Word: gores
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...white liberal in the race. Jesse Jackson, of course, should corral almost all the black vote. By finishing second in New Hampshire, with 20%, Richard Gephardt demonstrated that his nativist trade policies and his fiery mock-populist rhetoric resonate with blue-collar voters across the geographic spectrum. And Albert Gore, the not-ready-for-North ern-climes candidate, must prove that his Southern endorsements and smart-set moderate appeal can translate into primary votes...
With 93 percent of the South Dakota vote counted, Gephardt had 45 percent, followed by Dukakis at 30 percent. Trailing were Sen. Albert Gore Jr. '69 (D.-Tenn.) at 8 percent, Gary Hart at 6 percent, Jackson at 5 percent and Simon at 5 percent...
...with 22 percent of the results reported in Minnesota, Dukakis had 34 percent, Simon 19 percent, Jackson 18 percent and Gephardt 8 percent. Eighteen percent of the delegates were uncommitted. Gore and Hart each had I percent...
Jackson, who drew large, enthusiastic crowds during visits to Minnesota, was considered a wild card in the state's Democratic race. Gore and Hart virtually ignored the state...
...said that Dukakis had considered speaking to the Atlanta marchers, along with Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.) and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. But Spurling said that this is uncertain in view of scheduling conflicts...