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Round 5 | page 1, 2
To be sure, neither candidate needed a map to find the campus. Since last
spring, both Bradley and Gore have spent upwards of a month apiece in
the first-in-the-nation primary state, where the candidates
are neck and neck. The most recent poll, conducted by the American
Research Group and conducted from Dec. 29 until Dec. 31, had Bradley
barely edging Gore, 42 percent to 39 percent. But Bradley's
numbers have been sinking -- down from 48 percent just two weeks ago --
and Gore's have been slowly rising as the Feb. 1 election day approaches. Thus, Wednesday's debate was just one appearance in a full New England
itinerary for both men. On Tuesday, Bradley presented a 10-year plan to
eliminate more than $140 billion in corporate tax benefits. That
night, he participated in a televised town meeting at New Hampshire's St.
Anselm College with CNBC's Chris Matthews. On Wednesday, Gore had his own larger-than-life burly Irishman on
hand, as he received the endorsement of Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., who accompanied the vice president on a New Hampshire campaign swing Wednesday. Kennedy said
Gore has "the ability, the vision and
the experience to lead this nation wisely and well in the coming
years, and I'll be proud to stand with you in the great battles that
lie ahead." Thirty years ago, Kennedy stood with another Gore, Gore's
father, former Tennessee Sen. Al Gore, who seconded Kennedy's
nomination as Senate majority whip. Wednesday, however, the comfort of Kennedy's ample bosom was replaced
by some tough questions from Jennings, along with John DiStaso of the Manchester Union Leader,
Alison King of New England Cable News and Jenny Attiyeh of New
Hampshire Public Television. When Bradley and Gore sidestepped
questions, Jennings, in an entertaining mix of chivalry, toughness
and whimsy, would turn to the local reporter and ask if his or her
question had been answered satisfactorily. Or he would press the
issue himself. As a result of Jennings' persistence, we can now be assured that future GOP campaign spots will feature both Bradley
and Gore proclaiming that anyone either man names to the Joint Chiefs
of Staff will need to support a lift on the ban on gays and lesbians
openly serving in the military, a fact which was first milked from the two candidates Wednesday night. Jennings and company also helped produce some lighter moments of the debate, as when Bradley, pressed by
Attiyeh with an assist from Jennings, denied that he was the remote
Carter-esque exemplar of sanctimony that he sometimes seems. "Take a look? Am I aloof?" Bradley asked, to audience laughter,
pointing out that he'd just held his 46th town meeting in the state.
"You can't be aloof in a New Hampshire town meeting." Both men refused to shy away from the "liberal" label. "I don't
think the views I have espoused are a disadvantage for running for
president," Bradley argued, saying that gay rights were an issue of
"fundamental human decency," and gun control was one of "common
sense." "I don't care what kind of label people apply to those kinds of
positions and views," Gore said, outlining similar stances on similar
issues. Jennings then opened the format a bit, allowing the foes an exchange
with one another, leading them to inevitable confrontation by asking if either man was offended by a "vote or
quote" misrepresentation his opponent had made. Bradley, saying he had "a deep commitment to the issue of race in
this country," said that he was "really offended" by Gore's charge
that his health-care plan would "consciously, as part of a policy"
hurt African-Americans and Latinos. But Gore didn't back off, quoting Harry Truman's protest that "I'm
not giving him hell, I'm just telling the truth and he thinks it's
hell." Bradley's health-care plan, which replaces the hearty Medicaid
benefits package with a much smaller one, would disproportionately damage
minority communities, Gore charged, since those communities are
disproportionately poor and thus more dependent upon Medicaid. "Look here, in New Hampshire," Gore said, brandishing a cheat-sheet
with a chart of health care figures. "Here are a dozen different
insurance health plans under the federal employee benefit plan, and
not a single one of them can be purchased for anything close to $150
a month," the average subsidy Bradley's plan would provide. Bradley, with his trademark counter-charge that what Gore's saying
"is just not so," replied that a family of four under the New
Hampshire postal worker's union plan certainly would be able to
purchase the appropriate coverage. Regardless, "Al is saying all the
time it's a $150 cap. It's not a cap. It's a weighted average,"
Bradley said, "Some places it will be more, some places it will be
less." "What is a weighted average?" Gore joked. "I remember the old story
about the man who had his feet on a block of ice and his head in the
oven and according to the weighted average, he was really comfortable
with it." "First of all, let me explain to you, Al, how the private sector
works, OK?" Bradley jabbed. "If you have 30 million people, you're
going to find insurance companies competing to provide the lowest
cost service." Quickly, however, referee Jennings broke up the clinch. Both
candidates used their remaining time to answer charges and forward
arguments both for themselves against the other man. Bradley said he
was "disappointed" by Gore's insistence that his plan to require
licensing and registration for the "65 million handguns in this
country" was "too difficult to do." Where would the country be, Bradley rhetorically asked, if past leaders like FDR or LBJ had shared Gore's love for
pragmatics. "The essence of leadership ... is making it possible,"
Bradley said. Gore riposted that Bradley's gun licensing and registration plan "doesn't have a prayer of ever becoming law." "You need to find a way to make the political system work," he said, arguing that Bradley had failed to account for the ardent opposition such a "maximalist" proposal would arouse. "So many
people are going to fight tooth and nail [that] kind of maximalist
measure." Gore recast the campaign finance reform challenge he made to Bradley
on NBC's "Meet the Press" in which both men would forego television
ads and participate in twice-weekly debates. Since Bradley quite
credibly argued that as the lesser-known candidate, swearing off such
ads made little sense, Gore put it forward again, limiting it to New
Hampshire, where Bradley leads in the polls. Calling himself the
underdog in the Granite State, Gore said he was "asking people to
give me a come-from-behind upset victory." "Your underdog pitch brings tears to my eyes," Bradley said. "I hope my upset victory brings tears to your eyes on Feb. 1," Gore returned. The gloves come off again on Saturday in Iowa. UNH will host its next
debate in a mere matter of hours, when all six Republicans face off
on Thursday night.
- - - - - - - - - - - - Sound off Related Salon stories Sick of the health care debate? Neither Bradley nor Gore is telling the whole truth about what it will take to reform the system. Gore gets tough in non-debate The vice president raps an insurgent Bradley -- and Clinton -- at a New Hampshire town meeting.
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