Al Gore has made his sharpest attack yet on the George Bush presidency, describing the current US administration as ”a renegade band of right-wing extremists”.
In an interview with The Guardian on Wednesday, the former vice-president calls himself a ”recovering politician” but launches into the political fray more explicitly than he has previously done during his high-profile campaigning on the threat of global warming.
Denying that his politics have shifted to the left since he lost the court battle for the 2000 election, Gore says: ”If you have a renegade band of right-wing extremists who get hold of power, the whole thing goes to the right.”
But he claims he does not ”expect to be a candidate” for president again, while refusing explicitly to rule out another run. Asked if any event could change his mind, he says: ”Not that I can see.”
Gore, who appeared at the Guardian Hay literary festival over the bank holiday weekend, is promoting An Inconvenient Truth, a documentary and book detailing the climate-change crisis that he warns ”could literally end civilisation”.
The new levels of attention he is receiving have led some Democrats to call on him to run again for president, while others have responded with anger that Gore did not show the same level of passion in the 2000 campaign.
He has since acknowledged that he followed too closely the advice of his consultants during that campaign, and — before he started to scoff at the idea of running again — swore that if he ever did so, he would speak his mind.
In the years since, he has been a steady critic of specific Bush administration policies. He opposed the war on Iraq at a time when most prominent Democrats were supporting it, and more recently spoke out against what he called ”a gross and excessive power grab” by the administration over phone tapping.
In the interview Gore also distances himself from British Prime Minister Tony Blair on the subject of nuclear power, which the prime minister has insisted is ”back on the agenda with a vengeance”. Gore says he is ”sceptical about it playing a much larger role”, and that although it might have a part to play in Britain or China, it will not be ”a silver bullet” in the fight against global warming.
In the United States, Gore’s environmental campaign has sparked a backlash from some on the right who accuse him of scaremongering. A series of television advertisements, launched by a think tank called the Competitive Enterprise Institute, argues that carbon-dioxide emissions are a sign of American productivity and progress.
Gore’s true attitude towards a potential return to the White House — or, at least, a potential battle with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination — remains unknown.
At the weekend, Time magazine reported that he was telling key fund-raisers they should feel free to sign on with other potential candidates. The magazine quoted unnamed Democratic sources as saying that the former vice-president had also been asking the fund-raisers to ”tell everybody I’m not running”.
Gore would not find it difficult to raise millions of dollars, if he did decide to run. But while public denials might prove a wise campaign strategy — not least by prolonging the period of positive attention Gore is now receiving — actively turning away fund-raisers does suggest a firmer resolve not to re-enter electoral politics.
It is significant, however, that Gore refuses to go beyond saying that he has no ”plans” for such a campaign. ”I haven’t made a Shermanesque statement because it just seems odd to do so,” he has said — a reference to the famous announcement by the Civil War General William Sherman, who unequivocally refused to stand in the election of 1884. ”If nominated, I will not run; if elected, I will not serve,” Sherman said. — Guardian Unlimited Â