Gore Picks Lieberman for VP

Lieberman, an Orthodox Jew, is the first Jewish VP candidate in American history

BY: Ron Fournier


WASHINGTON, August 7 (AP)--Al Gore has selected Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman to be his running mate, rounding out the Democratic ticket with the first Jewish vice presidential candidate in American history, and Lieberman has accepted.

Gore made the offer in a telephone call to Lieberman on Monday.

"It is a special honor to be asked to run for vice president with a man I deeply believe in, Al Gore, and who I think is ready to be a great president," Lieberman said.

Picking the moderate Democrat and self-styled moral crusader as his running mate signals an effort by Gore to win over independent and Republican voters and distance himself from President Clinton's controversies. Lieberman was the first prominent Democratic lawmaker to openly criticize the president's conduct with Monica Lewinsky. Polls show Republican George W. Bush benefiting from the so-called "Clinton fatigue."

Democratic sources said Gore made his decision after discussions late Sunday night and early Monday morning with top advisers, including former Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who headed the search process, brother-in-law Frank Hunger, wife Tipper, and campaign chairman Bill Daley.

The vice president and his running mate will appear together at a noontime rally Tuesday in Nashville.

Lieberman, 58, beat out five other finalists: Sens. Evan Bayh of Indiana, John Edwards of North Carolina, John Kerry of Massachusetts, House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt of Missouri, and New Hampshire Gov. Jeanne Shaheen.

Shaheen praised the selection as "an excellent choice." She said, "He's a man of strong character and principle, and he really understands the economy we're in."

The Gore campaign hoped Lieberman's selection would be a bold stroke heading into next week's Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. He trails rival Bush in polls after last week's GOP convention.

One Democratic ally said Gore was driven in part by a need to make a pre-convention splash, which Lieberman's religion provides. The source said the vice president has been disturbed by polls giving Bush a double-digit edge and he fears the election will slip away unless he uses this critical two-week period to gain significant ground, particularly among independents and women.

A Democratic centrist, Lieberman will amplify Gore support of fiscal discipline and middle-class tax cuts, the sources said. Gore considers his pick a respected voice of independence and integrity, and the sources drew a contrast with the GOP ticket's ties to special interests.

The sources said Lieberman satisfies Gore's criteria for vice president: He can assume the presidency at a moment's notice, Gore trusts him, and he shares Gore's commitment to fight for American families.

Gore will also contrast the tickets as New Guard vs. Old Guard politics, the sources said.

Some Republicans saw wisdom in the pick.

"I think it's a bold move,"' said GOP consultant Scott Reed, who ran Bob Dole's 1996 campaign against Clinton. "It's a nontraditional pick, and it shows that Gore is going to make the cut from Clinton and say that Clinton's actions the last few years have been unacceptable."

Gore's selection of an Orthodox Jew is a first.

Continued on page 2: »

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