Al Gore chases Oscar nod, possible 2008 bid

The Associated Press notes that Al Gore is waging a fierce campaign for recognition and an Oscar statuette for his global warming documentary, while reviving talk that he’s pursuing a bigger prize: the presidency.

Suspicion is arising over his recent itinerary that is making him “high profile” such as making self-deprecating jokes on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” offering ideas on preserving the environment to Oprah Winfrey and her daytime audience (Oprah thanked him for being the country’s “Noah”) and batting questions on Iraq from Matt Lauer on the “Today” show.

Traveling the country to promote the DVD version of Inconvinient Truth — just in time for holiday gift-giving — Gore insists that he’s not planning a return to politics…

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“I am not planning to run for president again,” Gore said last week, arguing that his focus is raising public awareness about global warming and its dire effects. Then, he added: “I haven’t completely ruled it out.”

Those words make Gore the 800-pound non-candidate of the Democratic field. The possibility of another presidential bid delights many Democrats still steamed over the disputed 2000 election, in which they argue a few more votes, a state other than Florida and a different Supreme Court could have put Gore, not George W. Bush, in the White House.

New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is the front-runner, but a polarizing one for some Democrats. Illinois Sen. Barack Obama is the electrifying newcomer, but limited in his experience. Gore remains, for many party activists, the Democrat and popular vote-getter done wrong.

“He won the election in 2000 — he just lost the (electoral) count,” former Democratic National Committee Chairman Don Fowler said. “If I were he, I wouldn’t rule out a run. It’s an uncertain field, and he’s a person who is widely respected.”

In many respects, Gore is better positioned for a political comeback than in his previous bids.

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