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Al Gore Redux?

By Dean Shutt, published Feb 13, 2007
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I will admit up front that I have always been something of an Al Gore fan. Even back to 1988 when he first ran for President I thought he would have made a decent nominee, certainly better than Dukakis, but then that is a fairly low bar to cross. I was pretty happy in 1992 when Bill Clinton picked Gore as his running mate. He also got my vote in 2000, despite what was probably the least effective presidential campaign in recent memory. His loss was disappointing, but wholly earned by his timid and overly cautious campaign. All that being said, I hope against hope that Al Gore will take the plunge and run in 2008. Here are just a few reasons why the 2008 version of Gore can succeed where the 2000 edition failed.

First, even with the worst run campaign I have ever seen, he still won. Now, I am not talking about conspiracies and such, but he won the popular vote nationally and if you truly believe that those 2000 elderly Jewish folks voted for Pat Buchanan I have some very nice bridges in Arizona for sale that you can have for a steal. Al Gore was one poorly designed ballot away from being the President of the Untied States.

So how would the '08 version of Al Gore fare any better than he did in 2000? Well, for starters, he could run in 2008 with the full backing of the netroots. These bloggers and online activists didn't exist in 2000 and they absolutely love Al Gore for his early opposition to the war and his ongoing crusade against global warming. Their support means millions of dollars and thousands of volunteers that were not available in 2000.

Second, let's talk about that campaign. Throughout the campaign Gore was desperately searching for a voice that he never found. His appearance was that of a tentative man with a whole lot to lose, which made sense because he did have a whole lot to lose. He was given the nomination by his party after no real challenge in the primaries. He had an eight year record of peace and plenty to run on in the general election against a tongue tied former governor with no foreign policy experience. Only a chimp could lose an election like that and the pressure of winning what should have been a slam dunk got to him.

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