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- <text id=93TT2554>
- <title>
- Jan. 03, 1994: The Man Behind The Harpoons
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 03, 1994 Men of The Year:The Peacemakers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 67
- The Man Behind The Harpoons
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> When Arkansas state troopers Larry Patterson and Roger Perry
- met with reporters last week, standing beside them as media
- liaison and anecdote prodder was a Little Rock lawyer whom friends
- of Bill Clinton have taken to calling "Ahab." It is a befitting
- moniker: from the moment he began telling journalists last year
- that Clinton was lying about the draft, Cliff Jackson has been
- out to harpoon the President. The question is why.
- </p>
- <p> Surprisingly, the two have much in common. Both were overachievers
- who grew up in small Arkansas towns; both won scholarships to
- Oxford; they even served as co-captains on the same basketball
- team. Yet despite their similarities, Jackson and Clinton never
- became close: although Clinton today is said to remember Jackson
- as "a nice guy," a member of the President's Oxford coterie
- says Jackson was "not even in the third circle of Clinton's
- friends." While Jackson insists, "I have no personal vendetta
- against Bill Clinton," one of his friends says Clinton saw Jackson
- as a bumpkin and treated him badly. Whether the slights were
- real or imagined, Jackson, he says, never forgot.
- </p>
- <p> When the two men returned home, Clinton began his rise to the
- top of Arkansas politics, while a flatter trajectory took Jackson
- into private law practice. He developed a flair for grandstanding;
- in 1986, for example, he filed a $2 million suit on behalf of
- a woman who said she had purchased a "maggoty" Hershey's Kiss.
- Jackson wrote his brief in rhyme, releasing to the press such
- lines as, "There, wiggling and squirming all over the place,/
- Were oodles of maggots flavoring the taste." In another incident,
- he staged a protest of a power company's rate hike by symbolically
- tossing electric bills down a toilet while flushing sounds played
- in the background. In February 1992, Jackson turned his guns
- on Clinton when he unveiled a letter offering proof that Clinton
- had received an induction notice for the draft. Over the next
- few months, he told anyone who would listen--including CNN'S
- Larry King--that Bill Clinton was not fit to be President.
- </p>
- <p> A conservative who is far enough to the right so that friends
- jokingly say he "could be a staff adviser to Rush Limbaugh,"
- Jackson has demonstrated an astute understanding of how the
- media works--and how it can be manipulated. That skill served
- him well two weeks ago, when he refused to allow Patterson and
- Perry to speak with the Associated Press after they had talked
- to the American Spectator and the Los Angeles Times. He told
- the A.P. that he "felt we needed the national TV hammer at this
- time." The hammer, it turned out, was CNN: on Sunday night last
- week the story was beamed worldwide, and by Wednesday morning
- it had made its way onto the front pages of the Washington Post
- and USA Today. Score another harpoon for Ahab.
- </p>
- <p> By Kevin Fedarko. Reported by Dan Goodgame/Washington and Suneel
- Ratan/Little Rock
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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