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- <text id=92TT0173>
- <title>
- Jan. 27, 1992: Nipping at Clinton's Heels
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 27, 1992 Is Bill Clinton For Real?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- Nipping at Clinton's Heels
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Rival Democrats attack the Arkansas Governor--and backbite
- one another--as they jockey for position in the New Hampshire
- primary
- </p>
- <p>By Laurence I. Barrett/Manchester
- </p>
- <p> It was late in coming, but election-year madness has
- finally gripped New Hampshire. Candidates accost voters on
- frigid streets, knots of campaign workers wave placards in
- shopping malls, and a blizzard of campaign commercials blankets
- prime-time airwaves. But the familiar trappings disguise even
- more volatility than usual as the nation's first primary moves
- to its climax. Though Bill Clinton is the media-anointed front
- runner, easily two-thirds of the likely Democratic voters are
- in flux, and the fortunes of his four main rivals have been
- fluctuating erratically.
- </p>
- <p> Only now is the Democrats' Silly Putty politics beginning
- to assume some semblance of structure. Though Bob Kerrey, Paul
- Tsongas and Tom Harkin still strive to overtake Clinton in New
- Hampshire, each could survive to fight in later rounds by
- running a respectable second here. Jerry Brown, who started as
- the most prominent in a field of little-knowns, must fend off
- disaster in this contest or find a launching pad elsewhere. The
- strategies of Clinton's four main rivals:
- </p>
- <p>-- Brown as Ishmael.
- </p>
- <p> The former California Governor has three distinctions. He
- is the only one who has sought the nomination before. He bases
- his pitch exclusively on a crusade to purify the political
- process. And according to a poll published last week by the
- University of New Hampshire's Survey Center, only Brown has an
- overall negative rating among the state's voters. His constant
- attacks on his rivals as prisoners of the old politics make him
- seem like a single-issue Ishmael. Though his relatively high
- name recognition allows him to score well in national polls,
- that edge is absent in New Hampshire, where the other
- candidates are becoming known. His low-budget campaign appears
- to be getting nowhere in this state, so he is investing more of
- his time elsewhere.
- </p>
- <p>-- Harkin strikes again.
- </p>
- <p> Iowa Senator Tom Harkin staked out his turf early.
- Starting six months ago, he enlisted important allies in the
- labor movement and the state party leadership. He roused
- audiences with his muscular evocation of old-fashioned
- liberalism and scathing attacks on George Bush. Then he stalled.
- Observes Mark Mackenzie, president of the state AFL-CIO: "Harkin
- has had some trouble moving beyond his initial stump speech."
- </p>
- <p> Last week Harkin was desperately trying to pump juice into
- his campaign. Calling a press conference in 5 degrees weather
- at a sewer-construction site, he proclaimed himself "the only
- real Democrat in the race" and said his rivals were "all just
- shades of Republican policies." He accused "the Governor of
- Arkansas" of being too sympathetic to Japanese automobile
- imports. Belatedly he began running TV spots that ply the theme
- "I want to be known as the President that rebuilt America."
- Harkin thinks that as the only red-blooded liberal, he can eke
- out a plurality among traditional Democrats while his
- sound-alike rivals divide the rest. But this year even some
- labor chiefs and left-leaning activists yearn for a winner who
- can reach well beyond the New Deal heritage. So far, Harkin
- isn't even trying.
- </p>
- <p>-- Kerrey misfires and rearms.
- </p>
- <p> The Nebraska Senator started with enough emotional
- intensity and mystique to attract a following in New Hampshire
- that included many of Gary Hart's old supporters. But even some
- of his advisers now admit that Kerrey did not master his own
- message or achieve the discipline required for a national
- campaign. He relied too heavily on his biography (war hero,
- self-made businessman, ex-Governor) and on the appeal of his
- plan for a national health-care program.
- </p>
- <p> Having repeatedly called for "fundamental change" in
- government, he applied that principle to his organization last
- month by overhauling the staff. Then he proceeded to pick fights
- with Clinton, charging that his proposals are merely "a way to
- remake the programs of the 1960s" rather than a formula for
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Kerrey junked his TV commercials before they
- were shown and hired David Doak and Bob Shrum, a team of
- political-ad consultants known for their hard-hitting work.
- Though produced in a rush, their first two spots have drawn good
- reviews. Each carries the punch line "Fight Back America." One
- shows Kerrey in a hospital plugging his health program. The
- other poses him in a hockey rink, promising to defend America's
- net against unfair Japanese trade practices. Both convey a sense
- of determination that Kerrey hopes will convince voters that he,
- not Clinton, is the reliable agent of renewal. The remaining
- three debates will give him an opportunity to outshine the more
- cautious, stolid Arkansas Governor.
- </p>
- <p>-- Tsongas plays the enforcer.
- </p>
- <p> If class and intellect were the only criteria, the former
- Senator from Massachusetts would be cruising. Tsongas' platform
- is a trenchant 86-page guide to revival with two simple
- arguments: that sustained economic recovery demands fundamental
- changes in national policy, and that Democrats don't deserve to
- win unless they adopt a pro-business philosophy. Few New
- Hampshire voters have read his monograph, and fewer still agree
- with his dismissal of a middle-class tax cut as "Twinkie
- economics." On the basis of next-door familiarity and his
- reputation for integrity, Tsongas for a time held a lead over
- lesser-known rivals. As a campaign performer, the bland and
- somber Tsongas couldn't make the lead in a high school play. His
- demeanor, poor TV presence and dire admonitions make him this
- year's edition of Bruce Babbitt. With his early advantage
- fading, Tsongas remains the conscience and enforcer, trying to
- keep the field as honest as politics allows. Last week he
- blasted Kerrey's new TV ad on the trade issue as "economics by
- media consultants" because it "gives people every incentive not
- to understand that the threat is internal." He doesn't carp at
- Clinton much, partly because the two men agree on many issues.
- But in competitive terms, it serves Tsongas' interests to
- undermine Kerrey, who last week seemed his main rival for second
- place.
- </p>
- <p> New Hampshire voters have a history of demolishing
- conventional wisdom and learned analysis with election-day
- thunderbolts. Eight years ago this week, John Glenn appeared to
- be poised for a fine showing; his defeat forced him from the
- race. Others nurturing great expectations have suffered the same
- fate. But with "undecided" doing as well as any candidate in the
- latest reliable survey, all the contenders can still afford to
- dream.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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