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Home Front: Politix
Tales from alternate universes: "Gore-Edwards '00?" "Gore-Kerry '00?"
2007-05-31
Jim Geraghty, National Review

Bob Shrum says Edwards "nearly got the nod" to be Al Gore's running mate. Pages 343-344:

Warren Christopher, the congenitally cautious former secretary of state, was in charge of the search process; he thought Edwards was untested, unprepared, a reckless gamble. Edwards himself had first broached the long-shot possibility of being Gore's running mate with me early in 1999...

Gore was troubled by the report - ironically compiled by someone who had worked for Edwards but was now our campaign's research director - that as a lawyer, Edwards had taken the legal but potentially controversial step of incorporating himself to avoid paying Medicare taxes. It had come up in the 1998 Senate race, and we'd beaten it back; but it now gave Warren Christopher an opening to renew the case against Edwards as too callow, too uncertain, too far out of the box. He pressed Gore. How could he risk his reputation by making such a choice?

Let me get this straight - Edwards was elected in November 1998 and sworn in January 1999; he was angling to be vice president after serving in the Senate for... a couple of months?

"Well, at least he's ambitious and self-confident."

I can see the campaign slogan now: "Gore-Edwards 2000: the VP is the pretty one."

But wait, there's more:


Kerry Demonstrates How To Fall Off The Veep List in 2000

From Bob Shrum's "No Excuses: Concessions of a Serial Campaigner," page 325:

[Early in the day of the 2000 New Hampshire primary, Al Gore's campaign had been hearing bad news - the last wave of exit polls suggested Gore would lose by 5 points to Bill Bradley...]

John Kerry unexpectedly materialized, virtually the only outsider that night to make it past the check points and the Secret Service... Like everybody else, Kerry had heard about the exit surveys - which were withheld from the public until the polls closed, but were the common currency of political insider trading all through Election Day. When Kerry arrived, Gore came out to greet him and promptly got an earful, as Kerry expounded on why Gore was losing in New Hampshire. The stump speech didn't work; he didn't have a clear focused message - the critique went on and on. Tipper took me aside and told me to somehow get Kerry out of here... Tipper didn't forget that night and that moment - and when the time came, she was distinctly unenthusiastic about picking Kerry for vice president.

Smart woman, that Tipper.

"Gore-Kerry 2000: Don't You Know Who We Are?"
Posted by:Mike

#2  Beyond the fact that Edwards had no experience than (and barely any now) he probably would have made a better choice than Lieberman in 2000. The 2000 election was pre-Sept 11 and Lieberman's real additions with strong defense weren't seen as a strong point. And Edwards had charisma that Liberman lacked.

The reverse is also true. Lieberman would have helped the Kerry campaign. He wouldn't have overshadowed Kerry the way Edwards did and would have pumped up the military bonified.

Of course we have to assume the left wouldn't have turned on him by then.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2007-05-31 15:54  

#1  He would offer awesome hair to any ticket.
Posted by: eLarson   2007-05-31 15:52  

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