JUDY WOODRUFF: But right now: Few people know
what it is like to deliver an acceptance speech
for a major party's nomination for president.
Al Gore is among them. And he also knows what
it's like to be nominated for vice president
as well. In a year where we might not know
the results on Election Day, he offers a unique
perspective.
Al Gore, thank you very much for joining us.
As I say, more than anybody else we can think
of, you know what Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
are feeling tonight.
What -- give us a sense of what that is.
AL GORE, Former Vice President of the United
States: Well, first of all, thank you so much
for having me on your show, Judy.
And I'm excited for Joe Biden tonight. It's
a very big night for him. I know he's going
to do great.
I have been really enjoying the convention.
And I know that Joe has probably been occupied
with all kinds of telephone calls and tasks
and finishing up his speech. And it's a busy
time, waiting for the big moment.
He's already had some big moments in this
convention. I think it's been a spectacular
convention. And I'm looking forward to all
of the events tonight.
JUDY WOODRUFF: And do you think the Joe Biden
you know -- you served with him, you know
him -- do you think that's coming across?
AL GORE: I think it is. Yes, I do.
I think that his life story has been displayed
in a very moving and emotional way. And those
of us who have worked with Joe for a long
time know that he, as many have said, is just
the most decent, nicest guy you could ever
want to work with or know or have as a friend.
And I think that's come across in the presentation
of him and his career and his life story.
JUDY WOODRUFF: You know something about tough
elections. And a number of Democrats, including
Joe Biden himself, are saying that they think
President Trump could actually try to steal
this election.
Do you think that's a fair charge?
AL GORE: Well, of course, you only have to
listen to Donald Trump's own words to worry
that he has some trickery in mind.
He has apparently -- the way I interpret it
is, he has been sowing the seeds of doubt.
I heard him say: We might not even know the
result on election night.
I thought to myself, well, now, wait a minute.
I believe that's happened before.
(LAUGHTER)
AL GORE: It was 36 days in the 2000 election
before the Supreme Court decision.
But we need to prepare to push away the doubts
that he has planted in advance. I think it
probably will be several days, at a minimum,
before we know who has really won.
And there may be a different result apparent
in the day-of tabulations than when all of
these absentee ballots and mail-in ballots
come in. So, we just have to be patient and
wait for them to count the votes. And that's
an experience that I have been through.
JUDY WOODRUFF: You surely have.
And speaking of that, do you have some guidance
for them? I mean, what if -- we know it's
possible to lose the electoral vote, but win
the popular vote, which is what you did.
AL GORE: Well, that has happened more than
once.
And I don't know of any advice I can give
on that. Just make sure, in advance of the
election, that all of the voters who have
Joe Biden in their mind and heart get out
to vote.
As Barack Obama said last night, make a plan
now. What is it, text join to 30330? Did I
get their commercial line in there accurately?
JUDY WOODRUFF: You did. I think you did.
AL GORE: I just think -- I also -- I was moved
emotionally after John Lewis' passing. And
you did such great coverage of that. You knew
him, coming from Atlanta and all.
But the last time that he crossed the Edmund
Pettus Bridge in his life, last March, I believe
it was, I saw him do an interview on television.
And he said, we have got to vote like we have
never voted before.
That's the message that this convention has
been putting out to people who don't want
another four years of constant chaos and turmoil
and the kind of things that Donald Trump does
all the time, every day. And I hope that that
message really hits home.
JUDY WOODRUFF: One of the issues that's very
important to you, Al Gore, is climate change.
AL GORE: Yes.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Is Joe Biden where you would
like for him to be on that issue?
AL GORE: In the main, yes. There are always
a few things that I would like to see go farther.
But, look, this is the strongest and best
climate platform that the Democratic Party
or any party in the United States has ever
had. Joe's position in the primaries was good,
but some of his opponents had positions that
were leaning a little bit farther forward.
And he has, since he got the nomination, reached
out and picked up many of the great ideas
that his opponents in the race for the nomination
had offered. And the net result is really
bold, net zero electricity production by 2035.
I could go through the list, net zero total
by 2050.
He personally reaffirmed eliminating -- his
intention to eliminate all subsidies for buying
fossil fuels -- for fossil fuels in our country,
all the charging stations. He -- retrofitting
buildings. And it's a great platform.
And he has come to be a very passionate advocate
on climate. And after he got the nomination,
in effect -- he got the nomination just now,
but when the winner was determined, I have
had several long conversations with him since
then. And, boy, he gets it. And he is really
determined to do what our country needs to
do on climate.
JUDY WOODRUFF: So, to sum up about that, what
difference does it make whether it's Joe Biden
or Donald Trump who wins in November on the
issue of climate?
AL GORE: Well, there could not possibly be
a starker difference. It's the difference
between night and day. It's the difference
between wrong and right.
Donald Trump, of course, wants to pull out
of the Paris agreement. He's called the climate
crisis a hoax at different times. He is doing
whatever the coal barons and the oil and gas
polluters want him to do, ironically, at a
time when some of the energy companies are
saying, wait a minute, we would like to start
moving toward reform.
And they have even opposed some of the proposals
that Trump has put in place. He eliminated
the rule requiring a cap on these methane
emissions, also called natural gas, but it's
a very potent greenhouse gas.
And I started to say I could give you other
examples. You could almost pick any topic
related to climate at random, and you would
find Donald Trump wrong and destructive, and
you would find Joe Biden leading in the right
direction. It really is crucially important.
And, by the way Judy, we have seen record
temperatures again this week...
JUDY WOODRUFF: Right.
AL GORE: ... this month, 100 degrees north
of the Arctic Circle, 130 in -- well, that's
Death Valley, but it's the -- possibly the
hottest temperature ever measured on Earth.
Look at all the fires in California, two big
storms heading toward the Gulf Coast and possibly
the Eastern Seaboard this week. And the list
goes on.
We have got to solve the climate crisis. And
we can do it, as Joe Biden has pointed out,
by creating millions of new jobs. The fastest-growing
job in the U.S. is solar installer. The second
fastest-growing job is wind turbine technician.
We can put people to work, reduce the pollution,
and get our country moving in the right direction,
while saving the future.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Al Gore, the former vice president
of the United States, making a passionate
case for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
Mr. Vice President, thank you very much for
joining us.
AL GORE: Always a pleasure, Judy, thank you.
