2000 Bush VS. Gore

"Priority MD RNC"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Priority MD RNC," Bush, 2000

[TEXT: Drug Prices: Years]

FEMALE NARRATOR: Under Clinton/Gore, prescription drug prices have skyrocketed and nothing's been done.

[TEXT: THE BUSH PLAN]

FEMALE NARRATOR: George Bush has a plan. Add a prescription drug benefit to Medicare.

[TEXT: AFFORDABLE RX PLAN]

BUSH: Every senior will have access to prescription drug benefits.

FEMALE NARRATOR: And Al Gore, Gore opposed bipartisan reform.

[TEXT: OPPOSED BIPARTISAN REFORM]

FEMALE NARRATOR: He's pushing a big government plan that lets Washington bureaucrats interfere with what your doctors prescribe.

[TEXT: INTERFERE WITH DOCTORS]

FEMALE NARRATOR [and TEXT]: THE GORE PRESCRIPTION PLAN: BUREAUCRATS DECIDE.

FEMALE NARRATOR: The Bush Prescription Plan: Seniors Choose.

[TEXT: THE BUSH RX PLAN: SENIORS CHOOSE]

Credits

"Priority MD RNC," Republican National Committee, 2000

Maker: Cold Harbor Films

Original air date: 08/28/00

Video courtesy of the Republican National Committee.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/2000/priority-md-rnc (accessed July 8, 2025).

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2000 Bush Gore Results

Domestic concerns were at the heart of the 2000 presidential campaign as Vice President Al Gore and Texas Governor George W. Bush sparred over a relatively small group of key issues, including prescription drug plans for senior citizens, the future of Social Security, education, and the economy. Each side claimed that the other’s economic plan would result in increased deficits. Gore’s commercials claimed that Bush’s planned tax cuts were irresponsible, and Bush’s commercials claimed that a Gore administration would squander the budget surplus through big spending, bringing back the days of high deficits. With the economy in good shape, and with the public seemingly uninterested in foreign affairs, the election was a battle for the center. The commercials for both campaigns attempted to create warm images of their candidates with soft background music.

Conspicuously missing from the commercials was reference to the sex scandal and impeachment that marred the last two years of the Clinton presidency. The election was the closest in American history, determined by a margin of just 537 votes in Florida. A series of intense legal battles over the Florida recount was not resolved until a controversial 5-4 Supreme Court decision 36 days after the election.

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