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At
Any Cost:
How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election
by
Bill Sammon
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Prologue
Spoiling for a Fight
It
was 5:15 a.m. by the time I finally left the Washington
Times newsroom on November 8, 2000. Having
written countless versions of an ever-changing
story-including one in which I authoritatively
reported that George W. Bush had been elected
president-I was physically and mentally exhausted.
But like so many other journalists who had planned
on taking some time off after the grueling, eighteen-month
campaign, I was suddenly forced to scrap my vacation.
The election was deadlocked and Florida was about
to conduct a recount. Unable to remember the Sunshine
States capital, I asked an editor on the
way out of the newsroom.
I dunno, he shrugged. Tallahassee?
I
stopped at home en route to the airport and stuffed
a change of clothes in my briefcase. My wife suggested
I pack a proper bag, but I assured her: Its
a two-day story-tops. Then I headed out
the door, unaware that I would remain in Florida
for the next forty-six days.
Bleary-eyed and suffering from the ravages of
sleep deprivation, I found myself reflecting on
the long campaign as the plane headed south. Although
I had covered Vice President Al Gore almost nonstop
for more than a year and a half, I kept coming
back to a particular episode from the summer of
1999.
There
were only a handful of us on Air Force Two in
those early days of the campaign. On that particular
trip, there were even fewer reporters than usual
because the only public event on Gores schedule
was an environmental photo-op. Those were Gores
earth tone days and he wanted to showcase
his new, casual wardrobe in a carefully staged
canoe ride down the Connecticut River. The vice
presidents advance staff had even selected
a site on the riverbank where news photographers
would get the most flattering shot. They pleaded
with their boss not to turn and smile at the cameras
as he passed by, but instead to gaze purposefully
ahead as he knifed his paddle through the pristine
waters. The photo would look more candid that
way.
At the livery, Gore clambered into a canoe with
New Hampshire Governor Jeanne Shaheen and shoved
off. The press were instructed to double up and
follow.
If
were short one life jacket, we just wont
give one to the Washington Times guy,
deadpanned Jake Tapper of Salon, a liberal online
magazine.
Cmon,
Sammon, youre going with me, said
Washington Post political correspondent
Dan Balz.
We
grabbed a canoe and pushed off before the other
reporters could get in the water. As we began
paddling, the bottom of the canoe brushed briefly
over pebbles in the riverbed. But once we got
into deeper water, we had no trouble whatsoever
navigating.
It
was a glorious summer day and the scenery was
spectacular. At one point we passed under an old-fashioned
covered bridge that connected New Hampshire and
Vermont. At another point we spotted the gaggle
of photographers as they prepared for their preordained
photo of the day. But when Gore passed by, he
couldnt resist turning to mug for the cameras
with a big toothy grin. His aides and even the
photographers groaned. So much for a candid shot.
Balz
and I kept up a brisk pace in order to stay close
to Gore. In addition to the other reporters, who
were bringing up the rear, there were state officials
from both Vermont and New Hampshire. Toss in the
ubiquitous Secret Service and it was quite a little
armada.
The four-mile jaunt seemed to end almost before
it began. As we disembarked and started walking
up the bank to the vice presidential motorcade,
a man named John Kassel, director of the Vermont
Division of Natural Resources, sidled up alongside
me and struck up a conversation.
They
wont release the water for the fish when
we ask them to, but somehow they find themselves
able to release it for a politician, Kassel
groused. The only reason they did this was
to make sure the vice presidents canoe didnt
get stuck.
When
I expressed bewilderment, Kassel explained: The
drought that had been plaguing New England all
summer had slowed the Connecticut River to a trickle.
Gores advance team and the local environmentalists
who organized the photo-op had fretted that there
wouldnt be enough water to float the vice
presidential canoe. So Pacific Gas & Electric
was instructed to open the floodgates of its dam
upriver at dawn that morning. By the time Gore
got into his canoe, the river was plenty deep
enough for the trip downstream.
There
are people on the phone right now telling them
to shut it off, Kassel assured me.
As I reached the motorcade and Kassel went on
his way, I pulled out my cell phone and began
calling officials at PG&E. The other reporters
were now milling around and I didnt want
them to hear my conversation, so I did my best
to remain circumspect. At length I reached a senior
PG&E official who confirmed Kassels
account. I even tracked down the dam operator
who had pushed the button that morning to open
the floodgates.
Their
story was nothing short of amazing. The drought
was so severe that New Hampshire residents were
forbidden from watering their lawns or washing
their cars. And yet more than half a billion gallons
of water had been released from a dam in order
to accommodate Al Gores environmental photo-op.
The
story hit the front page of the Washington
Times the next morning. As I prepared a follow-up
report, I interviewed Sharon Francis, the local
environmentalist who had helped plan the entire
event. Francis reiterated a point I had made in
my first story-that Gore himself had not ordered
the raising of the river. But she also explained
something I hadnt known. Francis said she
informed Gore of the river-raising immediately
after the canoe trip, as she and the vice president
were walking to a riverbank podium to make brief
remarks. How had Gore reacted to this news? According
to Francis, he replied that since he was from
Tennessee, home of the Tennessee Valley Authority,
he was quite familiar with fluctuations in river
levels. This bit of detail, while interesting,
seemed of no consequence to my follow-up story.
But
then at lunch, I had an opportunity to question
Gore about the controversy. Careful not to accuse
him of ordering the floodgates opened, I instead
asked him how he felt about the river being raised
on your behalf.
I
didnt know it was, until I read your story,
Gore replied.
As
he walked away, I realized he had just contradicted
Francis. Now, instead of a routine follow-up story
destined for the back pages, I suddenly had another
front-page exclusive: What did Gore know and when
did he know it?
That
afternoon, Gores press secretary berated
me in the driveway of a swank New Hampshire home
as the vice president hobnobbed with Democratic
donors inside. Chris Lehane was furious that I
had written the story about the canoe flap. It
was picked up by CNN, MSNBC, the Associated Press,
the Washington Post, and the New York Times, among
other hot media barometers. The intended message
of the day-that Gore was a better environmentalist
than Democratic challenger Bill Bradley-had been
utterly obliterated by the new controversy, which
was already being dubbed Floodgate.
Suffice it to say that I was the least popular
person aboard Air Force Two as we flew back to
Washington that night.
Looking
back, the whole episode turned out to be inconsequential
in the grand scheme of campaign coverage. And
yet the canoe flap had taught me something important
about Al Gore. When caught in a jam, he reflexively
resorted to deception instead of just taking his
licks and moving on. He also made it his practice
to dispatch staffers to attack the messenger and
anyone else who dared question the message of
the day. For two weeks after that canoe ride,
Gore supporters furiously tried to spin the story.
First they disputed the number of gallons released,
arguing for days over whether it had been in the
tens of millions, hundreds of millions, or even
billions, as PG&E originally asserted. When
it became apparent that, no matter which number
was accurate, it was still an enormous amount
of water, Team Gore switched to another argument:
The dam routinely released water anyway. But Cleve
Kapala, PG&Es director of government
affairs, said this particular release was orchestrated
specifically for Gore.
It was a bit artificial, to be honest with
you, Kapala said. The river was pretty
dry and no one wanted the canoes to be dragging
on the bottom. Vice President Gores people
were concerned that we not raise the level too
high, either, because they didnt want it
to be dangerous.
He
added: It took a lot of water to get it
just right.
Dam
operator Dennis Goodwin said raising the river
for a VIP was anything but routine.
Its
a first for me, and Ive been in this job
for sixteen years, Goodwin said. But
if we hadnt done it, they might have hit
bottom.
Finally,
in desperation, Gore loyalists fell back on the
argument first raised by Kassel-that a release
would be good for the fish. But even Governor
Shaheens husband, Bill, who was manager
of Gores New Hampshire campaign, threw cold
water on that theory.
When
you raise the level for fishing, you have to keep
it up or else the fish die, said Shaheen,
who acknowledged the river receded to its low
level within hours after Gores departure.
By railing against the story instead of getting
it behind him, Gore gave it legs. The Hotline,
an online compendium of campaign coverage read
by virtually everyone in politics, charted each
Gore misstep in what was becoming a canoe saga.
The Republican National Committee gleefully issued
daily news releases, including one headlined Row
vs. Wade. Someone even filed a complaint
with the Federal Elections Commission, charging
that the release of water had amounted to an illegal
campaign contribution. By going to war over a
flubbed photo-op, Gore brought this flood of criticism
on himself.
Now,
fifteen months later, it looked as though Gore
was digging in his heels once again. He had conceded
the election to Bush, only to call back an hour
later and withdraw his concession. He seemed to
be hunkering down for a new fight, although no
one knew, as my plane touched down in Tallahassee,
just how far Gore was willing to go. At that early
stage of the standoff, no one could have imagined
that Gore would personally direct a smear-and-destroy
campaign against Floridas top election official
for simply upholding the law. In those innocent
days of the automatic statewide recount, no one
could have predicted that Gore would resort to
disenfranchising GIs serving overseas, not to
mention civilians living right there in Florida,
even as he publicly pleaded to count every
vote. And not even the craziest of conspiracy
theorists would dare posit a scenario in which
Gore would privately consult an Electoral College
expert to advise him on the possibilities of enlisting
faithless Bush electors.
Still,
as the plane taxied to a stop, I couldnt
shake the sense that perhaps we were heading into
a profoundly bigger and more important variation
of the canoe story, in which Gore would do anything
to win, no matter how bad he looked or how ugly
it got.
I
once spent several years uncovering election fraud
in Cleveland for the Plain Dealer newspaper.
I had seen how messy and imprecise the hallowed
exercise of voting really was: disappearing ballots;
a rigged vote-counting computer; a cat, I even
found, who was registered to vote under the name
Morris Feline Stuart, occupation exterminator.
In the end, there were investigations by everyone
from the Ohio secretary of state to the FBI. Both
Republican and Democratic election officials were
forced from office.
Now
I wondered if the entire nation was about to get
an eyeful of the sausage-making operation known
as voting in America.
Thirty-six
days after arriving in Florida, most of the reporters
finally went home. I remained for ten more days,
traveling the state to research just how far Gore
had gone to achieve his goal. In the end, when
he knew all was lost, he tried to inflict mortal
wounds on Bushs fledgling presidency. In
the process, he all but obliterated any chance
for a political comeback of his own.
In
short, Al Gore had tried like, well, Al Gore,
to seize the presidency-at any cost.
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