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- COVER STORIES, Page 37THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE"People Vote for Presidents, Not Vice Presidents"
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- DAN QUAYLE speaks out on abortion, the environment and Al Gore
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- By MICHAEL DUFFY and Dan Quayle.
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- Q. Please size up Al Gore.
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- A. He's a very good debater. He was a good debater in the
- Senate, a good debater in the House, does his homework. [But]
- he and I disagree on almost every issue.
-
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- Q. Do Vice Presidents matter much in this race?
-
- A. The American people vote for the President. The American
- people vote for the top of the ticket, where obviously the Vice
- President, or Vice Presidents, can help -- they can help with
- the core constituency out there. The bottom line is, people vote
- for Presidents, not Vice Presidents.
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- Q. What are the two or three accomplishments as Vice
- President of which you are proudest?
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- A. One, working to advance the President's agenda on
- Capitol Hill. Representing the President in 47 countries around
- the world. Traveling to all 50 states, helping out with
- political responsibilities. Heading the Competitiveness Council,
- heading the Space Council. Probably the most important event was
- monitoring the Philippine crisis when the President was in
- Malta.
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- Q. Was it a mistake to overemphasize family values in
- Houston?
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- A. The media have given more discussion to speeches other
- than the speech that I made, or other than the speech that the
- President made. [Ours] were the two main speeches. As a matter
- of fact, I've heard very little discussion of my speech, and not
- much more discussion on the President's speech. [Coverage]
- focused on these peripheral issues, and I think that is just
- simply the media trying to figure out a way to unfairly
- criticize the convention and criticize the President. I don't
- see people going back and looking at what Jesse Jackson said and
- what Jerry Brown said at the Democratic Convention, but you sure
- hear that review of the Republican Convention, so I just chalk
- it up as one more unfair attack on the President.
-
-
- Q. You gave what many people considered the best speech of
- your life in Houston. Had people not been paying attention to
- you, or were you the beneficiary of low expectations?
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- A. Others have to answer that. I spent quite a bit of time
- writing the speech. I was trying to make it topical but also
- defining the issue very clearly. It was not a much different
- speech than what I've given out on the campaign trail. The fact
- is that people don't focus on the Vice President, and I think
- in many people's mind the image is still back in the '88
- campaign; this is 1992.
-
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- Q. The President has been saying that Bill Clinton has no
- experience in foreign policy. Is that an argument that you think
- is going to work with the American people at a time when the
- economy seems to be the issue foremost in their minds?
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- A. The economy is the first issue, but international
- economics is very important. International economics will play
- a great role in creating new jobs and opportunities. This
- President knows every leader -- almost every leader in the world
- on a first-name basis. He's the one that can sit down,
- negotiate free-trade agreements, knock down tariffs, knock down
- barriers, create a world environment of free, fair trade rather
- than protectionism, and if you travel the road that Bill Clinton
- wants to travel, it will be much more of a protectionist road
- that will cost us jobs; small businesses will be denied export
- opportunities, jobs will be lost, and our country will suffer.
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-
- Q. On the environment, you have said that it is better to
- emphasize jobs over the environment and at other times you have
- said that there doesn't need to be a trade-off between the two.
- Could you clarify your position?
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- A. I think it's a false choice to say you can't have a
- strong environment and a strong economy. I think you can have
- both. Our emphasis, our approach -- just like we dealt with the
- spotted owl, you send legislation to the Congress that will
- preserve the spotted owl in its natural habitat and preserve
- 17,000 jobs. We have both, but unfortunately, the Democratic
- Congress is only interested in preserving the owl. The owl is
- important, but so are jobs. [The Democrats] are the ones that
- are basically saying we can only have a strong environment, and
- we can't have a strong economy as well.
-
-
- Q. Could you clarify your position on abortion? You have
- recently begun to indicate that it was a matter that you would
- leave to the states.
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- A. My position on abortion is one that I've always had, a
- pro-life position. I am opposed to abortion. I think abortion
- is wrong. I have said that what we need to do is focus more, and
- reflect more on the issues of abortion. That is precisely what
- the Pennsylvania statute calls for -- a 24-hour waiting period,
- parental notification of a minor. In Los Angeles I was talking
- to a woman who had an abortion at age 17, and she told me that
- she wished when she was 17 years old that someone would have
- told her what the postabortion trauma was going to be like.
- Looking back on it she wished that she had not chosen abortion,
- and she told me, "If I had time to reflect on it over the
- 24-hour waiting period, I might not have had that abortion."
- That's what I'm talking about -- changing attitudes, changing
- behavior.
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- Q. Are you suggesting that we don't need a ban on abortion?
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- A. My focus today is the pro-life position of reflecting on
- the issue of abortion, trying to have the choice of life rather
- than abortion.
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-
- Q. If you became President tomorrow morning, what would you
- do?
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- A. It really isn't appropriate for me as Vice President to
- talk to you about what I'd do as President, other than to say
- that I would continue to advance the agenda of George Bush.
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