home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2349>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- The Political Interest, Page 29
- Moving Toward Gridlock II
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By MICHAEL KRAMER
- </p>
- <p> Bosnia, Somalia, Saddam Hussein--they'll all be Bill
- Clinton's problems next week. And they'll be the easy ones. Not
- even the thornier foreign issues that await the new President
- will nag as much as the nation's domestic economic troubles, the
- continuing crisis Bill Clinton has been elected to solve. As the
- deficit climbs, it is hard to know who is telling the truth, who
- should be blamed (if anyone), and harder still to get a fix on
- what exactly Clinton plans to do--largely because the
- President-elect is enjoying the honeymoon that all newly elected
- leaders receive.
- </p>
- <p> A political honeymoon is a period during which a
- politician can say and do the most outrageous things and get
- away with them. In most respects, Clinton has nothing on his
- predecessors in this regard. Backing off on his promise to cut
- the White House staff 25% (which he appears to be doing), or
- asserting his highest regard for Washington's public schools
- while enrolling his daughter in a private academy, is small-bore
- stuff--par for the course and unremarkable. But Clinton is
- breaking new ground when it comes to the deficit. The
- President-elect's insistence that the latest debt numbers are
- news to him--that he is a victim whose best intentions may
- fall before a new reality--is chutzpah writ large.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, Clinton has reveled in a gift few ever enjoy--the ability to be at the very center of the action while at the
- same time being above it, critiquing the problem without
- bearing any responsibility for it. That he has so far been able
- to straight-facedly blame George Bush for hiding the truth is
- a wonder to behold. For as TIME has previously reported, Clinton
- knew the numbers were getting worse long before the election--and knew as well that his campaign plan was fraught with faulty
- assumptions and overoptimistic revenue and spending projections.
- That was fine for then--no one caught on, and Clinton won--but it's about to be his deficit and his hard choices, and as
- one of Clinton's economic aides says with a laugh, "Seeing the
- road out is proving a bit difficult."
- </p>
- <p> Which is putting it mildly. Consider the role of Congress,
- the institution controlled by Democrats that is supposed to be
- an ally of a Democratic President, a confluence Clinton
- promised would end government gridlock. In speaking with
- Congress's Pooh-Bahs, the President-elect's people have heard
- the following advice, almost uniformly: Clinton must get the
- deficit down, and Congress is ready to help. O.K. so far. But
- don't you dare try raising taxes beyond the new levies on the
- rich that Clinton spoke about during the campaign. Oh? Well,
- then, which spending programs would Congress support cutting?
- "Boy, that's tough," said a senior Democratic Senator.
- </p>
- <p> Tough is only the half of it. In an exercise that took
- weeks, Clinton's team developed a list of 70-odd programs whose
- gutting would save about $30 billion a year--or, as one
- economic adviser says, "virtually nothing." What's worse, says
- this Clinton aide, "after going over the list with Congress's
- key players, it's obvious that cutting any of them even
- fractionally would require the expenditure of enormous political
- capital," a prescription for Gridlock II.
- </p>
- <p> It was this reality that confronted Clinton when he met
- with his economic advisers in Little Rock last Thursday. On the
- table at this point are the following proposals: Do move forward
- with a multiyear stimulus package in the range of $75 billion
- over four years. "It'll have minimal impact on the deficit and
- buy us some goodwill in Congress," says a Clinton aide. Don't
- squander political capital trying to gut small programs, except
- for a few to symbolically telegraph Clinton's seriousness. Do
- postpone a middle-class tax cut, and do tie the stimulus program
- to a long-term deficit-reduction regime that will involve major
- revenue raisers like a gasoline-tax hike and a swipe at the
- deductibility of employer-provided health-care benefits. "The
- revenue side is where we'll likely concentrate, because that's
- what we think will be easier for Congress to swallow," says a
- Clinton aide. "But even that will require the boss going to the
- mattresses."
- </p>
- <p> No decisions have been made, and the President-elect has
- sent his troops back to the drawing board with instructions to
- "make sure you work it out with Congress." Trouble is, concedes
- a Clinton aide, "Congress is part of the problem, not part of
- the solution, and the only victory we've had is getting the
- media to blame Bush for the red ink," which could have a
- perverse effect. To the extent Clinton perceives himself as
- unbound from his pledge to cut the deficit in half in four
- years, the discipline required to seriously tackle the debt
- could quickly erode. "Yep," admits a Clinton aide, "that's a
- real worry. All you can say now is that it looks as if it'll
- take at least 1,000 days to accomplish our 100-days agenda,
- which of course we don't yet even have." Or, as George Bush once
- said, "Nobody said it was going to be easy, and Nobody was
- right."
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-