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| POLITICAL WRAP | |
December 15, 2000 |
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Shields and Gigot discuss the completed election and the road ahead. |
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JIM LEHRER: Some final words now from Shields and Gigot, syndicated columnist Mark Shields, Wall Street Journal columnist Paul Gigot. Mark, what would you like to share with us at the end of this remarkable week?
JIM LEHRER: Do you feel the same way, Paul? PAUL GIGOT: Feel the same.... MARK SHIELDS: Thief.
JIM LEHRER: Would you feel that way if Al Gore had ended up being president of the United States? Would you say hey, Jim, the system worked? PAUL GIGOT: Depends on how he would have won, Jim. If he would have won with a 4-3 verdict of the Florida Supreme Court, no way would I have felt that. JIM LEHRER: Mark, do you feel the system worked because the Supreme Court of the United States by a 5-4 vote gave it to George W. Bush? |
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| The system worked | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MARK SHIELDS: I think the system worked. I don't think justice was done. I think that Al Gore showed enormous respect and great example, almost an inspiration for following the rule of law. It was the rule of law that triumphed. He accepted a decision, which he disagreed with not simply because it went against him but because for many people it was indefensible, and not simply the political, just the legal and logical argument for it. But I do think the rule of law prevailed and that in the final analysis is the greatest tribute.
PAUL GIGOT: I think he has done fine, Jim. I've actually been impressed -- more impressed by how he behaved during this controversy. And I say that because at first he looked, I think, it's fair to say, a little bit shaky. He didn't have that great sense of command that you like to see right after an election. But then I think he did something very smart, two things. One is he delegated. He got Jim Baker in there and Baker handled all of this, the public and the legal strategy. And he dropped from sight. Bush I thought was very wise to be silent. He knew this controversy was polarizing. He knew that if he ended up being president, he didn't want to have to have spent capital on that. And much less than Vice President Gore, he was behind the scenes. I think that was shrewd and shows a certain sense... I don't know.... JIM LEHRER: He caught some heat for it -- saying who is the president-elect, is it Dick Cheney or is it George W. Bush? PAUL GIGOT: In the modern world, we're supposed to be defined by news cycles. We have to get that spin out there. We have got to get on the evening news and have the story and beat the other guy. But I think that he didn't spend... he didn't spend his reputation fighting this fight. And I think that is going to stand him well as the days go on. JIM LEHRER: How do you feel about George W. Bush since Wednesday? MARK SHIELDS: I feel he is president-elect and.... JIM LEHRER: Yes, Mark, I know that.
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| Governing from the middle | ||||||||||||||||||||
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JIM LEHRER: Paul, are there conservatives in the Republican Party who are going to put up with his governing from the middle and making deals with liberal Democrats in order to get things done? PAUL GIGOT: The answer to that is it depends on the nature of the deal, Jim. I mean, I think he is going to get a wide latitude first of all. JIM LEHRER: Why is he going to get it?
JIM LEHRER: Mark, how should the Democrats play this? I noticed John Breaux went down there today and was very pleasant but said no thanks, I don't want to serve in your cabinet. Is that going to be the answer George W. Bush is going to get from most Democrats -- this is terrific bipartisanship but count me out?
JIM LEHRER: But couldn't they make a deal and say, hey - MARK SHIELDS: Or appoint a very weak Democrat who couldn't get reelected. So I think that, and John Breaux knows that. I don't know if John Breaux wants to be a cabinet officer, but he knows it will be the kiss of death for his political career in the sense that Democrats will look upon it as betrayal. I think if there are going to be Democrats out of the Congress in the cabinet, it would probably be Democrats who hold House districts the Democrats could not keep like Charlie Stenholm in west Texas in all likelihood . Those are the types.... MARK SHIELDS: Well, I'll tell you -- it's two things that are working for the Democrats to cooperate with George W. Bush. The first is that the leaders of the Democratic Party, namely Dick Gephardt and to an increasing degree Tom Daschle in the Senate, are now mentioned as national candidates. They don't want to be in the position... Dick Gephardt ran in 1988 himself, he's wanted to be speaker of the House. But if he is going to run for president or thinking about it or Tom Daschle's thinking about national office, he doesn't want to be seen as an obstructionist or someone that is small and petty and not ready for the national scene. And secondly, the Democrats are the party of governance. They like to govern; they like to legislate. Republicans are the ones who oppose things. So when he proposes, they'll respond. JIM LEHRER: We have plenty of time to talk about this over the next several weeks and months. Thank you both very much. |
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