
Associated Press Gore Decides To Drop Out of Race By David Espo WASHINGTON (AP) -- Al Gore decided Wednesday to
concede the country's overtime election, aides said,
clearing the way for George W. Bush to become 43rd
president and leader of a nation sharply divided along
political lines. The vice president acted after a split
Supreme Court ruled against recounts in contested
Florida.
Two senior advisers, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said Gore would officially drop out in a
nationally televised address Wednesday night. ''The race
is over,'' said one official after speaking with the
vice president. ''We're done.''
Gore made the decision 12 hours after the U.S.
Supreme Court, as divided as the nation, ruled 5-4
against his president's bid to recount thousands of
ballots in Florida. Gore had sought the recount in hopes
he could overturn Bush's 537-vote victory margin in the
state whose 25 electoral votes will settle the election.
''The vice president has directed the recount
committee to suspend activities,'' campaign chairman
William Daley said in a written statement that
effectively ended an unbearably close election 36
tumultuous days after the nation voted. Gore topped his
Republican rival by more than 300,000 votes out of 103
million ballots cast nationwide. But Florida's electoral
votes would give Bush a total of 271 electoral votes to
Gore's 267.
Bush was in Texas, savoring his hard-earned triumph
in private, as if to give Gore all the room he needed
for a graceful exit. The governor waved to reporters as
he strode into the Capitol in Austin at midmorning but
merely smiled in answer to questions about the
developments.
Republican running mate Dick Cheney was in
Washington, with meetings set with Republican GOP
leaders.
Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III,
speaking for the Republican camp, had said Tuesday night
that Bush and Cheney were ''very pleased and gratified''
by the court's ruling. That was an understatement of
historic proportions given the furor since Election Day
-- a saga of counts, recounts, lawsuits by the dozens
and two trips to the highest court in the land.
Bush's inauguration on Jan. 20 would give Republicans
greater control over the government than at any time
since Dwight Eisenhower sat in the White House. The GOP
retained control of the House in the November elections.
The Senate is split 50-50, but Cheney's election as vice
president will give the GOP at least nominal control
there, as well.
The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling triggered a
fast-paced series of events.
Members of Gore's own party urged him to concede the
race, but the vice president went to bed Tuesday night
without telling aides what he would do.
After meeting with his wife Tipper and several
advisers, Daley among them, Gore authorized the
statement on Wednesday saying he would not press the
recount any further for Florida's pivotal electoral
votes.
Aides said the vice president intended to telephone
Bush, probably before his address. Democratic aides were
talking with the TV networks about broadcast time.
A Gore confidant said the evening speech will make
clear that he has conceded to Bush and that the country
should unite behind the next president. Gore also will
explain why he fought for five weeks after the election,
returning to his theme that every vote should be
counted.
Though Gore has told advisers he considers the 5-4
ruling the act of a partisan high court, the confidant
said the vice president will not criticize the justices
in his speech.
In Tallahassee, the court ruling and the vice
president's decision seemed to render moot the action by
the Florida Legislature to appoint a slate of electors
loyal to Bush. The House approved the measure on
Tuesday, and the Senate had been on track to follow suit
on Wednesday. Leaders were meeting to discuss whether to
proceed.
Democratic leaders who had stood with Gore throughout
his recount fight made no attempt to prod him to the
exits. ''The Supreme Court has made its decision. We
support and respect Vice President Gore's right to
respond on his own time schedule. Until he does so, we
will have no comment,'' said the party's congressional
leaders, Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri and Sen. Tom
Daschle of South Dakota.
Not all Democrats were as sanguine.
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., urged Democrats to
abide by the Supreme Court decision, but said that
''with every bone in my body and every ounce of moral
strength in my soul'' he disagreed with the high court.
He called it ''a willing tool of the Bush campaign''
that ''orchestrated a questionable 'velvet legal
coup.'''
The Texan would become the first presidential
candidate since Benjamin Harrison 1888 to lose the
national popular vote but win the state electoral
contest and thus the White House.
The electoral vote split would be the closest
electoral since 1876, when Rutherford B. Hayes defeated
Samuel J. Tilden by one electoral vote.
Bush is set to complete the nation's second
father-son presidential team after John Adams
(1791-1801) and John Quincy Adams (1825-1829). He has
relied on his well-to-do family's connections, both to
raise money and build the foundations of a new
administration.
The high court's ruling Tuesday night fell like a
hammer on Gore's chances.
Within an hour, Ed Rendell, the general chairman of
the Democratic party, was on television declaring the
vice president ''should act now and concede.''
Gore's loyalists moved swiftly to undercut the
comment, but within 12 hours, the vice president himself
had come to the same conclusion.
His team was divided, with some advisers arguing
Wednesday morning that the Supreme Court had left a
window open to an appeal. These aides said it was up to
the Florida Supreme Court to determine whether Tuesday
was a flexible deadline for assigning state electors,
and they suggested the state court could order recounts
completed by Dec. 18, when the Electoral College meets.
A legal brief had been prepared making that case to
the Florida courts, but Gore ruled out using it.
In their extraordinary late night ruling on Tuesday,
the court agreed 7-2 to reverse the Florida Supreme
Court's weekend decision that ordered a statewide
recount of thousands of questionable ballots, finding
that such a recount would not provide equal protection
because standards for determining a voter's intent would
vary by county. A narrower 5-4 majority found there was
no constitutionally acceptable procedure by which a new
recount could occur before Tuesday's midnight deadline
for selection of presidential electors.
''Because it is evident that any recount seeking to
meet the Dec. 12 date will be unconstitutional ... we
reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court of Florida
ordering the recount to proceed.'' The Electoral college
will meet Dec. 18, and the electoral votes counted in a
joint session of Congress on Jan. 6.
In the majority were Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin
Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy and Clarence Thomas.
Dissenting were Justices John Paul Stevens, David H.
Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer.
In a forceful dissent, Stevens wrote: ''Although we
may never know with complete certainty the identity of
the winner of this year's presidential election, the
identity of the loser is perfectly clear. It is the
nation's confidence in the judge as an impartial
guardian of the law.''
Souter and Breyer agreed there were constitutional
problems with the recount ordered by the Florida court,
but did not rule out the possibility of the state court
being able to fix them if allowed to do so and thus did
not join the 5-4 majority.
Copyright © 2000 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
December 13, 2000
