Posted on 06/19/2002 9:46:05 AM PDT by Jean S
The eleventh hour campaign revelation that then-GOP presidential candidate George W. Bush had been arrested in Maine in 1976 for driving under the influence of alcohol gave then-Vice President Al Gore the boost he needed to win the popular vote in the 2000 presidential election, Gore's former campaign spokesman Chris Lehane admitted late Tuesday.
"Obviously, I think it did have an impact on the election," Lehane told WABC Radio's John Batchelor and Paul Alexander.
"It was a very close election. All of our internal polls show that it was literally a dead heat," the former top Goreman added. "I think there was a small percentage but a critical percentage of people who were literally themselves up in the air until the last 24 hours."
Lehane continued:
"And when the DWI story broke, for a lot of people who were on the fence trying to figure out which way to go, that sort of pushed them to towards Gore. They had real reservations about Bush's judgment and whether he was up to the job."
Lehane's comments underscored the importance of the all but forgotten DWI story, which many suspected was a Democrat dirty trick designed to throw Bush off balance during the final days of the campaign.
Instead, "Beer-gate," as media dubbed the Bush DWI story, undoubtedly caused Bush's slim nationwide lead to evaporate overnight and precipitated the 37-day Florida recount fiasco that still has Democrats grousing Gore was robbed.
As NewsMax reported at the time, there was ample reason to believe that the "Beer-gate" bombshell was a strategically timed leak that had Gore campaign fingerprints all over it.
Clearly somebody was pushing very hard to get the 24-year-old DWI story on the big media's radar screen; a story which had already been passed up by the Associated Press and had received glancing coverage by PBS weeks earlier.
"There is something of a mystery that has unfolded since we broke the story," reported Fox News Channel's Carl Cameron just four days before the election.
"And that is that part of the arrest record and the state of Maine's documentation of George Bush's driving record and arrest record in Maine was faxed to news agencies all over the country after we were on the air with it at 6 o'clock Eastern time."
Cameron said he had no idea who was behind the Bush DWI blast fax, but former Wyoming Senator Alan Simpson didn't have any doubts.
"If anybody doesn't believe that this came right out of Gore headquarters, you ought to sprinkle some Peter Pan twinkle dust on them," he told CNBC's Chris Matthews.
Newsweek's Howard Finemen said Democrats appeared ready to pounce on the Bush DWI report, with a prepared strategy to revive allegations about his involvement in "other drug related incidents." (See: Bush DUI Info Blast-Faxed Around the Country; Dems Ready to Pounce)
The next day Tom Connolly, a Bush-hating Gore delegate from Maine, told reporters that he had tried to fax court records of the DWI arrest to Gore campaign headquarters a week earlier.
But he claimed he gave up after just one try because the line was busy.
Instead, Connolly said, he gave his DWI documentation to Fox News Portland Maine affiliate WPXT, where reporter Erin Fehlau broke the news locally.
There it remained until someone blast faxed the Bush court documents into every newsroom in America. (See: Beer-gate Alibi Unravels for Gore Dirty Trickster)
The question of who was behind the blast fax effort remains a mystery, but whoever it was succeeded in turning the 2000 election into a Constitutional crisis
Now that Chris Lehane has acknowledged that "Beer-gate" was key to Gore winning the popular vote, perhaps it's time for GOP to start crying, "We was robbed!"
And yes, you did MENTION Ann Coutler saying "So Bush had a DUI 24 years ago, stole a hotel wreath as a fraternity prank and got rowdy at a Yale-Princeton football game in college? Fine" but you didn't produce a SOURCE for that quote, now, did you, which puts us in the position of having to decide whether YOU are a credible source or not, and judging from your other posts on this forum, I'd say you're here with ill will in your heart.
And if that is, in fact, from Coulter, can you not READ??? College pranks? A wreath and a football game?
Do you possibly consider those ARRESTS that warrant the kind of distain you posted in your original reply?
Shall we take a look into YOUR past life, or are you yet another perfect conservative come along to pass judgment on your fellow Republicans?
Oh, don't forget to factor in the holier-than-thou conservatives who immediately decided Bush was the devil himself for that SIN. They didn't vote for him either.
Remember, the typical voter doesn't get very far past the headlines. The headlines were reading "Bush Arrested for DWI". Only if you took the time to read the story did you find out it was 30 years ago.
It was well known that Bush not only had a drinking problem, but that he was pretty wild (pary wise) earlier in his life. A DWI fit right in with that pattern. He had turned around his life and put all that behind him. The headline put doubts in some people's minds that he had really put all that behind him (because there was no time frame of when the DWI occurred in the headline.)
Had the Bush people put all that on the table early in the campaign, it would have been a non-issue.
And strangely enough, he is a little puke from Kennebunkport, Maine. Imagine that.
Oh Gawd, the hat, the hat, ...
I had managed to forget about that stupid damn hat.
Till now.
And in 1968, a DWI was NOT a serious charge.
And if it bothered you so much, you shouldn't have voted for him.
My recollection is that it had come out in a long form PBS interview that Bush had done months before. I agree it's important to get it out, but Rove didn't need to wave a flag about it.
It really points out the lazyness of political reporters that the facts had to be shoved under their noses before they jumped on it.
Seriously? A fairly serious crime?
Not at the time in America. In fact, in the sixties you could drive drunk in New England, race off a bridge, watch your date drown, and not do anything about it till the next day. Lie about it, get off scott free and go on to become a leader in the Senate.
Bush was actually stopped for driving to slow. Let's not ascribe today polital correctness to events that happened 30 years ago.
BTW, welcome to FreeRepublic. If you are going to throw firebombs, be prepared to source them.
I'll give you the same comment I used to get for sourcing 'The American Spectator' on Dem sights.
"You can't be serious, they are all known Bush haters."
Most people I know recognized it for what it was. I don't believe it had any significant effect.
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