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- <text id=92TT0170>
- <link 92TT1625>
- <link 92TT0891>
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- <title>
- Jan. 27, 1992: Is Bill Clinton for Real?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 27, 1992 Is Bill Clinton For Real?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 14
- COVER STORIES
- Is Bill Clinton For Real?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Anointed--prematurely--as the front runner, he remains an
- enigma: a bold planner but poor manager, a conciliator yet
- sometime waffler. Still, many Democrats believe he's electable,
- and that's what they want.
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/
- Manchester, Richard Woodbury and Michael Riley/Little Rock
- </p>
- <p> A few weeks ago most voters in the 49 states outside
- Arkansas had not even heard the name of Governor William
- Clinton. And those few political junkies who might recognize it
- would remember mainly one thing: his introduction of the newly
- nominated Michael Dukakis at the 1988 Democratic National
- Convention. Clinton's speech droned on through 33 minutes that
- seemed about five times as long; the cheers that erupted when
- he said "in conclusion" appeared to toll the knell of any hopes
- he might have had to succeed in national politics.
- </p>
- <p> Yet now, before a single caucus or primary ballot has been
- cast anywhere, the national press and television have anointed
- Bill Clinton as the front runner for the Democratic
- presidential nomination. Some pundits are speculating that he
- might even have the prize locked up in another eight or nine
- weeks. Their script: Clinton uses a victory or strong
- second-place finish in the New Hampshire primary Feb. 18 as a
- launching pad to wins in scattered primaries and caucuses from
- Arizona to Maine, and then storms the polls in 11 states, eight
- of them in his native South, that will vote on Super Tuesday,
- March 10. The next day the Arkansan will have the lion's share
- of the 1,400-odd delegates chosen by then--out of an eventual
- 4,282--and so much momentum that he can finish off any rivals
- who might survive that blitz in the Illinois primary on March
- 17. Going further still, many analysts believe Clinton is the
- Democrat most likely to beat George Bush in November--which,
- in a fine example of circular reasoning, is precisely why they
- say he has become the front runner.
- </p>
- <p> Well, now, wait just a minute. New Hampshire's
- cantankerous primary voters have a long history of giving a
- comeuppance to supposed front runners, from Harry Truman in 1952
- (who lost to Estes Kefauver there shortly before withdrawing
- from the race) to Robert Dole in 1988. Even now, though Clinton
- has rocketed from 5% in a November poll of New Hampshire
- Democrats taken by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center
- to 23% in a resurvey of the same voters two weeks ago, he still
- trails "undecided" (26%). Similarly, in a nationwide poll taken
- last week for TIME by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, "not sure" led
- with 24%; Clinton tied for second with ex-California Governor
- Jerry Brown at 22%. But Brown, who started out with far greater
- name recognition, has probably topped out, while Clinton is
- rising.
- </p>
- <p> From now on, most of Clinton's opponents can be expected
- to take dead aim at him, rather than scatter their fire against
- one another. And as he comes under close scrutiny for the first
- time outside Arkansas, Clinton may well be vulnerable on a
- variety of issues. One of them is his penchant for offering what
- sounds like detailed programs that on examination sometimes turn
- out to be distressingly vague. Nebraska Senator Robert Kerrey
- has already assailed the imprecision of Clinton's stand on
- health care, which is emerging as one of the hottest issues of
- the campaign. The Arkansan promises a plan that will combine
- insurance coverage of everyone with cost controls so stringent
- as to make the plan "revenue neutral": that is, it would require
- no additional tax money to finance. To some experts that
- combination sounds flatly impossible.
- </p>
- <p> Then there are the rumors about womanizing that have
- dogged Clinton for years and resurfaced in sensationalist
- tabloids last week. Clinton called the stories "lies" but, asked
- point-blank by a New Hampshire television interviewer last week,
- "Have you ever committed adultery?" he replied, "If I had, I
- wouldn't tell you." He admits that his 16-year marriage has gone
- through some troubled times but says it is now solid. Friends,
- and even some foes, note that no one has ever been able to pin
- down anything.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most distressing aspect of the Clinton boom is
- a suspicion that it is largely an artificial creation by the
- press. Journalistic pundits are constitutionally incapable of
- confessing that they have no idea what will happen in a
- presidential race; they are irresistibly driven to impose some
- sort of structure on the most shapeless contest. Last year many
- were looking for someone to cast as the principal rival to
- presumed front-runner Mario Cuomo. They came up with Clinton
- partly because he seemed the perfect foil to a Northern Big
- Government liberal: a Southerner who took many moderate stands--on education and welfare reform, for example--and talked
- constantly about the "responsibility" of people who receive
- government benefits to do something in return.
- </p>
- <p> Then, too, many journalists had repeated until it became
- conventional wisdom the idea that the Democrats have lost five
- of the past six presidential elections largely because they had
- become identified as a party of the poor, blacks, labor
- unionists, radical feminists and other special interests.
- Supposedly they could win again only if they chose a candidate
- moderate enough to win back middle-class voters, especially
- Southern whites. That idea was promoted most assiduously by the
- Democratic Leadership Council, a group headed in 1990-91 by none
- other than Bill Clinton. When Cuomo finally decided just before
- Christmas not to run, pundits of this school were pretty much
- stuck with hailing Clinton as the new front runner by default.
- Some who had complained endlessly about the interminable length
- of past campaigns are even beginning to grumble that this one
- may be over almost before it begins.
- </p>
- <p> But Clinton can not be dismissed as a mere creation of
- journalistic fashion. Many Democrats did not need the media to
- tell them that their standard-bearer should be someone who
- cannot be attacked as a McGovernite liberal. Reporters on the
- early campaign trail have been struck by the number of party
- activists who volunteer that this time around they are looking
- for "electability" far more than liberal purity in a nominee.
- Clinton got himself cast in that role largely because he could
- present solid credentials: as a canny politician who has run in
- 18 elections (counting primaries and runoffs) in the past 17
- years and lost only twice; as a Governor with a genuine, though
- far from unassailable, record of accomplishment; and as a
- candidate who says things the nation is not accustomed to
- hearing from Democrats--support of the death penalty, for
- instance.
- </p>
- <p> Like every politician who comes out of nowhere to hit the
- big time, Clinton remains something of an enigma, the more so
- since he often seems a bundle of contradictions: a visionary
- leader and a poor manager; a propounder of bold programs and a
- waffler who talks on both sides of hot issues. All of which
- raises the insistent question: Is Clinton for real--not only
- as front runner but as man, as Governor, as candidate? An
- attempt at some answers:
- </p>
- <p> THE MAN. Though Georgia Senator Sam Nunn, tongue in cheek,
- introduced Clinton at a meeting two years ago as "the only
- politician to be a rising star in three decades," he knew pain
- and adversity in childhood. His father, a heavy-equipment
- salesman, was killed in a freak road accident three months
- before Clinton--originally christened William J. Blythe IV--was born on Aug. 19, 1946, in the little southwestern Arkansas
- town of Hope. Five months later, his mother Virginia returned
- to nursing school in Shreveport, La., to get a degree in
- anesthesiology, leaving Bill with grandparents who ran a small
- grocery store. When Bill was four, she returned to Hope and
- married Roger Clinton, a Buick dealer who moved the family to
- Hot Springs. Bill's stepfather was an alcoholic who sometimes
- beat Virginia and once fired a gun at her in their living room
- (she insists to this day he intended only to frighten, not to
- injure, her). Virginia and Roger divorced but quickly remarried;
- as a gesture to help keep the family together, Bill, then 15,
- had his name legally changed to Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> The turmoil at home seems to have left two imprints on
- Clinton. One was a driving ambition to get out and make
- something of himself in the big world, initially by being the
- perfect student. As a high schooler, he was selected a senator
- in Boys Nation, an annual promotion by the American Legion in
- Washington, and he got to visit the White House and meet
- President Kennedy. He came home starry-eyed and fixed on
- politics as his career. He enrolled at Georgetown University
- largely to be near the Congress he hoped one day to enter. Then
- came Oxford, on a Rhodes scholarship, and Yale Law School, where
- he met the brightest woman in the class, Hillary Rodham--today
- a successful lawyer and a feminist who did not call herself Mrs.
- Clinton until her unwillingness to do so began to hurt her
- husband politically.
- </p>
- <p> Back home, Clinton lost a race for Congress but became
- state attorney general and in 1979, at 32, the youngest Governor
- in the country. Two years later, he was the youngest
- ex-Governor; he had impressed some of his constituents as an
- arrogant whiz kid who had surrounded himself with a bunch of
- outsiders who looked on Arkansans as barefoot hicks. In 1982 a
- chastened Clinton came back, apologizing to voters for
- developing a swelled head but vowing to reform; he has won every
- election since.
- </p>
- <p> The 1980 defeat also intensified a trait that is
- universally considered Clinton's greatest weakness. Even as a
- young teenager, he recalls, he often felt compelled to act as
- a peacemaker, trying to smooth over the violent quarrels at
- home. As a politician, he wants to be loved by everyone even
- more than most practitioners of his trade. Says Stephen Smith,
- a professor of communications at the University of Arkansas,
- Fayetteville, and onetime Clinton aide: "He would really like
- to get 100% in an election." Clinton makes such extreme efforts
- to conciliate opponents that Arkansans jest that the way to get
- something you want desperately is to become an enemy of the
- Governor's.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's compromising bent also makes him appear at times
- to take both sides of a controversial issue. To cite the most
- prominent current example, he claims to be the only Democratic
- candidate to have backed George Bush early and unreservedly on
- the gulf war. But on Jan. 15, 1991, the war deadline, the
- Arkansas Gazette quoted him as saying that he agreed with the
- majority of Democrats in Congress who voted against the use of
- force and for longer reliance on sanctions.
- </p>
- <p> Asked to explain, Clinton launches into a convoluted
- exposition: "The people who argued that sanctions should be
- given more time had some good arguments," but he thought and
- said it would be wrong to vote "to undermine the U.N.
- resolution" allowing the use of force; he did not trumpet that
- opinion because he was a Governor, not a member of Congress, and
- "I didn't want to give any extra grief to my two Senators and
- my Congressmen, who had a tough vote to cast"; looking back,
- though, it seems clear that "sanctions would not have worked to
- get Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait."
- </p>
- <p> Such performances lead opponents to call Clinton "Slick
- Willie." In the partisan opinion of Sheffield Nelson, who lost
- the 1990 gubernatorial race to Clinton, "He'll be what the
- people want him to be. He'll do or say what it will take to get
- elected." Supporters retort that Clinton has merely learned the
- arts of building coalitions and crafting compromises between
- opposing views, as a Governor--or President--must. True, but
- a President also should be tough enough to knock heads together
- on occasion, and Clinton has given little evidence of that
- ability.
- </p>
- <p> THE GOVERNOR. Clinton has shown a rare talent for sniffing
- out issues and acting on them at a state level before they
- become hot nationally. Early in his tenure, when some experts
- rated Arkansas' schools the worst in the nation, he pushed
- through a reform package combining increased spending with
- standards that all schools had to meet. Most famously, he
- instituted competency tests for teachers. The exams were not
- especially difficult; 93% of teachers passed the first time
- around and 97% passed the second time. But Clinton's supporters
- claim that many teachers were required to take new courses to
- improve their skills. In any case it is hard to argue with the
- results: the percentage of Arkansas high schoolers going on to
- college, which was only 39% a decade ago, has increased to
- almost 52%.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton also has made several reforms carrying out his
- "responsibility" theme: parents who do not attend parent-teacher
- meetings are fined $50 for each one missed, and students who
- drop out of school can have their drivers' license suspended
- (1,000 have been since 1989). Furthermore, the Governor has
- implemented a welfare-reform plan, requiring able-bodied
- recipients to undergo training or schooling, and imposing
- penalties if they do not. So far, the results are inconclusive,
- but critics say the plan has been sabotaged by the state's
- sluggish welfare bureaucracy.
- </p>
- <p> If true, that would point up what many critics, and some
- friends, consider Clinton's greatest executive weakness: he is
- a poor manager who conceives good programs but does not see that
- they are carried out. A lawsuit filed against the state and
- Clinton personally last July charges that the Arkansas
- child-welfare system is riddled with abuse and neglect; children
- placed in foster care have been mistreated, and some have even
- died. The problems have been festering for at least a decade,
- but Clinton paid scant attention. Last summer he appointed a
- task force (quintessential Clinton: his first response to almost
- any hot problem is to appoint a task force or study commission),
- and since then he has been working to repair the system. He
- hopes to reach a settlement before the suit comes to trial, now
- scheduled for March, and plans to call a special session of the
- legislature to enact reforms.
- </p>
- <p> Liberals contend that Clinton inherited a regressive tax
- structure (it presses harder on the poor than on the well-off)
- and made it more regressive by raising sales taxes while largely
- leaving alone income and business levies. Clinton replies,
- correctly, that the state constitution requires a nearly
- unobtainable 75% vote of the legislature to raise any tax other
- than the sales levy and, more dubiously, that he sought to
- change that and failed (critics say he did not make anywhere
- near the effort required). Characteristically, though, he adds,
- "What I've tried to do is to promote tax reform but also to give
- people what they wanted." Arkansas polls have consistently shown
- property taxes to be most unpopular, income taxes second, sales
- taxes the least hated.
- </p>
- <p> Overall, Arkansas remains a dirt-poor state, but during
- Clinton's tenure it has been rising, relative to the other 49,
- slowly but measurably in some rankings of well-being. In a 1991
- poll, the nation's Governors were asked which collegue they
- would rate the most effective; Clinton got more votes (39%) than
- anyone else. That, however, is not necessarily an omen of
- national success. Two years before the last presidential
- election, the same accolade went to Dukakis.
- </p>
- <p> THE CANDIDATE. Press puffery apart, Clinton has got off to
- an impressive start. He has improved immensely as an orator;
- his latest efforts have been smooth, colloquial and graced with a
- touch of self-deprecating humor. He has raised more money (close
- to $4 million) than any of his rivals, and on grounds of
- electability has won the sympathetic interest, if not outright
- backing, of teacher groups and labor unions that might
- ordinarily prefer a more liberal candidate.
- </p>
- <p> But how cogent is his program? His proposals are more
- detailed than usual for candidates at this stage and contain
- nothing that seems flagrantly silly. Most are at worst
- debatable, and they do hang together rather than contradict one
- another. Some specifics:
- </p>
- <p>-- Taxes. Like two of the other candidates, Clinton
- promises a middle-class tax cut, but he has at least thought it
- out. His idea: reduce the tax rates on income up to $82,150
- from 15% and 28% now to 13.5% and 26.5%; keep the present 31%
- rate on further income up to $200,000 but raise it to 38.5% on
- amounts above that. Supposedly these changes would collect the
- same amount of revenue as the present rates, but more
- equitably. Clinton also would allow entrepreneurs to exclude
- from tax 50% of their capital gains, but only on profits from
- money invested in new businesses and kept there for five years.
- He would grant tax credits on purchases of new plants and
- equipment, but only to small and medium-size businesses and only
- for purchases that exceed the average for the prior three years.
- The purpose is to spur new investment without giving a windfall
- to individuals and companies that cash in profits on investments
- made years ago or merely continue their existing level of buying
- plants and equipment.
- </p>
- <p>-- Recession. A nonpartisan criticism of Clinton's tax
- program is that it might help the economy in the long run but
- would do nothing to jolt it out of the present slump. To do
- that, the Governor proposes a variety of measures: speeded-up
- spending on highway construction, new regulations that would
- prevent banks from foreclosing on homeowners or business people
- who can at least keep up interest payments on their loans.
- Generally, these ideas seem helpful but insufficient.
- </p>
- <p>-- Defense. Clinton would chop $100 billion out of the
- military budget over the next five years, on top of the $100
- billion Bush already proposes to cut. Some suggestions: cancel
- the B-2 bomber and the SDI antimissile program, cut another two
- Army divisions and two aircraft-carrier battle groups, in
- addition to the reductions Bush has suggested.
- </p>
- <p>-- Social programs. A main element of Clinton's much
- touted "new covenant" between the Government and its citizens
- is his plan to ditch the $6 billion student-loan program and
- replace it with an $8 billion program that would extend funds
- to any student entering college--but require repayment, either
- through deductions from future earnings or by two years of
- low-paid community service as a police officer, child-care
- worker or the like.
- </p>
- <p> At times, the Governor is trying to find the middle ground
- on issues where none seems to exist. He has said abortion
- should be "safe, legal and rare"--a formulation likely to
- strike moralists on both sides as waffling pure and simple. On
- foreign policy, he takes an internationalist line, agreeing with
- Bush on some matters but flaying him on others, notably for
- continuing "to coddle China." On trade, he is generally
- antiprotectionist and favors a free-trade pact with Mexico. But
- he has said the U.S. should tell the Japanese that "if they
- don't play by our rules, we'll play by theirs."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has fed an almost palpable voter hunger for a new
- face and a new voice speaking neither liberal nor conservative
- orthodoxy. But that hunger can be dangerous. Suppose Clinton
- does sew up the nomination by mid-March and the Republicans
- discover a Willie Horton or Donna Rice in his background? They
- might choose to withhold the information until Clinton delivers
- his acceptance speech at the Democratic convention in July, when
- springing it would be most damaging. The grind of press
- conferences, debates, primaries, caucuses has often been
- vilified in the past as no test of anything about a candidate
- except his glibness and powers of endurance. But a mercifully
- shortened campaign season can and should fulfill a different
- function, subjecting an intriguing but largely ambiguous new
- face to a rigorous examination of his character,
- accomplishments, failures, ideas and ideals. Clinton should be
- put through a competency test tougher than any he imposed on
- Arkansas teachers. The nation will benefit whether he passes or
- flunks.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-