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“The Clinton finale”

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Workers put the finishing touches on the stage in the Staple Center as the spotlights are tested Sunday, Aug. 13, 2000, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)

August 15, 2000 

  

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Boasting of prosperity and trying to erase the vestiges of scandal, Democrats geared up to open their national convention Monday with a farewell address by President Bill Clinton. The rest of the week belongs to nominee-to-be Al Gore.


Clinton says Gore would keep building prosperity for all Americans, and Republican nominee George W. Bush would not.


"If people know the difference in what's in our vision for the future and what we're going to build on and what they intend to dismantle, do you have any doubt what the decision will be?" he asked the Democratic National Committee on Sunday. "Of course you don't."


As more than 4,300 delegates gathered in Los Angeles for the Democratic National Convention, police, working 12-hour shifts, braced for the threat of heightened protests during the four days of the convention.


A first wave of demonstrators - some 3,500 of them - marched on the convention hall Sunday, shouting and chanting their way to the protest area outside the Staples Center. Ten-foot (three meter) chain-link fences walled them from the convention hall and legions of police, some of them in riot gear, kept them in the court-ordered protest zone.


Democratic presidential hopeful Vice President Al Gore talks with Kaitlin Stevens and her mother Kim during a tour of The Cleveland University Hospitals Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, Sunday, Aug. 13, 2000. Gore visited the hospital to participate in a health care forum. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)

Gore was slowly making his way to his convention city, stopping Monday at former President Harry Truman's hometown outside Kansas City to mark the 65th anniversary of the Social Security system and tout his own proposals to expand Medicare.


He was being joined there by running mate Joseph Lieberman.


The polls of voter preference rate Bush the leader 12 weeks before the Nov. 7 elections, by margins that ranged from 3 percentage points in one survey released Sunday to 16 in another. A CNN-USA Today-Gallup Poll gave Bush 55 percent, Gore 39. during the week between the Democratic and Republican national conventions. A Wall Street Journal-NBC poll showed 44 percent for Bush, 41 for Gore.


John Podesta, Clinton's chief of staff, said the president will do whatever Gore thinks would be helpful to his campaign. Podesta said in an AP interview that it is Clinton's "moment to get off the stage" and turn it over to his vice president.


That transition always is a challenge when the man who has been No. 2, Gore's role for eight years, is nominated to take over. Gore said in an AP interview in Cleveland that the process has evolved over the course of the final year. "It reaches its crescendo at the time of the convention and after the convention," he said.


Gore arrives Wednesday, the day the nomination he clinched more than five months ago will be made formal by convention vote.


He inherits the prospering economy, a plus, but also the possible liability of lingering weariness at the scandal and impeachment that embroiled Clinton in the Monica Lewinsky affair.


After the president stirred the subject with an emotional, personal confessional to a conference of clergymen last week, Bush made a campaign topic of it, challenging Gore to declare his differences with Clinton.


"I think that he is trying to make a campaign about something the American people don't want this campaign to be about," Gore said. The vice president said he has served "according to the highest values, and I will continue to do that."


Lieberman was the first Senate Democrat to publicly rebuke Clinton, in September 1998, in a speech cited at each of his five television talk show stops Sunday. To the suggestion that his early rebuff would help the ticket, he said "well, if it does, fine.


"Because ... the Republicans seem to be campaigning mostly against a guy who is not on the ballot this year," Lieberman said on NBC, "not on his record, because the record is so great, but because of the personal mistakes that he made. And that's not fair to Al Gore."


When the vice president declared his candidacy, he said Clinton's conduct in the Lewinsky affair had been inexcusable, and that the president had lied to him as he had to everyone else. Clinton was said to have resented that.



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