-Caveat Lector-

>[The World According to the DLC]
>
>The Associated Press                                            January
>24, 2001
>
>'New Democrats': Gore Lost By Not Being Republican Enough
>
>         by Will Lester
>
>Washington -- A group of moderate Democrats contends Al Gore's
>populist presidential campaign wasn't aimed at the suburban
>residents, moderates and upper middle class whites he needed to
>defeat George W. Bush.
>         The Democratic Leadership Council, "new Democrats" who
>helped propel Bill Clinton to power with a centrist appeal, have
>released an analysis that highlights several reasons it thinks Gore
>was unsuccessful against eventual winner Bush - most significantly
>his steady appeals to the working class.
>         Gore had the Green Party's Ralph Nader draining votes from
>him, rather than Ross Perot dampening support for the Republican
>candidate, a factor not emphasized by the group's leader Tuesday.
>         "Given the fundamentals, the good economy, the fact that crime
>and welfare were down, the vice president should have won by a
>comfortable margin," said Al From, founder and chief executive of
>the moderate Democratic group.
>         Gore aides said during the campaign that he was trying to blend
>the new Democrats' moderate message with an outreach to those
>who felt the new economy had left them behind. Gore campaign
>research suggested the populist message would hit home with the
>small group of undecideds the campaign was pursuing in the very
>close race. Officials in his transition office did not return calls.
>         Gore did well among groups he targeted with his pledge to "fight
>for working families," but he didn't do well enough among groups
>like suburbanites, moderates and the upper middle class, From
>said.
>         Many political observers predicted Gore would win with a
>healthy majority of the vote because of the strong economy and
>general approval of President Clinton's job performance. Gore and
>eventual winner George W. Bush ended in a virtual tie, with the
>election settled by less than 1,000 votes in Florida.
>         "Democrats need to have a broad coalition to win," From said.
>"We need to expand beyond our Democratic base."
>         The council released an analysis of election results and a
>survey by Democratic pollster Mark Penn to highlight the kind of
>course correction it feels is needed for Democrats to recapture the
>White House.
>         Penn's research suggested Gore won on individual issues, but
>President Bush won the campaign on broader themes like reducing
>the size of the government and changing the tone in Washington.
>Penn found that Gore's "old-style populism" prevented him from
>reaching key voters, especially in key border states and in his home
>state of Tennessee.
>         DLC founder From wrote in his analysis of the election that
>Democrats need to build a new majority, not rely on the Democratic
>coalitions from years past.
>         The Democratic coalition "must expand beyond our Democratic
>base ... and must include men as well as women, whites as well as
>African-Americans and Hispanics, suburbanites as well as city
>dwellers, moderates and even some conservatives as well as
>liberals."
>         Democrats should not obsess about the Gore campaign's loss
>but begin working toward elections in 2002 and 2004, From said.
>         Key to renewed success by the Democrats is recognizing the
>changes in the country and realizing that a populist campaign
>causes voters to view a candidate as liberal and identified with "big
>government," he said. The new economy is causing dramatic
>changes in the voting public, he said, blurring the sharp class
>differences of an earlier era.
>         "America is changing. It's becoming more affluent, more
>educated, more suburban, more wired, more moderate and more
>diverse," From said. "To put together a majority, you have to talk to
>the country as it is."
>         He noted that Gore has been a strong supporter of the council
>and had a role in developing the new Democrats' strategy.
>         "The vice president was one of the leaders in shaping policies
>for the new economy," From said. "Al Gore has terrific credentials
>for running a winning campaign. But in this campaign, he chose to
>run a more populist strategy that didn't take advantage of those
>credentials."
>___________________________________

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