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- <text id=93TT2394>
- <link 93TO0094>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: Thumbs Down
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 26
- Thumbs Down
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the Zoe Baird case, it was American public opinion that forced
- Clinton to deliver on his repeated promise of a higher moral
- standard in government
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS - With reporting by Ann Blackman and Michael
- Duffy/Washington and Priscilla Painton/New York
- </p>
- <p> There was something extraordinary about returning to the
- chambers of the Senate Judiciary Committee for another livid
- lesson in how America really lives. For the second time in less
- than two years, this time in the wake of a convulsive election,
- the American people took their leaders by surprise, sat them
- down, chewed them out, and then wearily explained in
- one-syllable words what voters feel they should be able to
- demand of the people with the privilege of borrowed power.
- </p>
- <p> It turned out that Bill Clinton had something to learn.
- For the first half of the week, as the new President prayed and
- played and paraded and swore his oath of office, his nomination
- of Zoe Baird as Attorney General seemed nearly as secure as
- those of the rest of his Cabinet, stars and hacks alike. She had
- freely admitted hiring undocumented workers, to both
- Administration officials and Senators who were questioning her,
- and they had generally brushed it off as "an honest mistake."
- But within 72 hours, her nomination was unsalvageable, and she
- became the first U.S. Cabinet nominee in 120 years to withdraw
- her name from consideration.
- </p>
- <p> In the middle of Baird's ordeal, Clinton awoke on a
- bright, glassy morning and embraced a quarter of a million
- people. He had promised upon his nomination that he stood for
- the people who paid their taxes and played by the rules, and he
- vowed upon his Inauguration "to reform our politics so that
- power and privilege no longer shout down the voice of the
- people." Before the day was over, it was the people who were
- shouting about something that outraged them, and by the end of
- the week the message finally got through.
- </p>
- <p> Americans for the most part are enormously forgiving of
- wealth, remarkably tolerant of the gap between the rich and the
- poor in this country. But they reserve a special contempt for
- rich people who cheat. Outside Washington, the Baird story came
- across as an issue of people who play by the rules vs. those who
- don't and get away with it. Baird's story of the difficulty of
- finding safe, reliable child care might have won her the
- sympathy of millions of parents who face the same predicament.
- But when a couple with a net worth of more than $2 million hire
- not only an undocumented nanny but a driver as well, when they
- fail to pay the Social Security and workers' compensation taxes
- they owe, when a topflight corporate lawyer married to a
- renowned Yale law professor blames their troubles on "bad legal
- advice," the sympathy hardens into fury. As consumer advocate
- Ralph Nader observed, "This was a family that could afford to
- hire Mary Poppins."
- </p>
- <p> The scene at the Senate played out like Kabuki theater.
- Here the ghost of Anita Hill welcomed two new committee
- members, Carol Moseley-Braun and Dianne Feinstein, who owed
- their election in some measure to her. Here sat some of the same
- members who had been lambasted for their handling of Hill, eager
- for the chance to display their elaborate courtesy and newfound
- sensitivity. Here was Hill's chief tormentor, Orrin Hatch,
- praising Baird's competence, her record as a corporate lawyer,
- knowing full well that for his conservative purposes Baird was
- the best candidate he could hope for, and if he saved her job
- she owed him.
- </p>
- <p> And here was the first woman ever nominated for the
- nation's top law-enforcement job being drawn and quartered for
- the decisions she made about her child's care. But as hot an
- issue as working motherhood may be, this was not about child
- care, not about motherhood, not really much of a gender battle
- at all, as the furious phone calls from men and women across the
- country attested. Though there was much comment over what looked
- like a convenient double standard--had a male nominee ever
- been asked about his child-care arrangements?--the gender
- issue was quickly neutralized when two respected women
- lawmakers, Senator Nancy Kassebaum and Representative Marge
- Roukema, along with former Representative Barbara Jordan, came
- out against the nomination. Rookie Democrats Moseley-Braun and
- Feinstein were in no way inclined to ride to Baird's rescue.
- Feinstein, from California, knows something about the
- exploitation of undocumented workers, and Braun, a black woman
- from Chicago, knows something about who loses the jobs that
- illegals take.
- </p>
- <p> Fifteen months ago in these chambers, Clarence Thomas
- tried to turn his confirmation into a race issue, to minimize
- the gender battle. Baird shrewdly cast her trouble in gender
- terms, thereby discounting the simple issue of hypocrisy. "Quite
- honestly, I was acting at that time really more as a mother than
- as someone who would be sitting here designated to be Attorney
- General." The implication was that if she had known that she
- might one day be called on to enforce these laws, she would
- never have broken them. This time around, the Judiciary
- Committee got the point.
- </p>
- <p> "Do you have any sense of the feelings of outrage," asked
- Judiciary Committee chairman Joseph Biden, "about the action
- taken by you and your husband? There are millions of Americans
- out there who have trouble taking care of their children, with
- one-fiftieth the income that you and your husband have, and they
- do not violate the law." In a moment of near moral unanimity,
- the hosts, pollsters and casual eavesdroppers all seemed to echo
- the anger. "This counted to people," says University of Southern
- California law professor Susan Estrich, who managed Michael
- Dukakis' presidential campaign in 1988 and now hosts a radio
- talk show. "It was an issue people could understand and get
- their hands on much more than who is funding which party."
- </p>
- <p> Feinstein's offices in Washington and San Francisco
- received more than 3,000 calls, 2,872 of them opposing Baird's
- confirmation. "We have people who can't put food on their
- tables, who commit crimes and get hammered," says David Tuma,
- a retired Navy officer and father of four from Port Hueneme,
- California. "Then you have a person who doesn't have to worry
- about that and makes an unethical choice, and we want to make
- them Attorney General. I can't put the two of those together
- very well."
- </p>
- <p> To be fair, the White House was not alone in
- underestimating the depth of feeling. For days the editorial
- writers and pundits tiptoed around the controversy. "Is this
- minor scandal troubling?" asked the Los Angeles Times. "Yes.
- Should it embarrass Clinton and the Bairds? Most certainly.
- Should it disqualify Baird from being Attorney General? We think
- not." But the people's press, especially the radio shows, came
- down very differently. "Talk shows were like town meetings,"
- says Estrich. "When an issue takes hold with the people, you
- don't need a formal political process for the country to reach
- a decision. They reached it on their own, without leadership
- from Washington, and communicated that decision to the talk
- shows and television shows, and the matter was concluded within
- a few days."
- </p>
- <p> But Clinton somehow still managed to miss the point. In
- his statements after her withdrawal, Clinton declared that he
- was "accepting the judgment" of his nominee that she would not
- be able to serve effectively. He made no moral judgment of his
- own; in fact, his letter to Baird said he would like to find
- another place for her in his Administration. Spokesman George
- Stephanopoulos suggested that the President thought Baird would
- make a fine Attorney General and that he was not happy that she
- withdrew. But that left him in a small minority.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton had, in a sense, set himself up. For more than a
- year he had promised Americans a higher moral standard. He
- learned early on the depth of the public's resentment at the way
- elected officials arrive in Washington and instantly set about
- ignoring or rewriting the rules. He played on the fury at a
- government that does not pay its bills, exempts itself from
- civil rights laws, exploits its power for profit. He spoke of
- sacrifice, of middle-class tax relief, of returning government
- to the people who pay for it. He called himself the man from
- Hope, Arkansas, born into a single-parent family, who understood
- about hard times.
- </p>
- <p> But then he and his team were put to the test. One after
- another the signals came: Chelsea's private school, Commerce
- Secretary Ron Brown's reluctance to sever his ties to his
- lucrative clients, the corporate sponsorship of the Inaugural
- hoopla. He nominated a core of advisers that included 14
- lawyers, many of them multimillionaires, all of them earning
- more than $100,000--a feat matched by only 3% of all
- Americans. His inner circle belongs to a class defined not by
- its inheritance but by its graduate degrees. At least five, like
- Clinton, studied in England, and half a dozen attended Harvard,
- Yale or Georgetown, the same schools as the President and Vice
- President Al Gore. Their promise is to be the brilliant,
- creative, technocratic problem solvers--not the same old
- elitists behaving as elitists behave.
- </p>
- <p> Having a blue-chip resume is fine, but not at the expense
- of sensitivity to everyone else's plight. "This is a crowd that
- doesn't have the stature to demand sacrifice," says Kevin
- Phillips, author of the new book Boiling Point: Republicans,
- Democrats and the Decline of Middle Class Prosperity. "These are
- people who spent Vietnam in Oxford; they are $500,000 lawyers
- who hire illegal immigrants as baby-sitters; they are hotshot
- lobbyists. This group has no understanding of the kind of
- sacrifices made every day by the $26,000-a-year couple in
- Peoria, Illinois. They don't speak the language of the older
- generation that fought in World War II or the language of the
- under-30 generation that hasn't shared in the circumstances of
- the boomers."
- </p>
- <p> During the campaign, it often seemed that Clinton's great
- political gift was his ability to mediate between his friends
- in the intellectual elite and his friends in Arkansas. "He has
- tried to present the ideas of the elite to ordinary people, and
- he has tried to present ordinary people to the elite," observes
- Ralph Whitehead, journalism professor at the University of
- Massachusetts at Amherst. "He can speak wonk, and he can speak
- American." But that is too rare a skill in his present circle.
- "On the campaign trail, he had Jim Carville, who had no trouble
- making himself understood in barrooms. He needs people in the
- Administration who will do the same."
- </p>
- <p> Those around him in charge of finding, vetting and
- recommending appointees like Zoe Baird did not share the
- populist instincts of campaign advisers like Carville and Paul
- Begala. Even according to officials who participated in the
- Baird case, it is not surprising that high-paid, high-powered
- corporate lawyers did not see trouble coming. When Clinton put
- millionaire superlawyers Warren Christopher and Vernon Jordan
- in charge of his transition, he laid the foundation for Baird's
- destruction. "What happened here," said a transition official,
- "was that a lot of people who live in million-dollar houses and
- think nothing of hiring illegals were in charge of the process."
- </p>
- <p> The tax evasion alone should have been enough to
- disqualify Baird, whatever her salary. Baird explained that she
- and her husband had been sponsoring their employees for U.S.
- citizenship and that their violation was a "legal technicality."
- Even after it all unraveled, some still just didn't get it. In
- her letter to Clinton, Baird said she was "surprised at the
- extent of the public reaction."
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton is still struggling to understand the anger, he
- might want to talk to his own Labor Secretary, Robert Reich. In
- his book The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for 21st
- Century Capitalism, Reich describes how America's new
- professional elite has grown ever more distant from the rest of
- society and disengaged itself from communal spaces, institutions
- and obligations. "The most skilled and insightful Americans,"
- he wrote, "who are already positioned to thrive in the world
- market, are now able to slip the bonds of national allegiance,
- and by so doing disengage themselves from their less-favored
- fellows. The stark political challenge in the decade ahead will
- be to affirm that, even though America is no longer a separate
- and distinct economy, it is still a society whose members have
- abiding obligations to one another."
- </p>
- <p> Some of the callers last week reminded the lawmakers that
- citizens are required to obey even the laws that they disagree
- with, or are inconvenient, or are hard to enforce. The anger
- reflected an impatience with the notion that this generation can
- pick and choose which rules are worth obeying. "We've excused
- all the hippie crimes," says Sheila Bihary, a 45-year-old San
- Francisco lawyer. "Now we've got the yuppie crimes, but these
- are the same people who used to be hippies."
- </p>
- <p> It is possible to have enormous sympathy for the pain of
- working parents trying to do right by their children, and to
- have little for Zoe Baird. Millions of working men and women
- lose sleep every night wondering whether their children are safe
- during the day. The search for someone they are willing to trust
- their children with can be endless, the paperwork onerous, the
- expense breaking. It is an entirely different task from finding
- a reliable mechanic or a gifted gardener. Simply understanding
- the laws that apply would take the mind of a law professor--like the one Baird married.
- </p>
- <p> Baird was not without defenders, particularly among
- parents with firsthand experience of a child-care nightmare. "It
- is ironic," wrote columnist Anna Quindlen, "that the first
- woman At torney General-designate has been tripped up by that
- thing that trips us up day after day, makes us late for
- meetings, causes us to call in sick when we are well: the
- struggle for good surrogate care for our kids. Hard sometimes
- even if you are well to do. Horrid often if you are not." Anne
- Nelson, author of "Rock-a-Bye Nino: Confessions of a White
- Mother with a Brown Caregiver" in Mother Jones, contends that
- "Professional women with the income and requirements of child
- care are saying, `Why is the Washington male crowd picking on
- this woman?' " They may be sympathetic to Baird, she says,
- because they know how precarious the relationship between
- parents and caregivers can be. "You feel you want professional
- qualifications--some sense of child development--yet you're
- offering the working conditions of a servant. For both sides,
- the whole situation is a disaster."
- </p>
- <p> If the President ended the week regretting the sour finale
- to his Inaugural week, then he was missing a great opportunity.
- The outcry over Zoe Baird was a noisy reminder of how deeply
- voters wanted to believe his promises about a new way of doing
- business in the capital. It would have been a sad start to a
- historic presidency if Americans had been willing to accept
- anything less than the ideals that Clinton himself did so much
- to renew.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-