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Al Gore Still Not Saying No

by @ 8:44 am on January 7, 2007.

Former Vice-President Al Gore is leaving the door open to a run for President in 2008:

Will he or won’t he?

As the Democratic field for 2008 takes shape, one big remaining question is whether former vice president Al Gore — winner of the popular vote in 2000, an almost-candidate in 2004 and now the public face of the movement to address global warming — will be in it.

Over the past six years, Gore has become a heroic figure for the party’s liberal left, thanks in large part to his early and steady opposition to the war in Iraq. And it’s not just liberals who have taken to Gore. “An Inconvenient Truth,” the film detailing Gore’s lonely quest to raise awareness of climate change, is one of the most successful documentaries of all time and, as important, has transformed Gore’s public image from cold to cool.

That renewed popularity has stoked speculation that Gore just may have another national race up his sleeve. “He’s the Rocky Balboa of 2008,” said Chris Lehane, a former Gore adviser.

But is Gore ready to enter the ring one more time? Don’t count on it, say his closest advisers. “There are no secret meetings going on to plan the Gore campaign,” said Carter Eskew, a longtime confidant of the former vice president.

But neither Eskew nor any of the small cadre of Gore’s closest advisers would entirely rule out such a bid, leaving the same small but substantial amount of wiggle room that Gore himself has left in his public pronouncements.

And there are small signs here and there that could be read as the stirrings of his renewed interest in a campaign. Early last month, Gore addressed more than three dozen labor leaders in Washington, a wide-ranging talk about the Democratic congressional gains and the media, said one attendee, who demanded anonymity. Asked about 2008, Gore said that he has taken a number of calls from people encouraging him to consider running but he “didn’t know whether he was going to or not,” the source said. “Everybody felt he left a small door open.”

Given his name recognition and probable ability to raise money quickly, Gore can afford to wait and see how the Democratic field plays itself out. If it looks like there might be an opportunity for him, look for him to announce he’s running.

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