Word: gore
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...that Al Gore is the "underdog," mired in the familiarity and fatigue of the Clinton presidency, the veep wants to engage Bill Bradley in hand-to-hand combat. The Gore camp got on the phone to the newspapers Thursday, telling the Washington Post that Bradley?s days as an "outsider" are numbered, promising to dredge up every compromise and change of heart in the former senator?s 18-year record. (They?re likely to start with Bradley?s recent Iowa flip-flop on ethanol subsidies, which he once called "highway robbery.") Then there?s the debates ?- or at least...
...This time yesterday Bradley wasn?t leading in New Hampshire, dead even in New York, and tallying up as the candidate with the bigger coffers. Besides moving his HQ to Nashville, Gore has started talking about his post-Vietnam "disillusionment" with government, and using flowery Bradley-style imagery to illustrate his themes. Once, Bradley was a quixotic outsider to be ignored; now he?s the man to beat. "For a long time this campaign rightfully ?- and then wrongfully ?- thought the right strategy was to engage Bush," one Gore aide told the New York Times. "Now we have to acknowledge reality...
...priority is not internal politics; it is electing Democrats in 2000," said Sanberg, who admits that his personal sympathies lie firmly with the Gore camp. "It's my job to promote the Democratic Party in a fair and equitable...
Marcie B. Bianco '02, chair of the Students for Gore, said she thinks that both groups will benefit from their relationship to the College Democrats...
Joseph N. Sanberg '01, president of the College Democrats, said that both Students for Bradley and Students for Gore benefit from use of his group's e-mail list and the ability to poster and reserve rooms using the College Democrats' name...