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- <text id=90TT3077>
- <link 93TG0135>
- <title>
- Nov. 19, 1990: The 1990 Elections:Nothing To Cheer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 19, 1990 The Untouchables
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 30
- COVER STORIES
- Nothing to Cheer
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The biggest casualty of the midterm election may be George Bush
- </p>
- <p>By STANLEY W. CLOUD--With reporting by Michael Duffy and Dan
- Goodgame/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The voting took place amid rumors of war and recession and
- was preceded by a budget spectacle in Washington that made many
- Americans wonder if their system of government was too sclerotic
- to survive. Various pundits thought they detected a budding
- anarchic streak in the voters, a sullen, throw-the-bums-out
- attitude toward all incumbents, good and bad, Democrats and
- Republicans. Some political analysts forecast a populist revolt
- and called for campaign reform and mandatory term limitations
- to help restore the public's flagging confidence. But for all
- the advance drama and disquiet, when the ballots were cast and
- counted, the country did not seem to have changed much.
- </p>
- <p> It might have been otherwise had President Bush not waited
- until after the election to announce that he was nearly doubling
- U.S. troop strength in the Persian Gulf. As it was, only a few
- sitting members of Congress were defeated, hardly enough to make
- more than a token difference in the composition of the Senate
- (where the Democrats picked up one seat) and the House (where
- they picked up eight). In fact, the most significant result
- involved a politician who wasn't even on the ballot. For if the
- election of 1990 changed nothing else, it undermined the
- perception that George Bush is all but immune to the normal
- vicissitudes of politics. Suddenly, and for the first time in
- his presidency, Bush seemed vulnerable.
- </p>
- <p> The weakening process began when Bush abandoned his "no new
- taxes" pledge and deprived Republican right-wingers of their
- favorite issue. Then Congress rejected the deficit-reduction
- package negotiated by White House aides and congressional
- leaders. After that, the President went from bad to worse as he
- alternately attacked the Democrats, tried to explain his
- domestic policies and confronted growing doubts about the U.S.
- deployment in the Persian Gulf. By the time he finally signed a
- budget deal last week, his performance ratings in the polls had
- dropped 20 points.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his parlous political condition, Bush continued to
- sound his uncertain trumpet on behalf of Republican candidates. A
- few gave a polite "thanks, but no thanks" to his offers of
- assistance, a sure sign of slippage. Vermont Representative
- Peter Smith even used a presidential appearance on his behalf to
- dissociate himself from Bush's policies. But most G.O.P.
- candidates stood dutifully beside their President, smiled and
- hoped for the best. None could accuse Bush of shirking. From May
- Day to Election Day, he made more than 100 stops for 63
- candidates and helped raise about $80 million in campaign funds.
- The results were unimpressive. Struggling to put the best face
- on the outcome, a rather sheepish Bush insisted, "I'm told we
- did a little better than the norm, but that doesn't make me
- happy."
- </p>
- <p> Presidents have historically been of minimal help to their
- party's candidates in off-year elections, which are nearly
- always dominated by local issues and local personalities. But
- few, if any, of Bush's predecessors worked harder to affect the
- outcome. Thus while he and his staff can legitimately take some
- credit for the G.O.P. victories, they will be unable to avoid
- some of the blame for the defeats. Even though the election
- hardly represented a Democratic landslide, the returns do not
- bode well for Bush. Says former Democratic National Committee
- Chairman Robert Strauss, who is by no means certain that his own
- party can regain the White House in 1992: "I think he's in deep
- trouble. You don't recover from the kind of wounds he's suffered
- in the past few months."
- </p>
- <p> To prove that assessment wrong, Bush and his lieutenants
- last week began developing new strategies aimed at assuring his
- re-election. "The next two years are going to have a different
- feel," predicts a top White House official."We now face higher
- stakes than we faced in the first two years. So we'll act
- accordingly." In other words, the "kinder, gentler" days are
- over. Henceforth the White House will begin stressing the old
- tried-and-true campaign issues: flag-waving patriotism and firm
- opposition to crime, drugs, hiring quotas and taxes. Bush gave a
- preview of what is to come two days after last week's election.
- "I'm girding my loins to go into battle to beat back the tax
- attempts that I think are coming," he said, "because I think the
- American people are fed up with that."
- </p>
- <p> One hallmark of the new, tougher Bush may be that he will
- begin reaching outside the White House for political advice from
- the team of savvy, experienced advisers that helped him win in
- 1988. Despite the respect and gratitude Bush feels for his
- combative and often insensitive chief of staff, John Sununu,
- Bush understands he will need the help of others in the
- politically difficult months ahead. Says one Bush intimate: "He
- has come to realize that Sununu is no good at message and
- strategy. Sununu plays to one of the President's worst
- tendencies, which is to think that if you concentrate on policy
- and do the right thing, virtue will be rewarded. Well, the press
- and the Democrats aren't going to see it that way." By the end
- of the year, White House sources predict, a Bush re-election
- committee will be formed, possibly under the leadership of
- Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher or businessman Fred Malek.
- As if to underscore how the election changed the President's
- outlook, Bush and Sununu late last week lunched at the White
- House with some of his old political allies, including former
- press secretary Peter Teeley and former chief of staff Craig
- Fuller. Afterward one participant claimed that Bush will "pay
- more attention to communication and politics."
- </p>
- <p> Essentially this means he will abandon most attempts at
- bipartisanship, except for his military buildup in the Persian
- Gulf. "This election," says far-right activist Richard Viguerie,
- "was a wake-up call for George Bush, the Wall Street wing of the
- Republican Party and the tax-and-spend Democrats." But a degree
- of bipartisanship is also necessary at home if the country is
- to deal with its many problems. Last week's elections
- demonstrated that all too many voters still believe the old
- fantasy of Reaganomics that taxes can be cut while government
- programs grow. Bush ran for the presidency on that very notion
- in 1988. When he agreed to higher taxes this year, he was
- implicitly admitting he'd been wrong. For this act of
- contrition, he has now paid a heavy political price. But the
- conclusion he seems to have drawn from the experience is
- precisely the wrong one. At this point, the U.S. does not need
- more 1988-style partisanship. It needs more leadership.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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