home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0109>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: Nothing But Blue Skies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 86
- Nothing But Blue Skies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A TIME/CNN poll shows Clinton in a comeback, but concerns about
- Whitewater linger on the horizon
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo
- </p>
- <p> Just six months ago, midway through his bumpy and very public
- schooling in how to head a nation, Bill Clinton qualified as
- the most unpopular first-year President since polling began
- in the 1930s. But by last week, as he marked his first anniversary
- in office and got down to work on his State of the Union address,
- his approval ratings had bounced back to the healthy levels
- of his giddy Inaugural season. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted
- last week by Yankelovich Partners, 54% of those surveyed said
- they approve of Clinton's presidential performance, while only
- 34% disapproved.
- </p>
- <p> The approval number is all the more impressive in that it follows
- upon a month of stories criticizing his personal life as Arkansas
- Governor. Clinton's popularity looks better still after his
- dismal 37% approval rating of June, around the time his public
- image was being defined by his failed job-stimulus package,
- two failures to appoint an Attorney General, the fight over
- gays in the military, an ill-advised shakeup at the White House
- travel office and a haircut by Christophe. Clinton's popular
- rebound suggests that even if there were times last year when
- he made Americans wince, a majority of them remain ready to
- credit his progress on things that matter to them, including
- the deficit and health care. "People think that the President
- is trying," says White House chief of staff Mack McLarty. "It's
- like a huge battleship on a river. We're beginning to turn it
- around."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's recent tour of Europe also helped him gain in the
- public view of his ability to handle foreign policy--57% say
- he is doing a good job, while 28% disagree, a near reversal
- of the numbers he got after the October debacle in Somalia.
- But the same poll shows that the future holds some problems.
- The President faces lingering doubts about his trustworthiness,
- which is probably attributable to the Clintons' handling so
- far of questions about their investment in a real estate partnership,
- Whitewater Development Corp. In the TIME/CNN poll, just 40%
- of those surveyed said Clinton was a leader they could trust,
- vs. 56% who agreed they had "doubts and reservations." In response
- to such concerns, last week Attorney General Janet Reno appointed
- Robert Fiske, a respected former U.S. Attorney, as special counsel
- to investigate the case.
- </p>
- <p> The President's rising approval rating is partly the reflected
- glow from an increasingly rosy economy. After what felt like
- an endless recession, Americans are gingerly re-examining the
- almost forgotten notion of good times ahead. Fifty-two percent
- of those in the TIME/CNN poll say things are going well in the
- U.S., up impressively from only 39% last October. Even if many
- Americans don't give all the credit to Clinton--47% say he's
- doing a good job of handling the economy, while 42% say no--a rising tide, as the economists say, lifts all boats. The ship
- of state is one of them.
- </p>
- <p> Another neat trick is that Clinton is succeeding as both an
- outsider and an insider in Washington. In the survey, 69% agreed
- that Clinton "cares about the average American," and 67% said
- he is "a different kind of Democrat." At the same time, 62%
- say he is "dealing effectively with Congress," suggesting they
- have confidence in his ability to play the legislative game.
- Asked which congressional initiative should have the top priority
- this year, the largest number of those surveyed, 34%, chose
- health care, a sentiment that could help the President push
- some version of his plan through Congress. (Fifty percent favor
- his health plan, up from 43% in October.)
- </p>
- <p> Democrats ought to be pleased by the news that with congressional
- elections coming up in November, the Republicans don't appear
- to have gained much advantage from any of Clinton's earlier
- problems. Asked which party could do a better job of handling
- the nation's problems, 40% said the Democrats, 30% the Republicans.
- (And 14% said phooey to both.) For the Democrats that number
- is about the same as it was two months before the 1992 election,
- but for the Republicans it's 5% lower.
- </p>
- <p> One certainty is that such numbers move on a daily basis. Clinton's
- improved grade for foreign policy rests partly upon a European
- trip marked by still-to-be-honored pledges by Ukraine to give
- up its nuclear weapons and by Boris Yeltsin to continue reform.
- A face-off with North Korea or a crack-up in Russia could renew
- doubts about his capabilities abroad.
- </p>
- <p> More serious still is a nagging suspicion that Whitewater might
- be a scandal in the making. In the TIME/CNN poll, 35% think
- the questions about the Clintons' connections to a failed Arkansas
- savings and loan are a very serious matter, vs. 53% who don't
- think so. And 44% think the Clintons are hiding something, in
- contrast to 38% who believe the public explanations so far.
- </p>
- <p> The White House finally took a step toward minimizing that problem
- last week when Janet Reno appointed Fiske as independent counsel.
- A Wall Street lawyer who was a federal prosecutor in New York
- City under Presidents Ford and Carter, he once convicted the
- "untouchable" drug dealer Leroy ("Nicky") Barnes. But he quickly
- ran into trouble last week with conservatives who raised questions
- about his payment of $14,000 in back taxes as part of a dispute
- about the value of 3,500 acres in New York State owned by 25
- people, including him, that were donated to a charitable organization.
- Another explanation for their unhappiness is that Fiske headed
- the American Bar Association screening committee for federal
- judges from 1984 to 1987, when it opposed some Reagan nominees.
- </p>
- <p> At the Justice Department last Wednesday, one day before his
- appointment was made public, Fiske wrote out a personal charter
- on a pad of yellow legal paper. He insisted that he would investigate
- "any individuals or entities" who had broken federal laws relating
- in any way to the President's or First Lady's dealings with
- Whitewater or Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan, the defunct
- S&L once headed by James McDougal, the Clintons' partner in
- Whitewater. Over the longer term that could mean trouble for
- the President, the First Lady or both. Over the shorter term
- Fiske can only help them by absorbing all questions about the
- matter into the black hole of a closed-door investigation.
- </p>
- <p> What Clinton's increasing popularity says for now is that Americans
- have seen the President's faults, they've seen his strengths,
- and they have arrived at a balanced, if qualified, approval.
- Clinton's attitude may be part of it. "I like the job," Clinton
- said on Larry King Live last week. "Everybody here gets up and
- goes to work every day and works like crazy and, I think, in
- a spirit of geniuine hopefulness." For the moment at least,
- it's rubbing off on the rest of the country.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-