home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- COVER STORIES, Page 36THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL DEBATEWe're Not Measuring the Drapes"
-
-
- AL GORE holds forth on the campaign, television's damaging
- impact and Dan Quayle
-
- By S.C. GWYNNE and ELIZABETH TAYLOR
-
- Al Gore
-
-
- Q. Dan Quayle has been quoted as saying that your
- environmental views are detached from reality and devoid of
- common sense. In the face of these criticisms, have you
- deliberately moderated your views?
-
- A. No, not at all. I have emphasized the environment more
- than any other issue in this campaign. I have designed my
- schedule in a way that helps me highlight the environment at as
- many stops as I possibly can. I have emphasized some of the
- same points I make in my book about the economic opportunity
- that inheres in facing the crisis and dealing with it
- aggressively, and I will continue doing that.
-
- I believe that the extremist view is held by those who are
- willing to tolerate the doubling of carbon dioxide in a single
- generation, the loss in a single lifetime of more than half the
- living species God put on earth, the destruction of a large
- percentage of the protective ozone shield in only a few decades,
- the loss of more than an acre of tropical rain forest every
- second, the addition of an entire China's worth of people every
- decade, the poisoning of our air and water resources, the
- serious erosion of our cropland. Those of us who are attempting
- to rally this nation to lead a worldwide response to this crisis
- are responding in a common-sense way.
-
-
- Q. We hear that you and Governor Clinton have a 100-day
- agenda for the country if you're elected and that you'll be the
- legislative point man for the plan.
-
- A. Well, we're not counting our chickens before they hatch.
- We're not measuring the drapes. We are being a little
- close-mouthed about everything in the agenda we proposed for the
- country that will be included in that first 100-day plan. You
- can get a pretty good sense of it if you look at the position
- papers we've put out on the various issues we've discussed in
- the campaign. If we do win, we will change the psychology of how
- this country views the future and how we work together as a
- nation toward common goals in far less than 100 days. We will
- start doing that on Day One, and you will see a burst of
- productive activity throughout that 100-day period.
-
-
- Q. You voted in support of the Gulf War, and yet today
- you've become highly critical of George Bush's handling of the
- war . . .
-
- A. Not the war. I haven't been critical of his handling of
- the war at all. I've been very critical of the period leading
- up to the war, starting in his term as Vice President and most
- prominently in his term as President during the period
- preceding the war. And I've been critical of his handling of the
- aftermath of the war, starting on the final day of the war. I
- said in my speech a couple of weeks ago that he deserves credit
- for calling the fire department, but we should understand it
- was he who started the blaze. Once the fire has started, you
- don't say, Wait a minute, we shouldn't put it out because this
- fire shouldn't have been set in the first place. I would cast
- that vote all over again. I started making speeches against his
- Iraq policy back in 1988. I think it was an extremely serious
- mistake by Bush, and one for which he ought to be held
- accountable.
-
-
-
- Q. You have written about what you call a spiritual crisis
- in this country.
-
- A. The deeper crisis in the country is a crisis of meaning.
- Many people feel that their lives no longer have a sense of
- purpose. And part of the reason for that is this culture of
- distraction that we have which constantly falls in 15- and
- 30-second bursts of commercial activity toward this, that, or
- the other extraneous matter. Many people come home at night and
- just flip on the television, and that's it. The discussion of
- all these side issues in the campaign, about the draft, for
- example, represent the same phenomenon. And a lot of people are,
- in a way, relieved to be pulled into something of that kind
- because it seems easier than thinking about how we're doing to
- reduce our dependence on foreign oil and how we're going to
- reduce the budget deficit, how we're going to put people back
- to work, how we're going to solve the crime problem, how we're
- going to give people access to affordable health care, how we're
- going to improve our schools.
-
-
- But we're at a turning point in the history of
- civilization. What has changed the terms of debate in this
- election is that people have begun to realize how painful and
- unsustainable the current way of doing things is. We can't
- borrow a billion dollars every 24 hours. We can't tolerate 40
- million working Americans with no health insurance whatsoever.
- We can't tolerate a 29% dropout rate, an epidemic of violence
- and drugs and AIDS. We have to respond to these realities, and
- people are now willing to consider the changes that our nation
- must go through.
-
-
- Q. Why should it matter to voters whether they elect you or
- Dan Quayle as Vice President?
-
- A. Number one, there have been many, many times in our
- nation's history when the Vice President has suddenly been
- thrust into the presidency owing to an unanticipated death or
- tragedy. Secondly, Bill Clinton and I have a shared
- understanding of what the words partnership and teamwork are all
- about.
-
-
- Q. What do you say to people who say, "We wish Al Gore were
- at the top of the ticket"?
-
- A. This ticket is the way it should be. Bill Clinton is the
- best-prepared candidate for President I've ever seen, and he has
- earned the right to be exactly where he is. I have never had a
- single second thought about not running for President myself
- this time around. I made that decision for the right reasons.
- I am not only comfortable with it, I am extremely happy about
- it.
-
-
- Q. Is there anything good you can say about Dan Quayle?
-
- A. He's raised some great kids. They seem to be really
- wonderful kids.
-
-
-
-
-