Updated with video (13:50 EDT).
Is "Early Show" anchor Harry Smith stumping for an Al Gore presidency? On the May 30 edition of the show, it appeared like he did as he tried to place a "Gore 2008" pin on the former vice president’s suit. Before a tee ball interview, Smith demonstrated his desire for a Gore presidency to co-anchor Hannah Storm.
Video (0:29): Real (798 kB) or Windows Media (906 kB), plus MP3 (130 kB)
HANNAH STORM: Good morning, everybody and welcome to "The Early Show." Julie is off this morning, and Harry is spending the day down in Washington. Good morning, Harry.
HARRY SMITH: Good morning Hannah. We're here to talk to Al Gore, author, environmentalist, Oscar winner, and if you believe him, former politician. His new book is called "The Assault on Reason." But some people think it's more of an assault on President Bush. We went to a lecture he did last night at George Washington University. 1,500 people packed into a 90-degree room. They stood in line forever to get a signed copy of his book. And they were handing out little buttons that look like this. [holding up "Gore 2008" pin] I wonder what that means? Can you see that?
STORM: [laughing] I guess you'll be asking him about that as well Harry, right?
SMITH: We might. That might come up. We'll see you in a little bit Hannah.
After several short news stories, the Gore/Smith love fest began with seven and a half minutes of soft questions. Harry Smith, who regularly grills Tony Snow, and offered a puffy interview of Al Gore several months before, asked such questions as "where’s the other party?" implying that the Democrats do not attack the administration enough.
Gore read through the usual left wing talking points such as U.S. troops "trapped in a civil war" in Iraq, implied Congress has been a rubber stamp for the administration, called for public financing of political campaigns, and of course, called reducing greenhouse emissions a "moral issue." As Gore ticked these off, Smith simply said "right" several times. Harry Smith set up the former vice president to speak out against Bush’s environmental policies.
"President Bush getting ready to go to Europe for the G-8. The folks in the European Union want to do emissions reductions. The president said yesterday we're not going to participate. Your reaction?"
At the end of the interview, Smith essentially begged Gore to run as he presented a "Gore 2008" pin.
SMITH: Yeah. If you were president, you would have probably signed on.
GORE: Yeah, yeah.
SMITH: Do you mind if I [holding up "Gore 2008" pin]
GORE: [Laughing] No, no.
SMITH: -- you don't want to -- they were handing these out at the lecture last night at George Washington University. Are you sure you--
GORE: Thank you. Thank you for coming to that, by the way.
SMITH: There you go. You can hold it.
[laughter]
GORE: I don't want to invite that kind of speculation, but thank you.
SMITH: Here, let's see what it looks like. [holding up pin to Gore's suit]
GORE: Yeah, okay.
SMITH: All right, all right. Save that in a freeze frame.
The entire transcript is below.
SMITH: Former Vice President Al Gore believes it is time to act to save American democracy. In his new book, "The Assault on Reason," he argues that the foundations of our republic are under threat by today's politics of fear as practiced by the Bush administration and Al Gore joins us this morning. Good morning, sir.
FORMER VICE PRESIDENT AL GORE: Good morning.
SMITH: I want to dive right into the book. There are so many sections that literally lift off the page. Here on page 181 you're talking about President Bush. "We are less safe because of his policy. He has created more anger and righteous indignation against us than any leader of our country. In all the years of our existence as a nation, he has exposed Americans abroad and Americans in every U.S. town and city to a greater danger of attack because of his arrogance and willfulness." That is -- those are damning, damning words.
GORE: I think they're accurate. And I think that the deeper problem is how we have, as Americans, allowed the implementation of policies that have led to 150,000 troops being trapped in a civil war, just to pick one example. There are many.
SMITH: The thing -- as I read this book -- because you talk about television. You talk about a disengaged electorate. And I kept thinking to myself as I read it where's the other party? Where is the other -- we, we do live in a two-party system. Where's, where's the other party?
GORE: Yeah, and I criticize both parties and the system as a whole. And I say in the book very clearly it's too simple and too partisan to simply place the blame on President Bush because we have a Congress and free speech and independent courts and checks and balances, free press. We are all responsible for the decisions we make. And, and if this administration persuades the Congress to vote in favor of invading a country that didn't attack us, it is important for us to look at the reasons why that was acceptable to the Congress. At the time of that vote, more than two-thirds of the American people had been given the impression and believed it, that Saddam Hussein was the man who attacked us on 9/11.
SMITH: Right.
GORE: That wasn't true. And the fact that, that case was made is bad, but what's much worse is that the immune system of democracy, our natural defenses against such gross errors, failed to work, and we have to address these underlining problems. Because whether it's the invasion of Iraq or the climate crisis or other crises --
SMITH: Right.
GORE: -- There are -- there's lots of evidence available ahead of time that should be used to show that we should make a different decision.
SMITH: You certainly -- the news media comes under assault in your book because we seem to be so obsessed with a lot of things that tend not to matter. But one of the things that occurred to me was if, if, if part of the problem is there's not enough of a free flow of information back and forth, which you also argue about, wouldn't a public television show, like a Jim Lehrer, for instance, wouldn't they have 25 million viewers every night as opposed to the several million that they have, because they do what we don't do every day?
GORE: No, I don't think so. The, the essential -- the element of television that I think has been troubling for democracy, now that it has become the most dominant medium by far, even with the rising importance of the internet, is that it's one way. And whether it's public television or commercial television or whatever --
SMITH: Right.
GORE: -- Or community access television. When it's one way --
SMITH: Radio -- radio is one way. If you look back --
GORE: It is --
SMITH: -- Some of the greatest presidents of, of our democracy -- or the republic happened during the age of radio. That was a one way.
GORE: The most popular radio format simulates two-way communication by having call-ins. But you're quite right, that radio preceded television as the first broadcast medium.
SMITH: Right.
GORE: And the first concerns among defenders of democracy arose with radio. And that's why the equal time provision and the fairness doctrine and the public interest standard were put in place here. Those protections were almost completely removed during President Reagan's term.
SMITH: You talk about this disengaged electorate. And one of the things that occurred to me is maybe people don't feel they have a stake. Maybe they don't participate. Maybe they don't listen or search out information they, they, they should because they don't feel they have a stake because, quite honestly if you go a block over onto K Street, that's really who runs the people over there [pointing to the Capitol]. If you're a lobbyist, you have a say. If you're not a lobbyist, how do you have a say in that though?
GORE: Yeah, and I think that's right. I think that's related to the fact that the American people don't feel as if they have a way to make their voices heard, to make their votes count. And for all the work on campaign finance reform -- and I've always supported it --
SMITH: Yeah.
GORE: I do think that it sometimes misses the, the elephant in the middle of the room, which is, that as long as politicians in both parties have to rely on huge sums of money to buy 30-second television commercials, which is the principal means of communication in our democracy between candidates and voters now --
SMITH: Right.
GORE: Then they're going to go to the people who reliably have that money year in and year out and the special interests dominate that group.
SMITH: And in the book, you advocate federal, federal funding for elections. Two quick subjects, very quickly: President Bush getting ready to go to Europe for the G-8. The folks in the European Union want to do emissions reductions. The president said yesterday we're not going to participate. Your reaction?
GORE: Well, I think that's an abdication of U.S. leadership in the world. We are the largest source of global warming pollution. We are the natural leader of the world. All of the other countries in the G-8 are unified in support of taking action to save the planet's environment for us as human beings.
SMITH: Right.
GORE: And, and President Bush is opposed to it and is blocking any progress. Look, Harry, we are putting 70 million tons of global warming pollution into the atmosphere today and every day. This is a moral issue. And the fact that our country is not providing leadership and, worse, is blocking progress, should be an issue that brings protesters out, that brings people to speak their minds, loudly and clearly and forcefully on this.
SMITH: Yeah. If you were president, you would have probably signed on.
GORE: Yeah, yeah.
SMITH: Do you mind if I [holding up "Gore 2008" pin]
GORE: [Laughing] No, no.
SMITH: -- you don't want to -- they were handing these out at the lecture last night at George Washington University. Are you sure you--
GORE: Thank you. Thank you for coming to that, by the way.
SMITH: There you go. You can hold it.
[laughter]
GORE: I don't want to invite that kind of speculation, but thank you.
SMITH: Here, let's see what it looks like. [holding up pin to Gore's suit]
GORE: Yeah, okay.
SMITH: All right, all right. Save that in a freeze frame.
GORE: Thank you for the interview.
SMITH: All right, thanks very much. Vice President Al Gore, we do appreciate it. You can read an excerpt from "The Assault on Reason" at our website at cbsnews.com.




















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Comments Policy
His bumper stickers...Yeah, l
May 30, 2007 - 10:36 ET by vrwc13His bumper stickers...
Yeah, logic, reason, facts play less of a role now in the way we make decisions in America. – Al Gore
We're here to talk to Al Gore
May 30, 2007 - 10:44 ET by NoMoreClintonsWe're here to talk to Al Gore, author, environmentalist, Oscar winner,
They forgot "inventor" . . . of the internet of course.
You can read an excerpt from
May 30, 2007 - 10:46 ET by NoMoreClintonsYou can read an excerpt from "The Assault on Reason" at our website at cbsnews.com.
I wonder if they would do the same for a book by a high profile Republican.
<spoken slowly and deliber
May 30, 2007 - 10:51 ET by mattm<spoken slowly and deliberately> Awl youuu'd hayave to do-oo-oo is lklisten eh-tyo Ayll's retarded-sowounding drawl to eh-realiaze thyat he eh-izz ridiculusly unqualifiyed...
very nice!
May 30, 2007 - 11:28 ET by Sick-n-Tiredvery nice!
Forest Gore
May 30, 2007 - 11:31 ET by Cool ArrowEeyuzz eeyut reyully lawk aw bawx of chawklits?
Gore lied. Nobody fried
Objective Journalism
May 30, 2007 - 11:04 ET by ChasvsYep, great objective piece don't you think?
No questions like, if you'd sign the Kyoto Accord now, why didn't you support it under Clinton? Or didn't you once call for the removal of Saddam Hussein? Or how about, "I bet the Republicans can't wait for you to announce. That would ensure a Republican win no matter who gets the nomination!"
Dam, just got to love those unbiased interviews this guy does!
Al Gore
May 30, 2007 - 12:16 ET by LilyPearlYes I wish he would get the nomimation. That would insure that we conservatives would come out in droves just to keep him from becoming President.
Oh was that an interview ?
May 30, 2007 - 21:15 ET by SportPoliticsOh was that an interview ?All I noticed is Harry "lifted that Bush" criticism right out of the book, agreed with it, then agreed with everything Gore said, then hoped for him to run, then wanted his own freeze frame shot with his button on Gore.
I guess you figured out a lot more than me. Oh , they made a cutesy joke beforehand, about the button and wether it would come up or not. LOL - TOTALLY SLANTED. Pre-planned.
Gore Interview
May 30, 2007 - 11:17 ET by merlin61First he invented the internet, now he invented global warming. He also didn't hear about snow falling all over
the world in MAY. If we are the greatest producers of
pollution PROVE IT!!! What about other countries like China, India, Europe? I have a neice who came home
from France from hair styling school who had a white
jacket. When she came home this jacket was totally
grey from all the pollution. That does not happen in
the United States. Lets make them Prove IT, like
the conversations from yesterday. Our new motto.
Thought the same thing - but
May 30, 2007 - 12:06 ET by FastEdThought the same thing - but the msm (Lsm) doesn't use the common sense way of thinking - they follow their cowardly agenda - if not spoken by a demolib, then it can't be true.
There is no sense in being stupid, if you can't prove it! - my dad V
algore's theme song!There is
May 30, 2007 - 11:47 ET by FastEdalgore's theme song!
There is no sense in being stupid, if you can't prove it! - my dad V
Algores Psalms
May 30, 2007 - 11:58 ET by Airforce_5_OAlgores Psalms
Al Gore is my Sheppard, I shall always want.
He makes me lay down in an Eco-friendly house.
He lead me beside higher waters because of Artic Melting
He owns my liberal soul.
He leadeth me in paths of unproven science to sell more movies and books for his names sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of his girth,
I will fear all conservative ideas; for he does too
His fairness doctrine and internet blogs, they comfort me
Thou preparest a table for the welfare by taking from the evil rich
Thou aniontest my head with an Inconvenient Truth; My liberal cup runneth over.
Surely carbon offsets and one sheet of tolet paper will follow me all the days of my life.
And I will dwell as a caveman for all the days of my life.
I hope that sums it up.
"Gore 2008" pin. Wa
May 30, 2007 - 12:46 ET by ThisnThat"Gore 2008" pin. Was Harry one of the media elite who refused to pin an American Flag on his lapel following 9/11 to show his "journalism independence"? I really can't recall -- but I also don't recall any journalist, while interviewing anyone, offering up an American Flag pin to anyone.
So how does the Gore 2008 pin fit in with "journalism independence", Harry? Do you see any contradiction? Any at all? Please log onto Newsbusters, Harry, and type in your reply. I'll be waiting. <chirp>
I remember when Bill Maher re
May 30, 2007 - 19:36 ET by stratmanI remember when Bill Maher recoiled in horror when Jay Leno tried to pin an American flag pin to his lapel.
Disgusting, arrogant, elitist, sycophant-seeking reprobate. Maher epitomizes the self-loathing and unabated indulgence that permeated Rome proximal to its downfall.
Wow....Can you say fast three
May 30, 2007 - 20:31 ET by Airforce_5_OWow....Can you say fast three times?
It was my first post in this
May 31, 2007 - 01:13 ET by stratmanIt was my first post in this forum and wanted to ease into the neighborhood.
I need to get warmed up a bit.
I sincerely hope that Gore do
May 30, 2007 - 14:51 ET by Gat New YorkI sincerely hope that Gore does decide to run for two reasons:
Run, Al, run!You won't thou
May 30, 2007 - 15:30 ET by Dave RRun, Al, run!
You won't though, as The Hildebeast has more testosterone than you do, not to mention the dirt we all know she has on you, too.
This republic will not survive the continued neglect of its people.-Neal Boortz
Oh good gawd the bias is so bad they don't care anymore
May 30, 2007 - 20:59 ET by SportPoliticsOh good gawd the bias is so bad they don't care anymore.
I guess they excuse themselves with their anti-Bush polls or their save the world AGW gorian spew, or whatever it is, they are right out there front and center...
Why don't you just do what Maher does and get down on your knees and BEG in front of everyone. You know you want to....
The sickest part of it all is Gore had to reject him. Harry, gosh you aren't a democrat are you ? I can't imagine anyone getting that idea. How angry are you that "Gore was President in 2000" even though he wasn't ?
I just wish the msm'ers would come out and admit it, it's so blatant anymore, they don't even have a pretend act lined up for the screen.
Gosh, you couldn't push the button on Al, but you got your perfectly fantasied screen capture for your home album of dreams huh, Harry, and we all know, because you made us so painfully aware.