"There has never been a
time in this campaign when I have said something that I know to be untrue."
Vice President Al Gore, January
26, 2000 By now,
pretty much everyone recognizes that Vice President Gore has a problem with the truth.
So we decided to perform our own assessment of Gore's veracity, and came up with a list of
lies.
New Lie!
FIRE
LIE
October 3, 2000; First presidential debate, Boston, Mass.
CLAIM:
I accompanied James Lee Witt down to Texas when those fires broke out [in Parker
County].
TRUTH: FEMA spokeswoman Mary Margaret Walker told NR: During
the fires in Parker County, Texas, the vice president participated in a roundtable about
the fires with FEMA's regional director. . . . He was not with Mr. Witt at that
time. Gore admitted as much on ABC's Good Morning America: I've made so
many trips with James Lee to these disaster sites. I was there in Texas, in Houston, with
the head of the Texas emergency management folks and with the federal emergency management
folks. If James Lee was there before or after, then, you know, I got that wrong
then.
by John J. Miller & Kathryn
Jean Lopez
THE GIRL WITHOUT
A SEAT
October 3,
2000; First presidential debate, Boston, Mass.
CLAIM:
I'd like to tell you a quick story. I got a letter today, as I left Sarasota,
Florida. I'm here with a group of 13 people from around the country who helped me prepare
and we had a great time. But two days ago we ate lunch at a restaurant and the guy who
served us lunch sent got me a letter today. His name is Randy Ellis, he has a
15-year-old daughter named Kailey, who's in Sarasota High School. Her science class was
supposed to be for 24 students. She is the 36th student in that classroom, sent me a
picture of her in the classroom. They can't squeeze another desk in for her, so she has to
stand during class.
October 4, A.M. Tampa Bay, 970AM WFLA
TRUTH: Dan Kennedy, principal of Sarasota High School: "I think the facts
that he was provided with were inaccurate because we don't really have any students standing in class, and we have more than enough desks for
all of our students. . . .[What Gore was referring to] was probably one of the first days of school when we were in a process
of leveling classes. [Kailey] did have an opportunity to use a lab stool, which was also
available in the classroom. But we were refurbishing that classroom, and in the back of
that picture, if you look carefully, you can see probably about $100,000 worth of new lab
equipment that was waiting to be unpacked, which is one of the reasons the room looked as
crowded as it did. The teacher did not notify us that he needed another desk. Had we
known, we would have put one in there immediately.
by Kathryn Jean Lopez
BUSH'S
EXPERIENCE
October 3, 2000; First presidential
debate, Boston, Mass.
CLAIM: I have actually
not questioned Governor Bush's experience.
TRUTH: In an
interview printed by the New York Times on March 12, Gore said: You have to
wonder whether [Bush] has the experience to be president. I mean, you really have to
wonder. ... You have to wonder: Does Governor Bush have the experience to be president?
... Again you have to wonder: Does George Bush have the experience to be president?
by John J. Miller
SLICK GORE
Washington
Post, Sept. 24
CLAIM: At Sept.
22 press conference, Gore says, I've been a part of the discussions on the strategic
reserve since the days when it was first established.
TRUTH: President Ford
established the Strategic Petroleum Reserves when he signed the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act (EPCA) on December 22, 1975 two years before Al Gore became a
congressman.
OFF KEY
USA
Today, Sept. 19
CLAIM:
Addressing a Teamsters meeting, Gore spoke of lullabies from his youth and sang,
"Look for the union label."
TRUTH: The song was
written in 1975, when Gore was 27.
ARTHRITIS PAIN
Sept. 20,
2000; Associated Press
CLAIM: The vice
president told Florida senior citizens in an Aug. 28 speech that his mother-in-law pays
$108 a month for the same arthritis medicine he gives his dog for $37.80 a month.
TRUTH: The figures
he used were taken from a House Democratic study and did not reflect his family's own
costs. Moreover, the study's figures referred to wholesale prices, not prices paid by the
consumer.
DEBATING BUSH
July 16, 2000;
NBC'S Meet the Press
CLAIM: "I've accepted for two or three months now your invitation
to debate on this program," said Gore on NBC's Meet the Press. "How are
you going to persuade [Bush] to say yes, Tim?"
Tim Russert: "Well, maybe you're helping today."
Gore: "Well, do you think so? But what kind of approach can you get
Jack Welch involved?"
TRUTH: On the Today show on September 4, Gore refused to make
good on this pledge.
Matt Lauer: "I do want to remind you that back in July, you had already agreed
to the Meet the Press debate with Tim Russert."
Gore: "Sure."
Lauer: "Why now reject it?"
Gore: "I still agree to it. But first, let's do the commissioned
debates."
SOFT MONEY
March
15, 2000; CNN
CLAIM:
"What I did yesterday was to call on the Democratic National Committeeand
they'll comply with thisto not spend any of the so-called soft money on these issue
ads unless and until the Republican Party does."
TRUTH: "The Democratic National Committee announced a $25
million summer ad campaign, paid for with soft money. The Republicans, so far, have not
bought ads with soft money for Bush."
TEXAS GOVERNOR
May 2, 2000; Washington
Post
CLAIM: "You
know [Bush] has never put together a budget. The governor of Texas is by far the weakest
chief executive position in America and does not have the responsibility of forming or
presenting a budget. He's never done that."
TRUTH: Texas law defines the governor as "the chief budget officer of the
state" and orders him to distribute his budget to every member of the legislature.
And Bush, in fact, has formed and presented budgets as governor.
BUSH CRIME
RECORD
May 2, 2000;
Atlanta YWCA speech
CLAIM: "Under Bush, Texas' recidivism rate has increased by 25
percent."
TRUTH: Nobody knows what has happened to the recidivism rate under Bush because
those figures haven't been published, due to extensive lag times in reporting. The most
recent numbers are from 1994, according to the Texas Criminal Justice Policy Council.
BUSH DEBT PLAN
April 25, 2000;
Association for a Better New York speech
CLAIM: "He
provides for no reduction in the debt and no reduction in interest on the
debt."
TRUTH: By promising to reserve excess revenues generated by Social Security
payroll taxes for Social Security, Bush essentially promises to retire federal debt with
this money.
BUDGET SURPLUS
May 2, 2000; Washington
Post
CLAIM: Describing
the Clinton administration plan outlined in the 1999 State of the Union address to have
the federal government invest some of the budget surplus in the stock market: "We
didn't really propose it. We talked about the idea."
TRUTH: Page 37 of the Clinton administration budget submitted to Congress in
February: "The President also proposes to invest half of the transferred amounts in
corporate equities." From last year's budget: "The administration proposes
tapping the power of private financial markets to increase the resources to pay for future
Social Security benefits."
TOBACCO #1
March 1, 2000; San
Jose Mercury News
CLAIM: Its
not fair to say, Okay, after his sister died, he continued in the same relationship
with the tobacco industry. I did not. I did not. I began to confront them
forcefully. I dont see the inconsistency there.
TRUTH: The same month Gores sister died in 1984, he received a $1,000
speaking fee from U.S. Tobacco. The next year, he voted against cigarette and tobacco tax
increases three times and favored a bill allowing major cigarette makers to purchase
discounted tobacco. In the 1988 campaign, Gore bragged of his tobacco background: I
want you to know that with my own hands, all of my life, I put [tobacco] in the plant beds
and transferred it. Ive hoed it, Ive dug in it, Ive sprayed it,
Ive chopped it, Ive shredded it, spiked it, put it in the barn, and stripped
it and sold it (Newsday, 2-26-88).
TOBACCO #2
March 1, 2000; San
Jose Mercury News
CLAIM: My family had grown tobacco. It was never actually
grown on my farm, but it was on my fathers farm.
TRUTH: Gore had already admitted growing tobacco on his own farm: On my
farm, we stopped growing tobacco some time after Nancy died (Cox News Service,
4-26-99). Also, Gore received federal subsidies for growing tobacco on his farm (Wall
Street Journal, 8-10-95).
ABORTION #1
February 20,
2000; New York Times
CLAIM: Gore said he has always, always, always supported
Roe v. Wade.
TRUTH: In 1977, Rep. Gore voted for the Hyde Amendment, which says that abortion
takes the life of an unborn child who is a living human being, and that there
is no constitutional right to abortion. He cast many other votes favorable to the pro-life
cause and earned an 84 percent rating from the National Right to Life Committee.
CROWD ESTIMATE
February 4,
2000; New York Times
CLAIM: We had a huge event with 3,000 people at Ohio State
University.
TRUTH: Officials at that rally said the room where it had taken place did
not hold more than 1,200 people, and, given the area needed for the staging erected for
the occasion, they estimated the crowd at 500, reported the Times.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
PRIMARY
February 2,
2000; Good Morning America
CLAIM: We
won in every single demographic category in the New Hampshire primary.
TRUTH: Bill Bradley carried male voters and voters aged 18-29, according to exit
polls.
BRADLEY VOTING
RECORD
January 8,
2000; Democratic debate in Iowa
CLAIM: Why
did you [Bill Bradley] vote against the disaster relief for Chris Peterson when he and
thousands of other farmers here in Iowa needed it after those 93 floods?
TRUTH: Bradley voted for $4.8 billion in flood aid and opposed an amendment,
also opposed by the Clinton White House until the last minute, to add $900 million in
disaster compensation.
HUBERT HUMPHREY
December 27,
1999; Washington Post
CLAIM: Gore has
suggested that he contributed important lines to Hubert Humphreys acceptance speech
at the 1968 Democratic convention. Young Gore later often told the story . . . [A]s
[he] sat in the convention hall and looked up at Humphrey in the spotlight, he thought he
heard his own words coming back to him.
TRUTH: When Gores supposed conduit to Humphrey denied the influence, Gore
blamed his recollection on Faulty memory. Faulty memory.
RESIDENCE
December 23,
1999; ABCNews.com
CLAIM: I live on a farm today. I have my heart in my own
farm.
TRUTH: Gore lives in the vice-presidential mansion at the Naval Observatory in
Washington, D.C. After making this farm claim, Gore said: Yes, I live in Washington,
D.C., when Im working there!
INTERNET
PROTECTION
December 17,
1999; Democratic debate on Nightline
CLAIM: I helped to negotiate an agreement with the Internet
service providers to put a parent-protection page up and give parents the ability to click
on all the websites that their children have visited lately. Thatll put a lot of
bargaining leverage in the hands of parents.
TRUTH: Bartlett Cleland of the Internet Education Foundation, seven months
earlier: There was no Gore involvement. They hijacked this issue. He makes it sound
like he led the project. I cant imagine what he will invent tomorrow
(Washington Times, 5-6-99).
LOVE CANAL
December 1,
1999; Concord High School, Concord, N.H.
CLAIM: I
found a little place in upstate New York called Love Canal. I had the first hearing on
that issue.
TRUTH: In October 1978, Gore did hold congressional hearings on Love Canal
which he apparently found two months after President Carter declared it
a disaster area and the federal government offered to buy the homes.
HOME BUILDER
November 30,
1999; New England Business Council, Manchester, N.H.
CLAIM: I
was a home builder after I came back from Viet-nam. . . . I know a good bit about how to
make money that way. . . . To build this country is a great thing.
TRUTH: A Gore family corporation, Tanglewood Home builders, built nine houses
between 1969 and 1973 on property once owned by Gores father. I believe he [Al
Gore Jr.] came by a time or two, but not too often, Jewell Dillehay, the contractor
for the development, told the Orange County Register on February 20, 1988.
MCCAIN-FEINGOLD
CAMPAIGN-FINANCE BILL
November 24,
1999; New York Times
CLAIM: Unlike Senator Bradley, I was a co-sponsor of it.
TRUTH: Gore and Russell Feingold never served together in the Senate. Gore later
admitted to the Times that his comment was a mistake . . . [W]hat I meant to say was
that I supported that.
EITC
November 1,
1999; Time interview
CLAIM: I was the author of that proposal [the Earned Income
Tax Credit]. I wrote that, so I say [to Bill Bradley], Welcome aboard. That is something
for which I have been the principal proponent for a long time.
TRUTH: The original EITC law was enacted in 1975. Gore entered Congress in 1977.
STIFF AND WOODEN
October 23,
1999; Associated Press
CLAIM: I never got that stiff-and-wooden rap in the House and
Senate. It has been as vice president.
TRUTH: Time, March 21, 1988: A joke among the press corps is, How do you
tell Al Gore from his Secret Service protection? Answer: Hes the stiff one.
VIETNAM SERVICE
October 15,
1999; Los Angeles Times
CLAIM: I
carried an M-16. . . . I pulled my turn on the perimeter at night and walked through the
elephant grass, and I was fired upon. In 1988, Gore told the Washington Post:
I was shot at. . . . I spent most of my time in the field.
TRUTH: Gore never faced direct enemy fire, although several times he may have
arrived on the scene shortly after fighting was completed.
TEST-BAN TREATY
October 14,
1999; Gore ad
CLAIM: I ask for your support, and your mandate if elected
president, to send this treaty back to the Senate with your demand that they ratify it.
Ive worked on this for 20 years because, unless we get this one right, nothing else
matters.
TRUTH: Gore indeed worked on this matter for many years, but often
in opposition to a test ban. During his presidential campaign in 1988, he criticized his
Democratic primary opponents for the very idea of having a complete ban on all
flight-testing of missiles when we rely on deterrence for the survival of our
civilization (Washington Post, 2-22-88).
INTERNET
March 9, 1999; CNN
interview
CLAIM: During
my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the
Internet.
TRUTH: The Internet is an outgrowth of a Pentagon program established
in 1969. In the 1980s, Gore supported legislation considered favorable to the
Internets development.
CENSUS
July 16, 1998;
NAACP annual convention
CLAIM: The
Republicans know theirs is the wrong agenda for African Americans. They dont even
want to count you in the census!
TRUTH: Most Republicans opposed the Clinton administrations plan to
conduct the census by statistically sampling the population rather than actually trying to
count everybody.
BUDDHIST TEMPLE
January 24,
1997; Today show
CLAIM: I
did not know that it was a fundraiser.
TRUTH: A DNC memo prepared for Gore made plain that the event at Hsi Lai Temple
in Hacienda Heights, Calif., was a fundraiser. A Secret Service document called it a
fundraiser, Gores staff described the event as a fundraiser to reporters, and DNC
chairman Don Fowler testified to the Senate that he knew there was a fundraising
aspect to this event. Six weeks before attending the event, Gore met with temple
master Hsing Yun at the White House with fundraisers Maria Hsia and John Huang. Later that
day, Gore sent an e-mail saying that he couldnt be in New York on April 28, 1996:
If we have already booked the fundraisers [in California], then we have to
decline.
ABORTION #2
January 22,
1997; NARAL meeting
CLAIM: I
reached out to individuals who are leaders on the [pro-life] side of this issue to
make common cause on reducing unwanted pregnancies. He went on to imply that
Catholic pro-lifers opposition to birth control made it impossible for both sides
join together to make abortions rare.
TRUTH: Despite many queries, no pro-life leader has ever said Gore approached
him on this subject.
PEACE CORPS
February 16,
1992; C-SPANs Booknotes
CLAIM: Gore said his sister was the very first volunteer for
the Peace Corps.
TRUTH: Nancy Gore Hunger was a paid employee at Peace Corps headquarters,
1961-64.
SUPERFUND
April 16, 1988;
Democratic debate in New York
CLAIM: I
have written the law, along with one other principal author of the Superfund law, and
amendments to the other major law in this area, which requires that companies improperly
disposing of hazardous waste must bear the financial consequences of cleaning it up.
TRUTH: Rep. Jim Florio, Democrat of New Jersey, wrote the first Superfund law in
1980. Gore was not a coauthor but merely one of 42 cosponsors in the House. Eight years
before claiming authorship and praising the Superfund law, Gore criticized it for being
far too small to make a reasonable start on correcting this enormous environmental
problem (Congressional Record, 5-16-80).
HOMETOWN
February 1988;
two ads
CLAIM: Im
Al Gore. I grew up on a farm, and growing up in Carthage, Tennessee, I learned
our bedrock values . . .
TRUTH: Gore, the son of a senator, grew up primarily at the Fairfax Hotel in
Washington, D.C., in a suite of rooms overlooking Embassy Row. He graduated from the ritzy
St. Albans National Cathedral School, also in the capital.
SCHOOL DAYS
1988 campaign
video
CLAIM: Narrator
calls him a brilliant student.
TRUTH: His grades were uneven, never approaching the plateau of As
and Bs that might be expected of one who possesses such a pedagogical
demeanor, reported the Washington Post (3-19-00).
MUSIC LYRICS
November 3,
1987; Variety
CLAIM: I was not in favor of the hearing on music
lyrics.
TRUTH: At the Senate Commerce Committee hearing on September 19, 1985, Gore
said: Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I would like to thank you and commend you
for calling this hearing. Because my wife has been heavily involved in the evolution of
this issue, I have gained quite a bit of familiarity with it, and I have really gained an
education in what is involved.
INVESTIGATIVE
REPORTER
September 27,
1987; Des Moines Register
CLAIM: Gore
claimed he got a bunch of people indicted and sent to jail as a reporter in
the 1970s.
TRUTH: Two city councilmen were indicted; one was acquitted and the other given
a suspended sentence. In an interview with the Memphis Commercial Appeal (10-3-87) a few
days later, Gore admitted to a careless statement that was unintentional.
FEMALE STAFFERS
August 22,
1987; Associated Press
CLAIM: Gore
said half his campaign staff were women, and he would make half of a Gore Cabinet
women.
TRUTH: But pressed by reporters later to name women on his staff, he
fumbled and then mentioned one name, which later turned out to be incorrect.
ARMS CONTROL
1984 Senate ad
CLAIM: Narrator says Gore wrote the bipartisan plan
on arms control that U.S. negotiators will take to the Russians.
TRUTH: Ken Adelman, director of U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency: He had nothing to do with what we proposed to the Soviets (Boston
Globe, 4-11-00). |