[NYTr] Bashing Gore #1: Can He be Trusted?

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Oct 15 14:15:51 EDT 2007


[This was originally published on July 19, 2006 by Common Dreams. They
republished it on Oct 13, 2007. -NYTr]

sent by Ed Pearl

Common Dreams - Oct 13, 2007
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/10/13/4515/


Can Al Gore Be Trusted?

by Jeff Cohen

This is a repint of a vintage 2006 CommonDreams column exploring an Al
Gore presidential candidacy and the old Gore vs. the new Gore.

    “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.”

The wise old Chinese proverb on who is to blame for repeat gullibility
was famously mangled by our Embarrasser in Chief: “Fool me once, shame
on — shame on you,” Bush stammered, with that deer-in-the-headlights
look. “Fool me — you can’t get fooled again!” The video of that golden
Bushism can bring down the house on The Daily Show.

But these words of wisdom are no laughing matter when applied to the
man who defeated Bush in the 2000 election: Al Gore.

Many solid progressives want Gore to be the Democratic presidential
candidate in 2008. A recent AlterNet reader survey (in which Noam
Chomsky won the MVP for “Most Valuable Progressive”) showed Gore way in
front of the pack — with Russ Feingold second and corporate media
“front-runner” Hillary Clinton way back.

If Gore does run in 2008, big questions will nag: Didn’t he fool a lot
of us once before? Can we trust him?

Don’t misunderstand (or mis-underestimate) me: I’d love to see Gore run.

Like many progressives, I’ve grown to appreciate the new Gore.
Beginning in 2002 when leading Democrats had lost their voices, a
reborn Gore spoke out loudly against Bush policies (and irritated
mainstream pundits) through a series of speeches on Iraq, foreign
policy, economics and the assault on our precious Constitutional
freedoms.

Gore broke with former allies in the party establishment, worked
closely with grassroots groups like MoveOn and endorsed the upstart
Howard Dean in the primaries. He even spoke haltingly in favor of
single-payer national health insurance.

His global warming movie, “An Inconvenient Truth” is not just a box
office sensation. Gore is turning it into a broad organizing drive to
build a national consensus on climate change — a campaign that has
earned supportive words from Ralph Nader. The documentary shows Gore to
be a serious and passionate advocate, whose commitment to change begins
from an understanding of facts and consequences. In other words, the
opposite of the current White House resident.

If this new Gore were to run for president, I would do everything I
could to help him vanquish the Republicans.

But doubts still persist. Because I remember the old Gore.

I remember a politician whose words on the environment were not matched
by later actions; a politician whose foreign policy views were often
militarist and whose economic views were often corporatist.

I remember Vice President Gore — despite having written the
environmental manifesto “Earth in the Balance,” which highlighted the
impact of auto emissions — as the Clinton administration’s leader in a
“partnership” with Detroit auto makers that failed to increase fuel
efficiency standards one inch in eight years.

I remember a vice president who was the administration’s go-to-guy in
promoting corporate-oriented trade deals like NAFTA, with their obvious
negative impacts on the global environment and on workers’ rights.
(Asked recently about NAFTA by Larry King, Gore’s position seems to
have changed very little.)

I remember a vice president who played a lead role in pushing through
the Telecommunications “Reform” Act of 1996 that predictably led to the
worst media conglomeration in our nation’s history, and helped fortify
the media empires of folks like Murdoch, Clear Channel and Sinclair.

And I remember a presidential candidate in 2000 emptied of progressive
principles by Beltway consultants so afraid of the American people and
democracy that they believe a Democrat must win largely through
stealth. A candidate who chose as his campaign chair William Daley, the
NAFTA campaign czar despised by labor unions. And as his running-mate
Joe Lieberman, who aided Bush’s side in the Florida fight.

In his documentary, Gore seems to relish a biting quote from the
fearless progressive advocate, Upton Sinclair: “It is difficult to get
a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not
understanding.” The Sinclair comment is pungently anti-corporate,
anti-careerist. When I watched the movie, I felt I was seeing the new
Gore critiquing the old Gore.

So the question remains: If Gore runs for president again, which Gore
will we get? And if he makes it to the White House (or even gets
close), can we be sure that the new Gore won’t revert into the old?

In 2002, Gore parted with some old Beltway buddies. Today, new
grassroots forces and information/fundraising technologies may be
strong enough — stronger than when Dean nearly won the nomination — to
allow the new Gore to flourish and win the White House without the
backing of old-line media, timid consultants and corporate funders.

If Gore were to choose a grassroots/netroots path over the Beltway
bandit approach, it could be an inspiring campaign that would infuriate
the same pundit elite that went apoplectic over Dean’s primary campaign.

Here’s an inconvenient truth: Progressives have few options for 2008. A
high priority for some is stopping pro-war, corporate Democrat Hillary
Clinton — the preferred candidate of many in the media. Days ago,
conservative Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch hosted a fundraiser for Sen.
Clinton.

Many progressives have a message for Al: Get into the presidential
race… but free of the old corporatist baggage.

And don’t make fools of us again.

[Jeff Cohen http://www.jeffcohen.org/ is founder of the media watch
group FAIR http://www.fair.org/index.php, former TV pundit/producer,
and author of “Cable News Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate
Media.”]



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