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The Iowa Democratic Debate: Remembering Lenny
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I now understand why Gore wants to debate so much. On his better days, he's
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damned good at it. In today's Des Moines Register debate in Iowa, Gore
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was truly formidable, performing better than he has in any of his five previous
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encounters with Bill Bradley. To be sure, Gore was demagogic, gimmicky, and
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condescending at times--he can't help it. But he was also lethal
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throughout.
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Gore's most devastating shot came with the help of what I believe may be a
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technical innovation in presidential debating: the use of human props. As he
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put a question about agriculture to Bradley, Gore asked a member of the
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audience named Chris Peterson to stand. Peterson, Gore explained, was an Iowa
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farmer with 400 acres, 300 of which were flooded in 1993. Bradley, Gore noted,
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voted in the Senate against emergency federal aid for those affected. "Why did
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you vote against disaster relief for Chris Peterson?" Gore asked.
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Bradley, who should have been prepared to defend this vote, simply had no
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answer at all to the question of why he wanted to drown this friendly looking
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farmer along with his hogs and beans. He tried to play Gore's question off with
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the lame bromide that the candidates should be talking not about the past but
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about the future. When Gore came back at him again with the question, Bradley
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irrelevantly asserted that he supported the federal tax subsidy for ethanol.
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Bradley was so clearly nailed on this failing-to-pander charge that Gore was
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able to resist his usual urge to flog a dead horse, and didn't bring it up a
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third time.
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Though Gore's use of Peterson, and of a public school
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teacher he had also planted in the audience was compelling, I don't think it
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will lead to any good. When Ronald Reagan introduced a similar device in his
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first State of the Union address in 1982--by inviting Lenny Skutnik, a
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government employee who dived into the Potomac to rescue a survivor of an
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airplane accident--it was a nice touch. Since then, though, the
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heroes-in-the-gallery gambit has gotten completely out of hand, turning the
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State of the Union address into a version of the Grammys for people who can't
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sing.
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Gore did one other notably shrewd thing this afternoon. Responding to
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Bradley's "bunker mentality" charge from the last debate, he finally stood up
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and took credit for the record of the Clinton administration. "The other night
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in a debate, Sen. Bradley criticized me and other Democrats for being in what
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he called a Washington bunker," Gore said in his opening statement. "So I want
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to start by telling you what we were doing in that Washington bunker. We
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created 20 million new jobs, cut the welfare rolls in half, passed the toughest
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gun control in a generation, and created the strongest economy in the history
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of the United States of America."
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I was wondering when Gore was going to get around to sticking up for the
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president. Running away from Clinton as Gore has been doing makes the liability
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of "Clinton fatigue" into a self-fulfilling prophecy. But embracing Clinton's
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accomplishments plays to what I consider to be Gore's single greatest asset as
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a candidate: that he represents the continuation of Clinton's popular and
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successful policies without the continuation of Clinton himself.
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