Gored
The two candidates share a podium --
but the vice president knocks Bush off center stage.
By Jake Tapper
Oct. 18, 2000 | ST. LOUIS -- If you happen to see Gov. George W. Bush
over
the next few days, and it looks as though he has some dust or wax in
his hair
and on his face, have pity on him. Vice President Al Gore wiped the
floor
with him Tuesday night during the third and last presidential debate.
It was tough to feel bad for Gore after his schizophrenic performances
in the
first two debates -- hyper-aggressive, then overcompensatingly passive
--
that added up to a one-two swing-and-a-miss. Gore's had a quarter-century
career of nastiness, so for him to be slammed for being too obnoxious
in the
first debate, and then double-slammed for being falsely wimpy in the
second,
seemed like poetic justice.
But it was the Texas governor whose karma caught up with him this night.
A
lifetime -- surely a campaign season -- of coasting, not enough of
that fancy
book-learnin', came back and took a Texas-size chomp from his Lone
Star ass.
The Chevy Chase of American politics phoned in a real dud of a performance
Tuesday night, trying to slide by on charm and little else.
Sure, Gore was overeager and sometimes smug. He's Gore. But from the
very
first question about "HMOs and insurance companies making the critical
decisions that affect people's lives," the 100-plus Missouri residents
asking
the pre-screened questions sought specifics Gore was ready to give
them.
Conversely, Bush smirked and chortled, and while that probably went
over
super swell at the DKE house, it allowed Gore to pick him apart in
the
back-and-forth the format permitted.
Now, it's entirely possible that Bush's flat-lined performance was on
purpose. Gore was extremely forceful -- even seeming to invade Bush's
space
once, approaching him while asking for an answer -- and there's no
telling
how that will play. But in general, Gore killed Bush on the issues.
His
seemed to be a 90-minute performance-art piece dedicated to the virtues
of
substance over style. Of course, me being completely wrong wouldn't
be
entirely unprecedented, and focus groups immediately after the debate
indicated anything from mixed reviews to a Bush win.
Of course, as one Texas political reporter who called the night a draw
said
to me, "Bush gave the TV networks enough to pick apart for the next
two days.
The question is whether they'll do it."
If they don't, it won't be for lack of material. Time and time again,
Gore
ripped away at Bush's veneer, telling the audience that beneath it
all lay a
candidate who opposes them on the issues.
After the first question, Gore expressed his support for the bipartisan
House
version of the patients bill of rights, offered by Reps. Charlie Norwood,
R-Ga., and John Dingell, D-Mich. "It is actually a disagreement between
us,"
Gore said for the first of what would be many times. Norwood-Dingell,
he
pointed out, "I support and the governor does not."
Bush leapt to one of the most compelling arguments for his election
-- that
he has worked in Texas in a bipartisan fashion. "I brought Republicans
and
Democrats together to do just that in the state of Texas to get a patients
bill of rights through," Bush said. "It requires a different kind of
leadership style to do it, though. You see, in order to get something
done on
behalf of the people, you have to put partisanship aside. And that's
what we
did in my state."
Problem is, when people talk about a "patients bill of rights," they
mean -
as the questioner directly asked -- "Why aren't the HMO's and insurance
companies held accountable for their decisions?" Allowing patients
to sue
their HMOs or insurance companies is the pivotal difference between
Norwood-Dingell and the watered-down GOP leadership "patients bill
of rights"
bills that Bush supports.
In Texas, Bush fought against the right to sue harder than he fought
against
almost anything else. One of his first actions just after being elected
governor,
during the 1995 legislative session, was to veto a patients bill of
rights offered
by a conservative Republican. To his credit, he then instructed his
insurance
commissioner to enact by law several of the less-controversial provisions
of
the bill. But when the right to sue came up again in 1997, with the
threat of a
veto-proof majority, Bush let it pass without his signature.
So, of course, Bush opposes Norwood-Dingell. That didn't stop him from
pledging,
"It's time for our nation to come together and do what is right for
the people. And I
think this is right for the people. I support a national patients bill
of rights, Mr. Vice
President." Despite the fact that such a pledge is not really true.
"I referred to the Dingell-Norwood bill," Gore said. "It's the bipartisan
bill now pending in the Congress. The HMOs and insurance companies
support
the other bill that's pending, the one the Republican majority has
put
forward. They like it because it doesn't accomplish what I think needs
to be
accomplished ... It has strong bipartisan support. It's being blocked
by the
Republican leadership in the Congress. I want to know whether Gov.
Bush will
support the Dingell-Norwood bill which is the main one pending."
Bush again dodged it. "The difference is I can get it done," Bush said.
Gore
stepped toward him. Bush nodded his head, surprised Gore was there.
"That I can get something positive done on behalf of the people," Bush
said.
"That's what the question in this campaign is about."
Finally, moderator Jim Lehrer stepped in. "What about the Dingell-Norwood
bill?" he asked the governor.
Bush didn't answer the question. Again. And he misrepresented his record,
saying,
"People take their HMO insurance company to court; that's what I've
done in Texas
and that's the kind of leadership style I'll bring to Washington" while
somehow failing
to mention that he fought that provision tooth and nail.
Less than an hour into it, Bush seemed drained. Seventy-seven minutes
into
it, you could barely hear him. Seventy-nine minutes into it, the cameras
caught his wife, Laura Bush, with a gloomy expression on her face.
I went on TV after the debate -- post-midnight; if you missed it I won't
be
offended. The woman who did my makeup likes Bush. She sees it in his
eyes.
He's sincere. He means it. Gore looks away, she says. Maybe that's
true. But
it's easy to be sincere when you're not really talking about anything.
Asked about prescription drugs for seniors, Bush said he supported some
uncontroversial plans and then gave a whole lot of bipartisan platitudes.
"Now look," Gore said when Bush was done, "if you want someone who will
spend a lot of words describing a whole convoluted process and then
end up
supporting legislation that is supported by the big drug companies,
this is
your man," he said, pointing to Bush. "If you want someone who will
fight for
you and who will fight for the middle-class families and working men
and
women who are sick and tired of having their parents and grandparents
pay
higher prices for prescription drugs than anybody else, then I want
to fight for you."
Bam! Bam! Bam! Gore, with his typically hammer-fisted touch, drove his
points home.
"Governor Bush is for vouchers," he said. On Hollywood's marketing
"garbage" to children,
Gore swore to "do something about this" and Bush failed to even bring
up Gore's
multimillion-dollar Tinseltown fundraisers. Gore claimed that under
his watch, government
got smaller, shrinking by hundreds of thousands of jobs, conveniently
neglecting to mention
that most of those jobs came from the Department of Defense, while
Texas' government
under Bush got larger. Bush put up nary a defense, not unlike the rhetorically
emasculated
Gore of the second debate.
Bush on his tax cut largely benefiting the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans:
"Of course it does," Bush finally said. He went on to explain
how, since they
pay the most now, they would naturally reap the biggest benefit from
a tax cut.
A member of the audience -- the purple-shirted Leo Anderson -- asked
Bush a
question that many of us in the Fourth Estate haven't had either the
opportunity or
the guts to ask him about: that creepy smile that falls upon his lips
whenever he
discusses the death penalty. "You seem overly joyed and proud that
Texas leads
the execution of prisoners," the questioner asked.
"Did I misread your response and are you proud that Texas is No. 1
in executions?"
"No, I'm not proud of that," Bush said.
"The death penalty is a very serious business, Leo."
Another Texas record -- the state's abysmal rate of health insurance,
No. 50 out of 50,
according to Census figures -- came up, and Bush defended Texas as
having a "safety net,"
meaning that if someone is dying they can be taken to the emergency
room.
"Insurance -- that's a Washington term," Bush said.
And I cannot believe he did.
One of the more telling moments about the free ride Bush has gotten
thus far came
when Bush again tried to avoid answering whether he supported affirmative
action.
"In our state of Texas I worked with the legislature, both Republicans
and Democrats,
to pass a law that says if you come in the top 10 percent of your high
school class you're
automatically admitted to one of our higher institutions of learning,"
Bush said,
calling it "affirmative access."
In actuality, Democratic state Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, the sponsor
of that
bill -- which Bush did, indeed, sign -- told Salon in August that he
"developed that plan with the help of some university professors. And
I
passed it through the Senate. Bush never called me, he never wrote
about
it, he never had any press conferences to testify about the bill. So
for him
to take credit for it like it was his idea, that's just not right."
Gore hit Bush on another point, however, which again exposed how Bush
sure
doesn't like answering direct questions that might remove the first
word from
his "compassionate conservative" label.
"I don't know what 'affirmative access' means," Gore said. "I do know
what
affirmative action means. I know the governor is against it and I know
that
I'm for it."
Lehrer asked Bush if he was against affirmative action.
"If affirmative action means quotas I'm against it," Bush said.
"If it means what I'm for, then I'm for it. You heard what I was for.
He keeps saying I'm against things.
You heard what I was for and that's what I support."
Gore asked him if he supported it without quotas.
"I'm for what I just described for the lady," Bush said.
Gore asked if Bush supported "what the Supreme Court says is a constitutional
way of having affirmative action?"
Bush chose this moment to complain that Gore was breaking debate rules.
And he was. Gore can sure seem obnoxious and overbearing. In between
misrepresentations of what he's accomplished in Texas, Bush slyly drove
home
the point that Gore's style was typical for creatures of Washington.
"A lot
of people are sick and tired of the bitterness in Washington, D.C.,
and they
don't want any part of politics," Bush said. "They look at Washington
and see
people pointing fingers and casting blame and saying one thing and
doing
another. There's a lot of young folks saying 'why do I want to be involved
with this mess?'"
Responding to the same point -- a question about cynicism among youth
-- Gore
pressed for the campaign finance reform law offered by Sens. John McCain,
R-Ariz., and Russ Feingold, D-Wis.
And therein lay the difference -- pleasant platitudes, signifying nothing,
vs. old-school Washingtoniana, a legislative cure-all even for Gen
X angst.
This could also be seen in Bush's effective response to Gore's laundry
list
of solutions to all that ailed the audience -- the immense price tag
attached.
"When you total up all the federal spending he wants to do, it's the
largest
increase in federal spending in years," Bush said. "And there's just
not
going to be enough money. If this were a spending contest I would come
in
second." Poking at Gore's hack-pol underbelly, Bush noted, "One of
the
reasons I was successful as the governor of Texas is because I didn't
try to
be all things to all people."
Of course, Bush tried to prove his point about Gore's massive spending
by
citing the extremely partisan study of his proposals by the Republicans
on
the Senate Budget Committee. Gore protested by describing the citation
as one
"the journalists said was misleading."
"Forget the journalists," Bush said.