There’s
an inconvenient political truth for Texas Governor Rick Perry: he was
his state’s 1988 campaign chairman for then U.S. Senator Al Gore’s first
run at the presidency.
The
way their partnership has dissolved and their paths diverged in the
past three decades speaks eloquently to the way American politics has
been reshaped. Gore has sailed left, while Perry’s political odyssey has
seen him tack in the other direction — and to the opposing party. The
two men opted for different paths across a dynamic, changing political
landscape, and while one man fell short of the White House, the other
now contemplates that prize. (See the top 10 debate flubs.)
The
tale begins in 1984, four years before Perry took the helm of Gore’s
Texas campaign, when Gore, then 36 and a congressional wunderkind from
Tennessee, followed in his father’s footsteps by winning a U.S. Senate
seat. That same year, Perry, who was 34 and from much humbler roots as
the son of a Texas Rolling Plains cotton farmer, won a seat in the Texas
house of representatives. Both young men were handsome sons of the
South and proudly touted their philosophical bearings in the regionally
dominant conservative wing of the Democratic Party.
In
1988, seizing on the opportunity afforded by a lineup of southern
primaries on Super Tuesday, Gore announced his bid for the Democratic
nomination for President. Ronald Reagan’s second term was drawing to a
close, and Republicans were set to nominate the next in line, then Vice
President George H.W. Bush. The Democratic field was wide open, with a
raft of candidates to the left of Gore, who was dubbed the “southern
centrist” by the press.
The
young Senator, described by the New York Times as “solidly built, dark
and indisputably handsome,” lined up a list of conservative Democratic
big-name supporters, including Senators Howard Heflin of Alabama, Terry
Sanford of North Carolina, Bennett Johnson of Louisiana and Sam Nunn of
Georgia and Governors Jim Hunt of North Carolina and Buddy Roemer of
Louisiana. (In 1991 Roemer, like Perry, left the Democratic Party for
the GOP; he is now also reportedly considering a Republican presidential
run.)
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