Breaking nearly a year of silence, Al Gore returned to the public eye yesterday with a forceful speech at New York University, blasting the Bush administration for misleading the American people regarding vital issues of foreign and economic policy. In an event sponsored by MoveOn.org, Gore charged that the Administration had engaged in a "systematic effort to manipulate facts in service to a totalistic ideology that is felt to be more important than the mandates of basic honesty."
If you want to read everything The Nation has published on Election 2000, Al Gore and George W. Bush, click here for information on how to acquire individual access to The Nation Digital Archive.
-
John McCain's Voodoo Reformism
Ari Berman: The Republican candidate's maverick image obscures his cozy relationship with lobbyists.
-
Obama Under the Weather
Ari Berman: The Clinton campaign, bolstered by gotcha-style media, has slandered Bill Ayers and the Chicago charity that shaped Barack Obama's activism.
-
Pennsylvania's 'Obamicans'
Ari Berman: Democratic activism and Obama's campaign have turned Doylestown, Pennsylvania, from solid red to purple--maybe even blue.
-
Smearing Obama
Ari Berman: False claims about Obama intended to stoke racial and religious fear are trickling from the far right to the mainstream media.
-
The Dean Legacy
Ari Berman: The DNC chair has energized aging, ailing or previously nonexistent state parties.
-
Superdelegates 101
Ari Berman & VideoNation : The Nation's Political Correspondent breaks down who these "superdelegates" really are, and what they could mean to the Clinton/Obama race.
-
Not So Superdelegates
Ari Berman: Unelected insiders may well hold the key to the 2008 Democratic nomination. How did things become so undemocratic?
Gore centered his stinging and often tongue-in-cheek remarks around the false impressions the Bush Administration employed while pursuing their political objectives. Early in the speech, Gore recalled widespread misconceptions that were used to build support for toppling the Iraqi government, such as Saddam's connection to the 9/11 attacks and Al Qaeda and the threat of weapons of mass destruction ending up in the hands of terrorists. "When you put it all together," Gore said, "it was just one mistaken impression after another." He added that Congress and the news media exacerbated the problem by failing to hold the Administration accountable to the American people.
The harsh criticism of Bush's justification and handling of the war placed Gore in sharp contrast with recent statements by the centrist Democratic Leadership Council and their poster boy Joe Lieberman, who recently warned Democrats opposed to or "ambivalent" about the war of leading the party into "the political wilderness." In comparison, Gore's statements emphasized the foreign policy platform articulated by Democratic candidates such as Howard Dean and Bob Graham--tough on terrorism, opposed to preventive attack and committed to multilateralism. To regain credibility in the world community, Gore promoted internationalizing the Iraqi peacekeeping force, scrapping the plan to build new nukes at home and rapidly boosting efforts to decrease America's dependency on Persian Gulf oil by developing alternative energy technologies.
Gore said the President's "ideologically narrow agenda had seriously divided America," while accusing Bush's most ardent supporters of launching a kind of "civil cold war" against dissenters. To loud applause, Gore called on Bush to "rein in" Ashcroft and Rumsfeld, vigorously uphold civil liberties and scrap the Pentagon's proposed "Total Information Awareness" program, which he compared to something out of George Orwell's 1984. Despite the questionable information Bush receives from his advisors, Gore concluded that the real cause of policy obfuscations "may be the President himself."
Though his speech primarily dealt with foreign policy priorities, Gore also described a similar pattern of deception used to advance the President's economic policies. He targeted Bush's assertion that tax cuts would unleash investment and create new jobs, increase growth and revenue without swelling the deficit, and benefit middle-income families. Provocatively, Gore cited Nobel Prize winning economist George Akerlof in the German newspaper Der Spiegel: "This is the worst government the US has ever had in its more than 200 years of history."
Despite speculation that he might re-enter the presidential race, Gore insisted he won't run. Instead, he praised current Democratic presidential candidates and announced that his endorsement would come later in the political cycle. Yet Gore, whose fiery rhetoric drew a number of standing ovations, clearly seemed pleased to be back on the radar. "We have work to do," he concluded, before jumping into the crowd to shake hands with the enthusiastic audience. After eight years of political timidity in the White House and a failed presidential campaign, Gore finally gave the people something to cheer about.
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Reddit