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- <text id=89TT0571>
- <title>
- Feb. 27, 1989: That Was Zen, This Is Now
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 27, 1989 The Ayatullah Orders A Hit
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- That Was Zen, This Is Now
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Jerry Brown returns as, of all things, a party regular
- </p>
- <p> During two terms as Governor of California and two failed
- bids for the presidency, Jerry Brown, to some, symbolized
- visionary political leadership. To others, unmoved by his
- fascination with Buckminster Fuller's visions of the future and
- the small-is-beautiful theories of E.F. Schumacher, Brown was a
- weirdo they called "Governor Moonbeam." After losing a 1982 run
- for the Senate to San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, he dropped out
- of politics and set off on the political equivalent of a
- penitent's sojourn in the desert. He went to Mexico to learn
- Spanish, studied Zen meditation in Japan and worked with Mother
- Teresa in Calcutta. "I had such a negative reputation that
- every time I stood up someone would call me Moonbeam," Brown
- explains. "I felt I had to absent myself for a while, expiate
- for my political sins."
- </p>
- <p> Brown's journey has led him to an altogether worldly
- destination: a furniture warehouse in Sacramento, where he has a
- temporary office as the newly elected chairman of California's
- state Democratic Party. As Governor, Brown often feuded with
- party regulars and was never known for the organizational skills
- that are badly needed by California Democrats, who last
- delivered the state for the party's presidential nominee in
- 1964. Yet just the sort of politicos he once disdained backed
- his campaign for the chairmanship, swayed by his promise to
- build a no-nonsense organization that could provide Democratic
- office seekers with workers, polltakers and money. Says Brown,
- 50, whose father Edmund was also a two-term Governor of
- California: "I understand politics. I've been around it since
- the day I was born."
- </p>
- <p> The seeming mismatch between the party's needs and Brown's
- temperament has politicians guessing about his prospects.
- "Depending upon how he handles it," says a longtime friend, "it
- could be the rehabilitation of Jerry Brown and of the Democratic
- Party in California. Or it could be the return of the flake."
- The greatest fear is that his election will undermine
- Democratic candidates by giving Republicans a chance to dredge
- up his Moonbeam past. Brown thinks otherwise. "I can become the
- media black hole that absorbs all the negative feedback," says
- he. "I can absorb a lot of flak that would otherwise go to our
- candidates." The most organized opposition to Brown came from
- women's groups concerned about abortion rights. A pro-choice
- Governor, the former Jesuit seminary student did an about-face
- after working for Mother Teresa. Last year he told an
- interviewer, "The killing of the unborn is crazy." He also
- wrote a letter to Florida penal authorities urging the release
- of a jailed antiabortion crusader. During the campaign, Brown
- tried to defuse the issue by reassuring pro-choice opponents
- that whatever his personal feelings, he supported the right of
- women to choose for themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Though he may no longer have his eyes on the moon, most
- observers are sure that Brown is aiming for higher things -- and
- he has told friends that gaining the chairmanship is the first
- step in a plan to gain party support for another tilt at the
- presidency. Brown even jokingly acknowledges the speculation
- about his motives. If he can create an effective Democratic
- Party, he says, he might run for office. "I would have earned
- it!" he says. Then he adds, "If I don't do it, I'm going back to
- the monastery."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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