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- <text id=93TT0984>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: What's In It For Us?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 33
- What's In It For Us?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Voters in Ohio's Montgomery County want change, but the specter
- of higher taxes is making them squirm
- </p>
- <p>By JON D. HULL/DAYTON
- </p>
- <p> Bingo Night at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds was passing
- slowly. But when a visitor started asking questions about Bill
- Clinton's plans to raise taxes, voices rose and necks were craned
- to catch the commotion. "Look, just because I have a little
- money to gamble with doesn't mean I can afford any more energy
- taxes or income taxes or any damn taxes," said Doug Smith Jr.,
- 46, whose thick and callused hands testify to his part-time
- job as a carpet installer. "Enough!" Heads nodded up and down
- along the wooden table, one of 40 set up in the brightly lit
- but smoky meeting hall where about 300 mostly working-class
- gamblers were quietly plotting for a piece of the $3,500 pot.
- "I voted for Clinton because I figured he'd stick it to the
- fat cats," said auto mechanic Steve Cordow, 32. "If he wants
- any more money from me, he's going to have to hit up everyone
- who makes more than me first. And that includes just about everybody,
- even my friend Doug here."
- </p>
- <p> Amid the laughter, Cordow spontaneously slammed his palm down
- on the table, causing a near panic as the players scrambled
- to reorganize their bingo cards. Tightly creased expressions
- reflected the seriousness of the occasion. Among the lucky charms
- and trinkets on display: six coins, one family photograph, one
- clay figurine, two rock crystals and 13 toy trolls. Two of the
- trolls belong to Smith. He confessed, "I need the money."
- </p>
- <p> So does Bill Clinton. Judging from the mood among voters in
- Montgomery County, most Americans are quite willing to make
- the sacrifices that Clinton is calling for, especially if the
- money is earmarked to pay off the deficit, improve schools or
- create jobs. But there is one consistent caveat: nobody wants
- to go first.
- </p>
- <p> Situated among the rolling hills of southwestern Ohio, Montgomery
- County is an uncanny microcosm of the rest of the U.S., right
- down to the renewed obsession with trolls. Last September TIME
- profiled the region when it was targeted by both the Clinton
- and Bush campaigns as a critical swing county in a critical
- state. Among the 96,000 registered Democrats, 66,000 Republicans
- and 173,000 independents, concern over the economy won out over
- the county's latent conservatism. Clinton took 41% of the vote,
- vs. Bush's 40% and Perot's 18%.
- </p>
- <p> Now, as campaign promises transform into presidential proposals,
- sometimes with startling differences, voters in Montgomery County
- are starting to squirm like patients in a dentist's waiting
- room. Everyone is resigned to a little pain, but all are praying
- they can avoid a full-blown root canal. "Basically, I'm preparing
- to have to dig deeper into my pockets in the near future," says
- Sherwin Eisman, the Republican mayor of middle-class Huber Heights
- (pop. 40,000), near Dayton. He fears that additional federal
- taxes will inspire local voters to reject any attempts to raise
- local levies, including a May ballot proposal to raise the city
- income tax from 1% to 1.25% for additional fire and police services.
- He says, "People tell me that they are sick and tired of taxes."
- </p>
- <p> True, but many Montgomery County voters are even more fed up
- with bad schools, murderous streets, pink slips and health-care
- nightmares. "People are willing to pay more as long as they
- understand where the money is going," says Dayton Mayor Richard
- Dixon, a Democrat. As proof, he notes that local voters have
- approved three tax increases in a row.
- </p>
- <p> Dixon hopes his city will get a share of Clinton's proposed
- economic-stimulus plan. Once a thriving industrial gem, Ohio's
- sixth largest city has been crippled by the loss of tens of
- thousands of blue-collar jobs since the 1970s and the flight
- of white citizens to the suburbs. Though countywide unemployment
- stands at 6.1%, a full point below the national average, job
- insecurity is endemic, particularly given the region's heavy
- dependence on General Motors, which employs about 20,000 workers
- at eight plants.
- </p>
- <p> At the Dayton Convention Center, autoworkers Tom Brock, Lonnie
- Gaines and Tom Burns prepared a powertrain exhibit for the annual
- Dayton GM Auto Show. Together they have clocked 75 years with
- GM, but next year their plant, which employs about 500 workers,
- is scheduled to move to Mexico. "If we keep shipping the jobs
- to Mexico, five years from now there won't be anybody in this
- country to buy these cars," says Brock.
- </p>
- <p> Gaines voted for Clinton; Brock for Perot. Burns won't say.
- But all three are deeply worried by what they see happening
- to the economy and to the social fabric of their communities.
- "We are sitting on dynamite," said Gaines. All three are willing
- to pay more taxes so long as the burden is distributed fairly,
- meaning that the rich pay significantly more. "We just don't
- have the tax write-offs that the rich people do," said Burns.
- He advises the President to ignore his opponents and get cracking.
- "The fact is that Clinton got elected on his ideas, so as long
- as he follows through with them I say he can ignore all the
- special-interest groups he is going to offend."
- </p>
- <p> In a roomful of Montgomery County voters, the opinions on how
- to balance the budget outnumber University of Dayton sports
- fans. But nearly 60% of these voters supported either Clinton
- or Perot, and their ballots were backed up by fears that the
- U.S. is dangerously off course. "Drugs are talking over, our
- cities are falling apart, and our children can't get good jobs,"
- says Willie Thorpe, president of Local 801 of the International
- Union of Electrical Workers. "Got it?" James Sullivan, the assistant
- director of the county Board of Elections, traveled to Washington
- for the Inauguration, but now he is getting impatient. "Hell,
- this country is in real trouble," he said, "and we're talking
- about gays and nannies?"
- </p>
- <p> Even the down-and-outs are willing to give something up--if
- they can trade it for something that offers them more hope.
- Wesley Helfinstine, 35, sat in the welfare office in downtown
- Dayton last week with his girlfriend Tracey Marcum, 27, shaking
- his head and clutching a sci-fi paperback called Ten Years to
- Doomsday. Both are unemployed, and Marcum is applying for emergency
- medical assistance. They also need $243 to get the electricity
- turned back on in their apartment. "Would somebody please tell
- me why we are still sending money to the foreigners?" asked
- Helfinstine. Despite their hardships, both would support tougher
- welfare requirements, as long as welfare payments are replaced
- by job opportunities. "You get so burned out trying to find
- a job, and then you get sucked into this welfare business and
- you're stuck," said Marcum.
- </p>
- <p> Yet cutting welfare for the poor is a lot less explosive than
- reducing entitlements for the elderly. News that Clinton may
- try to tamper with Social Security sent shudders through the
- Greater Dayton senior citizen center, even though most of the
- regulars are too poor to be affected by any increase in taxes
- paid on benefits. "Every President tries to stick his hand into
- our pockets. But I worked my hands to the bone to earn my Social
- Security," said Isabel Mejia, 79, pausing from her volunteer
- work, in which she rolls plastic eating utensils into paper
- napkins. And don't call her stingy: last Christmas she and her
- fellow elderly collected 25 baskets of goods for the Salvation
- Army. That said, she wants Clinton to slash the deficit and
- wishes him "lots of luck."
- </p>
- <p> Others hope that Clinton will deliver on his promise to help
- young people get ahead. Last fall Stuart O'Dell, 19, registered
- 503 voters out in front of the Wal-Mart store where he works.
- Because Clinton won Montgomery County by fewer than 3,200 votes,
- O'Dell likes to think he helped put Clinton over the top. In
- return, he expects the President to push through his plan to
- help students go to college in exchange for some form of community
- service, a promise that Clinton has already scaled back somewhat.
- "I've managed to save up $1,900 so far from my job, but I figure
- that will pay for only one semester," he says. So for now, O'Dell
- mans the electronics department at Wal-Mart each day, listens
- attentively to the news from Washington--and waits.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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