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- <text id=93TT0950>
- <link 93TO0132>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: Ready Or Not
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 26
- Ready or Not
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Clinton takes office, a slow start and a string of broken
- promises signal a rough ride ahead
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> Since his election, Bill Clinton has more than
- demonstrated his brains, energy and rapid grasp of complex
- issues. He named his Cabinet by Christmas and kept his vow to
- bring diversity to top government posts. For two days in
- December, he conducted a tour de force over the economic
- landscape, dazzling TV viewers as he pitched and fielded
- questions on subjects ranging from capital formation to
- auto-emission controls. He even talked policy as he frolicked
- on the beach, giving some Americans an impression that they had
- elected a new-age Renaissance man who could juggle all sorts of
- modern challenges. In a TIME/CNN poll, 69% of those surveyed
- viewed Clinton as trustworthy enough to be President, up sharply
- from 49% in late October.
- </p>
- <p> It was inevitable that reality would catch up with his
- political promises, but in Clinton's case the reckoning crept
- up faster than he expected. As he came under fire for a
- remarkable string of discarded pledges last week, some
- weaknesses began to show. Democratic Party officials conceded
- that the transition had exposed traits that may hamper Clinton
- in the Oval Office. Although he is determined to master the
- details of policy, they said, he is often reluctant to confront
- politically difficult problems. His commitment to diversity is
- so complete that it frequently grinds his decision making to a
- halt. His greatest strength as a politician--his inclusiveness
- of people and ideas--hampers his ability to say no. "He's
- fairly slow, he's fairly indecisive, and he's easily
- sidetracked," said an adviser who nonetheless admires Clinton.
- "And the will to please is so prevalent that it is interfering
- with his effectiveness."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's desire to give no offense led him to make many
- of the campaign promises that now lie bent and broken on the
- floor. Some of the latest reversals were unavoidable: Clinton's
- campaign mathematics were untenable long before the Bush
- Administration revised its projections of future deficits.
- Budget Director Richard Dar man's estimate of deficits in excess
- of $300 billion through 1997 simply hastened the need for
- Clinton to curtail his plans and start spinning down
- expectations. In early January, aides began to back away from
- his improbable plans to provide tax relief to middle-class
- Americans, spend $20 billion on infrastructure this year, oppose
- a gasoline tax and still cut the deficit in half by 1996.
- Explained a top economic adviser: "You gotta let people know
- we're gonna do some tough things."
- </p>
- <p> The deficit dodge might have been acceptable by itself.
- But it was accompanied by a number of other retreats and
- conversions, which revived the lingering impression of Clinton
- as a "pander bear" who would say anything to get elected. His
- aides backed away from a promise to trim the White House staff
- 25%; plans to present an economic blueprint on Jan. 21 were
- postponed six weeks. After condemning as "callous" the Bush
- policy of turning back boatloads of Haitians, including those
- with valid asylum claims, Clinton had to reverse himself when
- he found out that as many as 10,000 Haitians were preparing to
- brave dangerous seas once he was sworn in. Last week he embraced
- the Bush policy, at least for the time being, and urged the
- would-be immigrants to stay home. The Coast Guard dispatched a
- special armada of 17 cutters and patrol boats to turn back
- anyone who ignored Clinton's plea.
- </p>
- <p> Asked last week if there were any campaign promises that
- he wouldn't break, a visibly annoyed Clinton snapped, "The
- American people would think I was foolish if I didn't respond
- to changing circumstances." Privately, Clinton's advisers
- cringed at the wreckage left behind by all the U-turns. "Our
- pants aren't even off yet," said a top adviser, "and the
- honeymoon is already over."
- </p>
- <p> Part of Clinton's problem may simply be that he talks too
- much, explains too much and makes too many excuses. He doesn't
- fully realize that, as President, his every word will receive
- microscopic attention--and will be compared with everything
- he said before. At a press conference last week, an angry
- Clinton twice denied to reporters that he had been asked in an
- interview with the New York Times a day earlier about
- normalizing relations with Iraq's Saddam Hussein. In fact,
- Clinton had been asked three times. Transition spokesman George
- Stephanopoulos had to issue a statement saying Clinton
- "inadvertently forgot that he'd been asked that specific
- question...He regrets denying that it was asked." The whole
- incident was silly--except as a reflection of Clinton's
- reluctance to exercise discipline over what he says.
- </p>
- <p> Some aides speak of sometimes having to interrupt Clinton
- in private meetings to bring what seem like endless discussions
- to a close. A participant in a recent strategy session noted
- that some of Clinton's economic advisers "come from a world
- where if you don't get to the bottom line fast, someone else
- will do it for you."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton recognizes his tendency to be methodical. He
- described his selection of top staff members as a "pretty tough
- slog," and admits things haven't gone as fast as he would like.
- Last week the staffing situation became so critical that
- Clinton asked Bush partisans for help; after requesting the
- resignations of all Bush Administration appointees, transition
- officials reversed their stand and indicated that they would
- prefer the Bush brigades to stay in place until they can be
- replaced "on a case-by-case basis." Too late, in many cases:
- Bush has already told hundreds of officials to leave office on
- Inauguration Day.
- </p>
- <p> The early confusion stems in part from Clinton's apparent
- belief that he can handle his new job much as he did his old
- one, as Governor of a small state. It was quite possible in
- Arkansas for Clinton and his wife to immerse themselves in the
- half a dozen major issues and stay in personal touch with the
- 500 or so people who mattered most. In Washington, far more than
- 500 people are registered to lobby Congress on health-care
- reform alone. Problems that might be undone in Little Rock with
- a couple of phone calls can turn into a two-day story in
- Washington. "It's hard to believe that he and Hillary think they
- can still do it by themselves, just like in Arkansas," said a
- Democratic adviser.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has nonetheless organized his White House so that
- all lines lead to his door. He has maintained a tight hold on
- all personnel decisions, discussing his choices only with his
- wife and the tiniest circle of old allies. His choice of the
- amiable Thomas ("Mack") McLarty as White House chief of staff--and the notable lack of a strong-armed Washington veteran
- elsewhere in the West Wing--suggests that he intends to
- continue making most of the decisions himself. Clinton admits
- his tendency toward micromanagement--"I lean toward getting
- into the details of it," he acknowledged last week--but added,
- "As I get more comfortable with it, I'll be able to delegate
- more and more."
- </p>
- <p> Several party veterans predict privately that the
- President-elect will need to be far more decisive for this
- Clintocentric system to work, and hint that he'll need to rely
- heavily on a White House staff to sort out the big decisions
- from the small ones. But last week many of the same officials
- questioned whether Clinton had chosen a staff of sufficient
- depth and heft to meet the challenge. Before Clinton tapped a
- conspicuously young White House staff, party elders tried in
- vain to bring in more seasoned Washington hands. "This whole
- thing has been structured as spokes of a wheel leading into the
- President," said a party official. "That's O.K. when you have
- a strong staff, like in the campaign, but this does not look
- like a strong staff."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton generated unusual internal resentment when he kept
- many of his most loyal aides in the dark about their jobs until
- late last week. Some longtime aides blamed transition aide
- Susan Thomases, a New York attorney and friend of Hillary's, for
- vetoing strong candidates and enacting a strict quota policy
- that tilted last-minute personnel choices toward women and
- minorities. But others said Thomases was simply acting as the
- Clintons' enforcer and was worried that after she returns to her
- New York law practice, the President-elect would lack "a bad
- cop" to execute painful decisions.
- </p>
- <p> Already, top Clinton team members expect that the role of
- enforcer may soon be played by Hillary Clinton. Last week the
- President-elect spoke almost wistfully of being unable to tear
- down walls in the West Wing so Hillary could have an office
- nearer to him. Several officials say they expect the First Lady
- to work out of a corner office on the second floor of the West
- Wing--about as far as you can get from the Oval Office and
- still be in the same building. But as an official put it,
- "Wherever she sits will be the chief of staff's office."
- </p>
- <p> White House veterans say Clinton must take steps early to
- prevent Hillary from being transformed into an unaccountable
- power center. "If Hillary is going to let herself be a visible
- yet undefined force in the West Wing," said a Bush
- Administration veteran, "then she is setting herself up to be
- Sununu-ized. Everybody who makes an appeal to Hillary and wins
- will leak it. And everybody who makes an appeal and loses will
- leak it too. Over time, that will be bad for Bill. They've got
- to define it so that everyone knows what her authority will be."
- </p>
- <p> One reason Clinton has been a successful politician is
- that he works hard for consensus. Once he makes a decision,
- aides say, he so thoroughly shops it around for reaction that
- it almost inevitably is revised in the process. That creates the
- impression that he is easily swayed. Clinton, for example,
- backed away from a strong candidate for chairman of the Council
- of Economic Advisers--World Bank chief economist Larry Summers--after Al Gore and other environmentalists objected to
- Summers' writings that seemed to favor dumping toxins in Third
- World countries.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton sometimes leaves the impression that no sale is
- ever final. A week before Clinton named Bruce Babbitt to be
- Interior Secretary, the Arizona Democrat was told by Clinton
- aides to prepare to become U.S. Trade Representative. Babbitt
- spent a week boning up on the subject, and flew to Little Rock
- on the eve of the announcement thinking he was joining the
- economic team. Later that night, he was told to switch gears.
- Cracked a Babbitt admirer: "He's the best-prepared Trade
- Representative that Interior has ever had."
- </p>
- <p> At other times, for all of Clinton's love of process and
- consensus, he has shown a tendency to depart from it on a whim.
- Attorney General-designate Zoe Baird told Clinton about her
- employment of illegal aliens as drivers and nannies last
- November, but she survived the transition's much vaunted vetting
- process anyway. Clinton turned to campaign chairman Mickey
- Kantor to be his Trade Representative even though the Los
- Angeles lawyer has no experience with the issue and must recuse
- himself from two upcoming rulings because the law firm in which
- he retains a financial interest represents NEC, a Japanese
- semiconductor company, and the automobile firm Suzuki.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has received high marks for naming nearly as many
- blacks and women as Wasp men to his Cabinet. But centrist
- Democrats have reason to doubt Clinton's commitment to political
- reform. Several of the "new Democrats" who helped generate the
- best ideas for Clinton's campaign, including Democratic
- Leadership Council luminaries David Osborne and Robert Shapiro,
- have not found places in the new regime. Said former drug czar
- and Education Secretary Bill Bennett: "We know now that `a place
- called Hope' seems to be a room full of lawyers." For all the
- ethnic and gender diversity of Clinton's Cabinet, 14 of its 18
- members are attorneys.
- </p>
- <p> Nor does Clinton seem eager to hurl spears at the
- Democratic special interests that have long held sway over party
- doctrine. When the Clintons decided to send their 13-year-old
- daughter Chelsea to a private school, they failed to accompany
- the announcement with any challenge to public schools or
- teachers' unions to make themselves more competitive. On the
- contrary: Clinton's designated Education Secretary vowed that
- the President-elect opposed a pilot program to extend to lower-
- and middle-income families the choice of private schools that
- the Clintons enjoy. "One is left wondering," said a Clinton
- adviser, "when and where the `change' is coming from."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's slowness in developing an economic plan has led
- to a confused political strategy. Because Clinton's team is
- still unsure what policy to pursue, the President-elect has sent
- out mixed signals to the public. In late November, Clinton
- played down reports of a resurgent economy on the eve of the
- holiday shopping season, apparently to preserve dissipating
- political momentum for a short-term spending program to
- stimulate the economy. When the deficit estimates mushroomed in
- early January, Clinton's aides said the stimulus might have to
- shrink, though the final amount seems very much in flux. "If we
- haven't figured out which combination of short-term and
- long-term economic proposals," said a planner, "then maybe we
- should just shut up."
- </p>
- <p> Doug Bailey, the publisher of the Political Hotline, noted
- last week that some of the momentum of Clinton's election has
- been lost in the mixed messages of the transition. "The
- economic summit was part and parcel of their goal to define the
- mandate of the election," Bailey said. "But if you ask voters
- now what is the mandate, people could only guess." In the wake
- of his broken pledges, Clinton made a point last week of
- repeating his top five priorities: increasing growth and
- investment, reducing the deficit, reforming health care,
- instituting national service and reforming campaign finance. "I
- think you can look forward to seeing major initiatives in those
- areas early," he said, "and real effort to pass them all."
- </p>
- <p> Early in the transition, Clinton often praised Ronald
- Reagan's take-charge first year, when Congress passed a
- revolutionary package of tax and spending cuts. With Clinton now
- enjoying high levels of public confidence, some advisers are
- urging him to follow Reagan's example and spend his political
- capital on cutting the deficit and fixing the health-care mess.
- </p>
- <p> If he does, notes a top Republican strategist who worked
- for both Reagan and Bush, his start-up problems won't matter.
- "What does matter is results," he said. "I believe that Clinton
- knows what he ought to do with the deficit and the economy. But
- I don't know if he has the political guts to do it. He will be
- smart if he does. And if he doesn't, it will eat him. We didn't
- have guts enough to solve it, and it ate President Bush."
- </p>
- <p> Eat or be eaten. Starting this week, that's Bill Clinton's
- challenge.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-