform. Gore offered Bradley a compact: that
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they both agree to a moratorium on 30-second ads and that they debate twice a
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week for the rest of the campaign. In a long exchange, Bradley grabbed this
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weapon out of Gore's hand and pistol-whipped him with it. Here are some
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highlights:
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Gore : We
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don't have to wait for the Republican nominee to be picked. Bill, I'll make you
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this offer right now. If you will agree, I will stop running all television and
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radio commercials until this nomination is decided. That can get a lot of the
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money out of the presidential campaign and accomplish one of the best reforms.
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What about it?
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Bradley: Sounds to me like you're
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having trouble raising money.
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Gore: No, uh, as a matter of fact, I'm
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not ...
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Bradley: I mean this is a
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ridiculous proposal. You know, the way you communicate with people is
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when you talk to them. I love to talk to them in town meetings--that's my
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favorite place. I've been doing that since January. But I also love to talk to
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them over television in their living rooms. ...
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Gore: [turning to moderator] OK, here's
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the second part of the proposal. ... Let's debate twice a week from now until
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the nomination is decided and just go face-to-face about the issues and get rid
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of all these television and radio commercials. Why not do that?
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Bradley: You know something? For 10
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months that I was running for president you ignored me. You pretended I didn't
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exist. Suddenly I start to do better and you want to debate every day. It's
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ridiculous. We're having debates. ... The point is, Al, and I don't know if you
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get this, but a political campaign is not just a performance for people--which
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is what this is--but it is rather a dialogue...
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Gore :
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Look, we could call this the Meet The Press agreement. We could have
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two debates every single week and get rid of all the television and radio
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commercials. I'm willing to do it right now if you'll shake on it [extends
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hand].
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Bradley: Al, that's good. I like that
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hand [talks to the hand]. But the answer is noooo . I mean, why should I
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agree now? I'm not interested in tactics, Al. ... And that was a very
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interesting ploy on Meet the Press .
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Gore: Look, I'm ready to agree right
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now.
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Bradley: It was nothing but a ploy
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Gore: Debates aren't ploys.
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Bradley: That "Come here, shake my
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hand"--that's nothing but a ploy.
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I've quoted this exchange at length because I think it represents a pivotal
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moment in the Democratic campaign. I'm not sure whether the effect fully comes
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across in written form, but on television Bradley made Gore look like a
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complete ass. (
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Slate
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's Chatterbox thinks it was the
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other way around; click here for
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his take. For more on the debate, see "Pundit
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Central.") Gore gave him an opening, by acting like a fast-talking used car
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salesman in a plaid blazer--"Bill, I'll make you this offer right now." Bradley
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responded by snipping off the huckster's polyester necktie, saying in effect,
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Do you have so little respect for me as to think I'd fall for something that
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stupid ? While Gore waited with his hand dangling in midair, Bradley
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disdainfully critiqued and dismissed his whole approach to politics.
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Bradley was equally effective in neutralizing Gore's
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assaults on other topics. When Russert asked Gore and Bradley what steps they
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would consider to ensure long-term solvency for Social Security and Medicare,
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both candidates tried to rule out the option of raising the retirement age.
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Gore then criticized Bradley for having voted in the Senate at one point to
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consider raising it. Bradley responded that the Clinton administration had
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itself discussed this option. Gore responded that he hadn't ever discussed
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it.
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Bradley: You didn't discuss it in all
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your Social Security forums out there?
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Gore: I certainly didn't.
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Bradley: No one ever did, right? No one
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ever did? Give me a break.
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Gore: Bill, I voted against raising the
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retirement age.
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Bradley: Give me a break. But the point
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is that at the same time you criticize me for wanting discussion in the United
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States Senate on the variety of possibilities--the exact thing Tim is talking
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about--you and your administration are out doing the same thing.
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What made Bradley's response on this point especially devastating was his
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accompanying hand gesture, undoubtedly unconscious but perilously close to the
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universal symbol for "pull it a little harder." Throughout the entire debate,
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in fact, Bradley's facial expressions and body language were those of a
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grown-up compelled to contend with an obnoxious punk. He would fight back if
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necessary--but only after making clear that doing so was beneath him. What
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Bradley showed, I think, is that he has found a way around the diabolical
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box that Gore has tried to put him in. He has figured out a way to defend
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himself without climbing into the mud-wrestling pit. While Gore rolled around
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in the muck, Bradley did no more than take off his jacket and roll up his
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sleeves.
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At various points in the broadcast, you could hear Gore chuckling and
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sighing while Bradley was saying something he disagreed with. But these
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expressions of contempt have nothing of the force that Bradley's do. Gore's
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sneering gestures all seemed rehearsed and theatrical. Bradley, on the other
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hand, came across as straightforward and real, his authenticity underscored by
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Gore's plasticity.
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In sum, Gore may want to reconsider his request for twice-weekly debates. A
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few more like this morning's and he'll be kaput.
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