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- <text id=93TT0951>
- <link 93TO0132>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: His Seven Most Urgent Decisions
- </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 30
- His Seven Most Urgent Decisions
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The new President will run into policy quagmires in which almost
- every choice is a risky one, but he will have to act fast while
- he still has political momentum
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH - With reporting by Dan Goodgame, J.F.O.
- McAllister and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> During the campaign, Bill Clinton seemed to emit a five-
- or six-point plan every time he opened his mouth. As a
- vote-getting strategy, it worked: he convinced many people that
- he understood their concerns and had thought hard and developed
- specific ideas about what to do. But now he is bumping into the
- fact that some of his pledges were contradictory and others were
- easier to voice than fulfill. So he faces an unusual number of
- tough calls that are bound to disappoint some followers and make
- some enemies. Yet Clinton will have to move fast to begin
- enacting his policies before the momentum of his election begins
- to fade. And the choices he faces in doing so are far more
- complex than anything foreshadowed by campaign oratory. A
- partial rundown:
- </p>
- <p> THE ECONOMY
- </p>
- <p> Jobs and red ink: Which campaign promises to break?
- </p>
- <p> Clinton simply cannot fulfill his pledges to "grow the
- economy" through both short-term stimulus and long-term
- investment (read: spending) while cutting the deficit in half
- in four years--at least not while cutting middle-class taxes,
- avoiding a gasoline-tax boost and carrying out other ancillary
- pledges. His numbers have never added up. Yet Clinton cannot
- just ditch either growth or deficit reduction. Spurring the
- economy into faster job creation is the core promise that got
- him elected, but letting the deficit balloon further could
- eventually put a stop to that very growth.
- </p>
- <p> While backing away from a middle-class tax cut, Clinton is
- sticking to the idea of pumping an extra $20 billion in deficit
- spending into the economy this year--down from a $50 billion
- stimulus that was under serious discussion in mid-December--through investment tax credits and public-works spending.
- Deficit hawks wanted no quick stimulus at all. Political
- considerations, however, are winning so far. Clinton feels a
- need to please some loyal constituents, chiefly organized labor
- and big-city mayors, and to create some happy winners from his
- economic policies before deficit reduction produces some angry
- losers.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, further, is sticking to his promise to pour an
- additional $220 billion into the economy over four years in
- spending for job training, education and infrastructure projects
- (roads, bridges, high-speed railroads, fiber-optic
- communications), which only makes it harder to attain his goal
- of cutting the fiscal 1997 deficit $145 billion below current
- projections (that would represent a 38%, rather than a 50%,
- cut). But if he is to retain any credibility, he must produce
- a concrete program for doing it, and soon.
- </p>
- <p> How? Clinton's people are studying all manner of nasty
- moves they had hoped to avoid: raising gasoline taxes; limiting
- mortgage-interest deductions, perhaps to $20,000 a year; further
- restricting itemized deductions for upper-income taxpayers;
- taxing more of the Social Security benefits of high-income
- pensioners. Any one of these would enrage politically powerful
- groups, but efforts to ease the pain--rebating gasoline taxes
- to lower- and middle-income people, for example--would soften
- any bite taken out of the deficit. "We aren't close [to
- agreement] yet," says an adviser. "Will we be there in three
- weeks? Maybe."
- </p>
- <p> HEALTH CARE
- </p>
- <p> How to cover everybody while holding down costs?
- </p>
- <p> If economic growth was vote-winning promise No. 1,
- health-care reform was No. 2. A compassionate government, says
- Clinton, must extend care to the 37 million people in the U.S.
- who have no medical insurance. And a government out to cut the
- deficit must slow the rocketing rise in medical bills. Needless
- to say, the two goals are extremely difficult to combine.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's aides have pretty well decided on the general
- approach: managed competition. The government would encourage
- (or force) health-care providers--doctors, hospitals and
- insurance companies--to vie for customers by offering
- competing packages of services and premiums. But economic
- advisers want to phase in universal coverage slowly to hold down
- costs. Others insist that benefits must reach many people fast.
- Object: to set up a political counterpressure against attempts
- to overturn the plan by people who lose out--for example,
- those who would have to pay a new tax on medical benefits
- provided by employers.
- </p>
- <p> Another heated debate rages around the idea of a "global
- budget"--that is, a fixed ceiling on annual health-care
- expenditures. Won't work, say opponents: price controls would
- distort competition, even managed competition. Advocates reply
- that without a ceiling, any health-care plan would hand over to
- doctors, hospitals and insurers the keys to the federal
- Treasury.
- </p>
- <p> BOSNIA
- </p>
- <p> When should the U.S. use military force overseas--and
- how much force, and to what ends?
- </p>
- <p> Those are the overarching questions for American foreign
- policy in the post-cold war era. Secretary of State-designate
- Warren Christopher asserts that he "will not attempt to fit the
- foreign policy of the next four years into the straitjacket of
- some neatly tailored doctrine." Decisions will continue to be
- made case by case--and Bosnia is likely to be the first case.
- During the campaign, Clinton bashed Bush for not doing enough
- to stop Serbian aggression and "ethnic cleansing." But so far,
- he is contemplating nothing more than Bush eventually came
- around to: enforcing the no-fly zone over Bosnia and lifting the
- embargo on arms sales to Bosnia's Muslims. Moreover, Clinton
- aides talk of doing these things only in combination with
- European allies, which would be a recipe for inaction, since the
- allies are afraid. Clinton's people are also searching for
- "middle options" short of massive use of ground troops. But as
- Christopher has pointed out, if the U.S. were, say, to stage air
- strikes on Serbian artillery positions, that would raise "the
- question [of] what is the ultimate objective." Saving what is
- left of Bosnia? But what is left is not a viable country.
- Forcing the Serbs to make a compromise settlement? But what
- compromise is acceptable? And suppose air power cannot force
- such a settlement? Can the U.S. really walk away, and if not,
- how does intervention stop short of escalation into a new
- Vietnam?
- </p>
- <p> SOMALIA
- </p>
- <p> Now that we're in, how--and when--can we get out?
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's advisers are clear enough on what they want to
- do: Hand over the job of keeping order to a United Nations
- peacekeeping force--soon. But that force does not exist.
- Creating it will involve tough decisions, to be negotiated with
- U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, on size,
- composition and, above all, rules of engagement. As forerunners
- of more muscular U.N. forces of the future, the peacekeepers
- will have to be given more authority to shoot than past forces,
- which could only hunker down while violence raged around them.
- Other decisions to be made soon: what degree of order and
- disarmament the U.S.-led multinational troops will have to
- impose before passing the baton, and what residual U.S. presence
- might be required. The penalty for getting those decisions wrong
- would be severe: either a premature withdrawal, allowing Somalia
- to collapse back into starvation and anarchy, or a long American
- presence with no visible end date.
- </p>
- <p> MILITARY SPENDING
- </p>
- <p> How much can Clinton cut--and how hard will he tromp on
- Pentagon toes?
- </p>
- <p> The incoming President's pledge to slash $60 billion from
- George Bush's defense budget over five years, beginning with
- $5.7 billion in fiscal 1994, is central to his economic
- strategy. Yet Secretary of Defense-designate Les Aspin indicates
- that that might not be doable. One reason: Bush's spending plan
- might not have been enough to pay for all the weapons the
- Pentagon has contracted to buy. Aspin proposes to cut three Army
- divisions out of Bush's projected base force of 18, 110 ships
- from the projected Navy of 450, and five of a projected 43
- active-duty fighter wings.
- </p>
- <p> But if Bush's budget would not pay for Bush's force, $60
- billion less might not pay for the smaller Clinton force. To
- save as much as he wants, Clinton might have to force a Pentagon
- overhaul cutting out much duplication--consolidating
- air-combat missions now performed by different military
- services, for example, and assigning the primary responsibility
- for quick intervention in Third World fights to either the Army
- or the Marines, rather than maintaining divisions capable of the
- job in both services. But in a draft report, Joint Chiefs of
- Staff Chairman Colin Powell is believed to have rejected almost
- every such proposal. To change that would require an early
- presidential commitment to a bruising fight.
- </p>
- <p> TRADE
- </p>
- <p> How tough should Clinton get with U.S. partners?
- </p>
- <p> The President has two deadlines coming up on March 2. That
- is the expiration date for broad White House authority to
- negotiate agreements with Canada and Mexico and with the 107
- other members of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. The
- Bush Administration, Canada and Mexico have already signed a
- treaty setting up a North American Free Trade Association, but
- before pushing for ratification, Clinton has pledged to
- negotiate supplemental agreements with Mexico on labor and
- environmental issues and to guard against a sudden surge of
- imports into the U.S. from Mexico. Can he do so by March 2? If
- not, he could ask for and probably get an extension of
- negotiating authority--but that would risk losing so much
- momentum that opponents of the treaty might mobilize and prevent
- it from ever going into effect. The same is true in spades for
- the GATT talks, which already have dragged on for six years;
- many experts believe it is now or never. The fundamental problem
- is that freer trade will wipe out tens of thousands of jobs in
- noncompetitive U.S. industries like apparel and glassware--but
- pushing too hard to protect U.S. interests could torpedo
- agreements that would give a long-range boost to fully
- competitive industries.
- </p>
- <p> EXECUTIVE ORDERS
- </p>
- <p> How far should Clinton go in pleasing special interests?
- </p>
- <p> Aides have prepared a thick book of orders Clinton could
- put into effect with a stroke of the presidential pen. Some
- samples of their diversity: three would overturn bans on
- homosexuals in military service, discussion of abortion in
- federally aided family-planning clinics, and admission into the
- U.S. of foreigners with the AIDS virus; another would cut the
- size of the White House staff; still another would require
- federal vehicles to run on natural gas or other nongasoline
- fuels. But should Clinton start pouring them out right away or
- wait until he has drafted, say, a budget and a health-care plan?
- </p>
- <p> Arguments for quick issuance: they would get the Clinton
- presidency off to a fast start and please supporters whom
- Clinton will need for the bruising battles ahead on broader
- policy. Arguments against: a blizzard of such orders would
- convey an impression that Clinton is more intent on playing to
- special interests than on addressing the larger concerns of the
- people, and it would raise doubt about whether he really is a
- "new kind of Democrat." Some, notably the order on gays in the
- military, could ignite loud fights that would use up political
- capital the President should conserve for bigger battles.
- </p>
- <p> Formidable as it is, this list is not necessarily
- complete. The fall of Boris Yeltsin and the accession of a
- hard-line nationalist government in Russia, a new outbreak of
- racial rioting in the U.S.--any of a dozen unpredictable
- developments could suddenly sweep almost everything else off
- Clinton's agenda. But even if nothing of the sort happens,
- Clinton still faces monumental decisions. Welcome, Mr.
- President, to the White House--and the real world.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-