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Title: Al Gore's Statement Regarding Kerry's Pick


GSC Admin - July 6, 2004 10:00 PM (GMT)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0...4283266,00.html

``This team combines John Kerry's courage and record of outstanding leadership and John Edwards' inspiring struggle on behalf of middle class Americans and those working to reach the middle class.'' - Former Vice President Al Gore, 2000 Democratic presidential nominee.

GSC Admin - July 6, 2004 10:02 PM (GMT)
Good statement Al! I am glad that you have taken the lead in supporting John Kerry and this campaign.

GSC Admin - July 6, 2004 10:04 PM (GMT)
Apparently John K. contacted Al before all of this:

http://itemonline.com/articles/2004/07/06/...s/d83lg7280.txt

Edwards Joins Kerry's Bid to Unseat Bush

By RON FOURNIER

WASHINGTON - Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry on Tuesday selected former rival John Edwards to be his running mate, calling the rich former trial lawyer and rookie senator a man who showed "guts and determination and political skill" in his unsuccessful race against Kerry for the party's nomination.

As Kerry announced his decision in Pittsburgh, a huge crowd of supporters burst into applause, waving handmade signs that mixed with professionally printed "Kerry-Edwards" placards kept under wraps until the last minute.

"I trust that met with your approval," Kerry, a smile crossing his face, said at a rally. A banner unfurled behind him with the latest campaign message: "Kerry-Edwards. A stronger America."

As he wrapped up his remarks _ a vintage Kerry stump speech laced with a few descriptions of Edwards _ Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" played, a reference to the first name the running mates share. Kerry later boarded a plane for a speech in Indianapolis, the aircraft sporting an Edwards' logo that had been added overnight.

In his speech, Kerry had words of praise for Edwards as he promised thousands attending the conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church that unlike 2000 and the disputed election, "we will make sure every vote is counted."

By selecting Edwards, 51, Kerry went with the smooth-talking Southern populist over more seasoned politicians in hopes of injecting vigor and small-town appeal to the Democratic presidential ticket. Kerry, a decorated Vietnam veteran whom critics call aloof, calculated that his ticket didn't need foreign policy heft as much as a flash of pizazz.


"I was humbled by his offer," Edwards said in a statement, "and thrilled to accept it."

Edwards is a self-made multimillionaire who turned his up-from-the-bootstraps biography into a compelling story during his nomination fight against Kerry and several others.

During that campaign, Edwards did better than Kerry among Republicans and nearly as well among independents, according to exit polls conducted by The Associated Press. By comparison, among all voters in those primaries, Kerry beat Edwards 2-to-1. Edwards' voters frequently said the top candidate quality in their choice was that "he has a positive message."

President Bush's allies at the Republican National Committee immediately labeled Edwards a "disingenuous, unaccomplished liberal" trial lawyer _ even as Vice President Dick Cheney called to congratulate him. Spokeswoman Nicolle Devenish said Cheney congratulated Edwards and told his rival that he looked forward to the vice presidential debate and "a spirited campaign."

Later, Bush used similar language to welcome Edwards to the race.

Kerry revealed his choice in an e-mail to supporters, saying he couldn't wait to see Edwards go "toe-to-toe with Dick Cheney."

Rep. Dick Gephardt of Missouri, Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and Sen. Bob Graham of Florida emerged as finalists in a search that began four months ago with a list of about 25 candidate and a mandate to find a political soul mate who would be "ready at any minute" to assume the presidency.

Kerry called all three also-rans, and perhaps one more, shortly before the rally, an aide said. He also telephoned 2000 Democratic nominee Al Gore, who in turn talked to Edwards.

Kerry's choice was a bow to internal pressure: Edwards was the most popular of the leading contenders for the job, according to an AP-Ipsos poll of registered voters taken last month, and party leaders had been urging Kerry to shed his initial resistance to the North Carolina senator, elected in 1998.

In his 15-minute call to the North Carolina senator, Kerry said, "Teresa and I would like to ask you and Elizabeth to join us on our ticket to take back our country."

Edwards was at his home in Washington's Georgetown neighborhood when Kerry told the rally, "I have chosen a man who understands and defends the values of America, a man who has shown courage and conviction as a champion for middle-class Americans and for those struggling to reach the middle class, a man who has shown guts and determination and political skill in his own race for the presidency of the United States, a man whose life has prepared him for leadership."

Bush's re-election campaign rushed to the airwaves with a television ad featuring former Republican rival John McCain and titled "First Choice," an effort to paint Kerry's running mate as his second choice. McCain, the Arizona senator, had rejected Kerry's overtures to be No. 2 on the Democratic ticket.

McCain says of Bush in the ad: "He has not wavered, he has not flinched from the hard choices, he was determined and remains determined to make this world a better, safer, freer place." Kerry's campaign rushed into production its own ad featuring the newly minted ticket.

The Bush-Cheney ad alludes to what Republicans hope will be a problem for Edwards _ his lack of foreign policy experience and political seasoning. It is not a new argument for Kerry: During the Democratic nomination fight, Kerry groused to associates that Edwards had no right seeking the presidency after less than a single term in the Senate.

But aides said the Massachusetts senator steadily warmed to Edwards, first in the primary campaign, where he stood against Kerry until the end without going negative. After pulling out of the race, Edwards campaigned aggressively on Kerry's behalf and urged his contributors, mostly trial lawyers, to donate to his former rival's campaign.

Edwards' advisers, meanwhile, waged a quiet campaign on the North Carolina senator's behalf. Both Edwards and Gephardt had top aides who joined the Kerry campaign in recent weeks.

Edwards was at his home in Georgetown when Kerry called, readying his two young children for summer camp. Kerry called from his Pittsburgh home.

Obsessed with secrecy, Kerry kept his decision to himself until the last possible minute, giving Edwards no time to get to Pittsburgh. He met secretly with Edwards on Thursday _ top aides for both men didn't know about the session _ and the search team headed by Jim Johnson turned over its final reports to Kerry that night.

Kerry waited until Monday night to tell his top two aides, Johnson and campaign Manager Mary Beth Cahill, about his decision.

The Democratic ticket will meet up late Tuesday in Pittsburgh, where the candidates and their families will have dinner together at Kerry's estate. They fly to Ohio, a major battleground state, on Wednesday for their first joint appearance. Their multistate tour will take them to Edwards' home state of North Carolina, a GOP bastion that Kerry hopes to put in play with his selection.

Bush travels to the state Wednesday for a GOP counterpunch.

The Kerry-Edwards ticket will be nominated at the Democratic National Convention in Boston, which begins July 26. Kerry hopes to dominate the political landscape in the run-up to the convention, fleshing out his candidacy for voters who know little about him and hopefully opening a lead against Bush. Polls show the race is tight.

Edwards was the last major candidate standing against Kerry in the Democratic presidential race. He emerged as a favorite second choice of Democratic voters, thanks to his youthful good looks, a self-assured manner and an upbeat, optimistic style. He saved his harshest criticism for Bush, whom he accused of creating "two Americas" _ one for the privileged, another for everyone else.

Kerry and Edwards are both wealthy. Kerry came about his money by marriage, Edwards through jury verdicts against corporations that he says wronged middle- and lower-class Americans.

Edwards and Kerry had few major policy disagreements _ both supported the decision to go to war in Iraq, for example, and both voted against the $87 billion package for Iraq and Afghanistan.

One division was over the North American Free Trade Agreement: Kerry voted for it, but Edwards campaigned against NAFTA, which the Senate approved before he was elected. Edwards made trade, jobs and the economy the centerpiece of his campaign, questioning Kerry's vote on NAFTA but not pledging to seek its repeal.

They also differed in some ways on how to approach some issues. Both called for rolling back the Bush tax cuts, but Kerry proposed eliminating the tax cuts for those who make more than $200,000 a year while Edwards set the ceiling at $240,000. Kerry voted against the ban on so-called "partial birth" abortion passed by Congress, but Edwards did not vote. A more clear-cut difference was Kerry's opposition to the death penalty and Edwards' support of it.

Kerry finished first and Edwards second in the Iowa caucuses in January, surprising front-runner Howard Dean and driving regional favorite Gephardt out of the race. Dean finished second to Kerry in the New Hampshire primary, and as Dean lost the next dozen delegate contests, the race became a contest between Kerry and Edwards.

Yet Edwards could never muster enough momentum to overtake his Senate colleague. He won only a single state during the competitive phase of the primary, his native South Carolina, and ended his bid following the 10-state Super Tuesday elections on March 2. North Carolina gave Edwards a victory in its first presidential caucus on April 17, but the vote meant more as a boost to his standing at the Democratic National Convention and to his potential as a running mate.

Guest - July 7, 2004 02:34 AM (GMT)
Sadly, I don't see that he has any choice as he and our democratic form of government were so completely betrayed by the dem leadership when Bush was stealing the 2000 election in Florida. I find Kerry's belated "count every vote" quote to be too little and too late. Jeb's theft of the 2004 election in Florida is already well under way. For the record, Kerry hid in his ivory Washington tower in 2000 instead of helping Al Gore defend our democracy agaist the Bush coup. I'll be holding my nose very tightly when I vote for Kerry in November.

JamesAquila - July 7, 2004 03:14 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (Guest @ Jul 6 2004, 10:34 PM)
Sadly, I don't see that he has any choice as he and our democratic form of government were so completely betrayed by the dem leadership when Bush was stealing the 2000 election in Florida. I find Kerry's belated "count every vote" quote to be too little and too late. Jeb's theft of the 2004 election in Florida is already well under way. For the record, Kerry hid in his ivory Washington tower in 2000 instead of helping Al Gore defend our democracy agaist the Bush coup. I'll be holding my nose very tightly when I vote for Kerry in November.

You keep blaming the victums and that those that commited the crime. You sound like those who blame a woman that was raped for not fighting back enough.

guest - July 7, 2004 07:27 AM (GMT)
I took it upon myself to email Joel Connelly regarding the "crying in your teacup" comment Kerry was suppose to make. I asked him when and where Kerry said this. Heres how he responded........" He was on a bus traveling from Seattle to state Democratic dinner in Tacoma and I was interviewing him..
jc

JamesAquila - July 7, 2004 01:57 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (guest @ Jul 7 2004, 03:27 AM)
I took it upon myself to email Joel Connelly regarding the "crying in your teacup" comment Kerry was suppose to make. I asked him when and where Kerry said this. Heres how he responded........" He was on a bus traveling from Seattle to state Democratic dinner in Tacoma and I was interviewing him..
jc

Wow that's really specific.

GoreLeadership - July 7, 2004 05:38 PM (GMT)
James,

Are you suggesting that this isn't true?
Many of things that you argue about are not even true.
This may be just another one of those things..

-GoreLeadership

JamesAquila - July 7, 2004 06:08 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (GoreLeadership @ Jul 7 2004, 01:38 PM)
James,

Are you suggesting that this isn't true?
Many of things that you argue about are not even true.
This may be just another one of those things..

-GoreLeadership

He still gives no exact time or place where the statement. Even when asked directly about it Mr. Connelly is very vague. I'd take it with a grain of salt. Look at what is going on now. All the media outlets are reporting McCain was Kerry's first VP choice despite both McCain and his chief of staff saying he was never offered the job.

Guest - July 8, 2004 04:23 AM (GMT)
James omce again you fail to understand the facts. The victim of Bush's theft of the 2000 election will always be our country, not your failed dem party leadership and Al Gore will always be the symbol of the stolen election. Florida election law very clearly required the uncounted votes to be counted. It's Florida's election laws that were raped by the Bush election stealers in order to thwart the will of the people while your failed dem leadership stood by and did nothing.It's your dem leadership who's following in the footsteps of the non nazis in the German parliment who did nothing to stop Hitler in the early 1930's when they had the chance to do so. Thanks to your failed dem leadership, our country is now headed down the same terrible path.Your efforts to let the dem leadership off the hook for doing nothing to stop the Bush 2000 coup only helps the Bush election stealers. Every previous generation of americans has fought and died for what the Bush election stealers stole in 2000 while your cowardly dem leadership did nothing to stop them. The facts prove that your cowarly dem leadership isn't the victim that you're trying to make them out to be. In the run up to the stolen 2000 election,your failed dem leadership did nothing to stop Jeb's first felon purge, the illegal ballot designs that too many Florida counties used and never bothered to make sure that the voting equiptment being used was properly maintained and that it gave all voters the same chance to have their votes counted. Your twistng of the painful truth of your failed dem party leadership's doing othing to stop the Bush 2000 election theft follows in the footsteps of the former soviet union's re-writing of history to hide the truth. BTW, Kerry's "get over it" remark was made during a speech to a dem party gathering in Washington state. This was a fact that was cited in the original reporting on this comment. It's ot my fault that you can't handle the ugly truth about your failed dem party leadership. Democracy died on the watch of your failed dem paty leadership and that's nothing to be proud of. it's shameful and disgusting and it betrays the very founding of the DNC which was founded in the aftermath of the stolen 1824 election that the then dem party leadership fought back against.

GSC Admin - July 10, 2004 01:10 AM (GMT)
Blah, blah, blah!

Guest - July 10, 2004 01:50 PM (GMT)
Chris, your disdain for the truth is shocking. I'm very disappointed in your very apparent flip flop into a shill for the wips who got our country into this terrible mess by doing nothing to stop the Bush 2000 coup. I think it's the ultimate insult for you to use Al Gore's good name to shill for these wimps. This is supposed to be a forum for rea Al Gore supporters but it's turned out to be anythng but. Your downplaying of Kerry's well documented and offensive comment telling those angry over Bush's theft of the 2000 election is shameful. Every previous generation of americans has fought and died for what Bush stole in 2000. I think your view is a shinning example of why democracy in America is truly dead.

earthmother - July 10, 2004 02:20 PM (GMT)
Dear "Guest" (aka Nancy)--I think Chris has every right to have this board up, and while I don't share his enthusiasm for Kerry, you do have to remember that Gore himself has given his support to his candidacy. Arguably, it's not a true endorsement in the sense of whole-hearted support he gave to Howard Dean, but if nothing else, we should remember that Gore wants nothing more now than to get Bush out of office. And the only way we can do that in 2004 is by electing John Kerry. So while many of us may have reservations about Kerry, we are helping Gore oust Bush by supporting him. This board remains a place where we can talk openly and honestly about the issues and the candidates (usually, anyway), and criticizing Chris for all his hard work in providing a place for us to meet and talk is a low blow that none of us appreciates.

Guest - July 12, 2004 03:59 AM (GMT)
Calling this forum an Al Gore support forum has all the accuracy of Fox News claiming to be "fair and balanced". Real Al Gore supporters are visciously and repeatedly attacked in this forum for defending Al Gore and for not towing the DNC/DLC republican impersonation line and this s why they've all left this forum. I'm really tired of these attacks. This strategy was a disaster in 2002 and it'll be a disaster again in 2004. What makes it worse is that while Kerry is the DNC'DLC sacrificial lamb, the truth is, our country can't afford 4 more years of the election stealing Bush.

earthmother - July 12, 2004 04:02 AM (GMT)
If you can't stand it anymore, then I'll repeat my question: Why do you keep reading what we post? No one's twisting your arm.

And I agree, btw, that we can't stand another four years of Bush.

And everyone on this board is a Gore supporter, first and foremost. That's really not hard to see. :rolleyes:

Guest - July 12, 2004 05:00 AM (GMT)
I'm fed up with the nasty attacks against Al Gore and his real supporters by the leadership of this forum. Someone must defend Al Gore and post the truth at this web site. I think the name of this web site needs to be changed to a Kerry support forum because it's sure no longer an Al Gore support forum. Why do you think all of the real Al Gore supporters have left?

GSC Admin - July 12, 2004 07:18 AM (GMT)
Please quit posting here. You are no longer welcome. You are banned from this forum until further notice.

GSC Admin - July 12, 2004 09:12 AM (GMT)
Thanks for the support EarthMother. I just read these latest posts and decided to can her.

earthmother - July 12, 2004 02:40 PM (GMT)
I don't know that I would've canned her--she brought something, uh, unique?, to this forum. But we certainly won't miss her. :D




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