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- <text id=93TT1053>
- <link 93TO0140>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: Working The Crowd
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 18
- WORKING THE CROWD
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite its higher taxes, Clinton's economic plan gets a warm
- welcome from the public, but Congress seems ready to give it
- a pounding
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS--With reporting by Dan Goodgame/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> If a presence haunted the halls of Congress last Wednesday night,
- it was not Kennedy or Roosevelt or any of the other 20th century
- Democrats who beckoned the citizenry to sacrifice. It was Ronald
- Reagan, the last leader to stand before the country and sketch
- a vision so dramatic. "Government is not the solution to our
- problems," Reagan said in 1981. "Government is the problem."
- </p>
- <p> "I believe government must do more," the young apostate declared
- 12 years later.
- </p>
- <p> "We have every right to dream heroic dreams," Reagan said.
- </p>
- <p> "We have got to play the hand we were dealt," Clinton replied.
- </p>
- <p> "For decades we have piled deficit upon deficit, mortgaging
- our future and our children's future for the temporary convenience
- of the present," Reagan said. "To continue this long trend is
- to guarantee tremendous social, cultural, political and economic
- upheavals." The trend did not continue--it accelerated, doubling
- the $1 trillion debt that he deplored, then doubling it again.
- Reagan's 67-mile-high stack of $1,000 bills, Clinton said, now
- reached up 267 miles. By the end of his speech, Clinton had
- grabbed hold of all that Reagan professed, wrapped it in burlap
- and cast it aside.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's first sacrifice was poetry. Short words work hard
- and cost little, and he had too much to say to afford the extravagant
- dream weaving of his Inaugural. He did not talk about "a government
- for our tomorrows" or evoke posterity in a child's eyes wandering
- into sleep. Having spent a career pantomiming Kennedy, Clinton
- found his own voice, offering a modern translation of the call
- to sacrifice. "My fellow Americans," he said, "the test of this
- plan cannot be what is in it for me. It has got to be what is
- in it for us." It was rhetoric in a hard hat, and judging by
- the immediate reaction of the polls, it worked.
- </p>
- <p> That 4 out of 5 people praised the speech may have said less
- about some new national appetite for pain than about a hunger
- for leadership. Three out of 4 people, according to a TIME/CNN
- poll, thought that Clinton's plan represented real change. Either
- they believed what Clinton said or they just wanted someone
- to stand up in a roomful of politicians and announce that there
- should be no more blame assigned, no more numbers cooked and
- no more responsibilities dodged.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton warned that there were forces crouching to attack him
- for everything he was trying to do. So it will be ironic if
- he stumbles over anger at what he didn't try to do. In the days
- that followed, the most piercing charge against him was that
- he had given a great speech, seized the moment, told the truth,
- wrestled the demons and then settled for a draw. For the next
- few weeks, as he travels the country and stumps in Congress,
- he will have to persuade voters and their representatives that
- the $246 billion in tax hikes, while painful, is necessary and
- fair, that the $247 billion in spending cuts is more than symbolic,
- and that the combination of the two will invigorate the economy
- and cut the deficit $325 billion from 1994 through 1997. "We've
- got ourselves a President who's a hell of a salesman," says
- one of Clinton's advisers. "The question is whether we've given
- him a good enough product."
- </p>
- <p> The drama is all the greater for its context: time and again,
- in 1981, 1982, 1984 and 1990, the President and Congress have
- looked at the deficit, winced and struck a bargain. Each time,
- a change in the tax structure was paired with proposed spending
- cuts. Each time the tax structure was changed, but the spending
- cuts proved inadequate or illusory. Many of Clinton's proposals,
- even those as obvious as getting the Tennessee Valley Authority
- out of the fertilizer-research business, have been tried and
- rejected over the past decade. A battle is sure to come. "This
- is probably a much better plan than what he's likely to get
- through the Congress," said Clinton's erstwhile rival Paul Tsongas.
- "By any definition of what's likely in the real world, you have
- to give Bill Clinton credit."
- </p>
- <p> By proposing so blunt a program, especially so huge a tax hike,
- Clinton was feeding raw meat to his Republican opponents. In
- the hours before the speech, G.O.P. lawmakers were already displaying
- a banner reading, IT'S THE SPENDING, STUPID! Radio blowtorch
- Rush Limbaugh bet the Democratic National Committee $1 million
- that by Jan. 1, 1995, inflation, unemployment, interest rates
- and the federal deficit will all be higher and that Clinton's
- approval rating in the polls will be 45% or less. David Wilhelm
- of the D.N.C. replied with a counteroffer: If the Clinton plan
- works, Limbaugh will have to give his microphone to the D.N.C.
- for a year.
- </p>
- <p> The President's opponents charged that he had abandoned his
- campaign pledge not to raise taxes on the middle class, since
- new energy taxes will hit all families earning more than $30,000.
- They pointed out that for the next two years, virtually every
- penny of the deficit reduction will come from tax hikes rather
- than spending cuts. They warned that raising taxes would dampen
- the recovery, spook consumers and investors, and ultimately
- cost jobs by suppressing growth. "I felt good about the proposals,"
- said Dick Johnson, a retired aeronautical engineer in Dallas,
- "until I heard the Republicans telling me nothing was going
- to change."
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton left himself a single challenge, it is to prove that
- his revolution is for real, led by a "New Democrat" who has
- been chastened by the failures of his well-intentioned predecessors.
- He may speak of "investments" rather than spending and "contributions"
- rather than taxes, but more than his vocabulary must be new
- if he is to wean voters from their profound cynicism about what
- government can accomplish. The criticisms of his plan are predictable,
- but formidable too:
- </p>
- <p> TOO MANY TAXES, TOO FEW CUTS During his confirmation hearings,
- Budget Director Leon Panetta promised $2 in spending cuts for
- every $1 in new taxes. Over the next few weeks, the Administration
- retreated to a "one for one" balance, but the plan falls far
- short of even that goal. If his new spending proposals are factored
- in, Clinton's plan includes $3 in net new taxes for every $2
- in spending cuts.
- </p>
- <p> The charge that the program is an old-time liberal tax-and-spend
- scheme formed the heart of the Republican counterattack. Senate
- Republican leader Robert Dole said, "Before President Clinton
- demands that the farmer, the nurse, the factory worker, the
- shopkeeper, the truck driver or our senior citizens send one
- more dime to Washington, they should demand of President Clinton--and Congress--that every outdated program, every bloated
- agency and every item in the federal budget take the hit it
- deserves."
- </p>
- <p> That kind of grandstanding prompted the normally placid Panetta
- to draw the line. "The time has come to put up or shut up with
- regard to spending alternatives," he told the House Budget Committee.
- He locked in on Ohio Republican John Kasich. "You are now the
- perfect example," Panetta said, "of the kind of gridlock that
- people are tired of."
- </p>
- <p> But it was not only Republicans who felt that, given the power
- of Clinton's speech and the mood of the nation, this may have
- been the moment to do even more. A truly revolutionary plan,
- deficit hawks argue, would do away completely with the $30 billion,
- 5,000-employee Education Department, since education is almost
- entirely a state and local responsibility. The Veterans Affairs
- Administration and Department of Housing and Urban Development
- could be folded into Health and Human Services, shedding thousands
- of bureaucrats in the process. The EPA and the Department of
- Energy could be merged with Interior in a single Department
- of Natural Resources.
- </p>
- <p> Such plans for streamlining government have kicked around Washington
- for years--one of the best by Budget Director Panetta. He
- and some other economic advisers, particularly Lloyd Bentsen
- and Alice Rivlin, wanted to pay for all the new spending and
- half the deficit reduction through cuts in government programs.
- "But that turned out not to be possible...for political
- reasons," says an adviser. "We decided early on that we weren't
- doing this as an academic exercise. We wanted a package that
- could get through Congress."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's political instincts told him to hold his fire. Programs
- that might have been scrapped altogether were merely trimmed.
- His plan, for example, calls for cutting the mohair subsidy
- to $50,000 per producer, even though the program was originally
- designed to ensure a supply of fabric for soldiers' uniforms--during the Eisenhower Administration. Funding for other extravagances,
- like the $30 billion space station and the $8 billion superconducting
- supercollider, was spared partly to help the Democrats hold
- on to Bentsen's Senate seat. Many of the spending "cuts" are
- actually higher user fees for government services like inland
- waterways, national parks and meat inspection.
- </p>
- <p> Having proposed deeper cuts than either of his more conservative
- predecessors, Clinton set out to outflank the opposition. He
- dispatched Bentsen to Texas, economic adviser Robert Rubin to
- the New York Stock Exchange and other Cabinet officers to their
- home states to sell his plan. "All those who say we should cut
- more, be as specific as I have been," Clinton said. By the day
- after his speech to Congress, during his road show to promote
- his budget plan, he was adopting the Republican message as his
- own, telling a crowd in St. Louis, Missouri, "We need you to
- hold our feet to the fire. No raising taxes unless we cut spending!"
- Clinton added, "I know there is more that we can eliminate.
- I am honestly looking. I've just been there four weeks and a
- day, and I'm nowhere near through."
- </p>
- <p> TOO MUCH NEW SPENDING Poll after poll before and after the speech
- showed that Americans would accept higher taxes to cut the deficit.
- But the willingness comes with the condition that government
- sacrifice too, by giving up the high-calorie programs that help
- Congressmen get re-elected, the agencies that keep bureaucrats
- employed, the pet programs that have marinated in think tanks
- during the Democrats' years in the wilderness. "If he increases
- taxes simply to spend more money," says James Nowlan, president
- of the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois, "then public cynicism
- will only increase."
- </p>
- <p> Karen Meredith, 38, a Perot voter, founded the American Association
- of Boomers three years ago to pursue her generation's interests.
- She says she is hearing from many of her 26,000 members that
- Clinton didn't cut nearly enough. "It won't reduce the deficit
- at all. We will have paid all those taxes for nothing. There
- are a lot of tough choices out there, and I don't know if Bill
- Clinton has the guts to be unpopular."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton must convince voters like Meredith that his new spending
- proposals represent a different kind of government activism.
- The bill for his new "investment" and stimulus would amount
- to a four-year cost of $169 billion for new highways, summer
- jobs, environmental cleanup and other measures. Overall government
- spending would grow from $1.48 trillion in 1993 to $1.68 trillion
- in 1997. That is roughly the rate of current inflation and less
- than the average 6.4% growth of the Reagan-Bush presidencies.
- But that does not factor in the cost--anywhere from $30 billion
- to $90 billion a year--for extending health-care coverage
- to 37 million uninsured Americans.
- </p>
- <p> It may be hard to argue with the usefulness of hiring 160 new
- meat inspectors after a two-year-old boy died and 400 people
- fell ill from eating bad hamburgers at Jack in the Box restaurants;
- or of vaccinations that save not only lives but also health
- costs down the line. But Clinton's advisers acknowledge that
- his plans--and the potential costs--go much further. Clinton
- has been impressed by the arguments of counselors like Labor
- Secretary Robert Reich and Laura Tyson, chair of the President's
- Council of Economic Advisers, who contend that the government
- must help America's industries to become more competitive players
- in the global marketplace. That means subsidizing new technologies
- and industries, retraining workers and pressuring foreign competitors
- on their trading practices.
- </p>
- <p> TOO MANY LOOPHOLES In his search for new revenue, Clinton made
- a calculated gamble in deciding to target the rich, as opposed
- to the more diffuse "special interests." As politics, it was
- unassailable: 98% of households, he repeated again and again,
- would not see their income taxes rise, and for a typical family,
- the energy tax would range from $10 to $17 a month. Class resentment
- had been simmering long enough to ensure that there would be
- few voices in Congress willing to come to the defense of millionaires,
- deductible golf-club memberships and three-martini lunches.
- Any particular spending cut, on the other hand, was guaranteed
- to add another obstacle in Congress. "As a political matter,"
- said a Clinton aide, "it's easier to put the burden of deficit
- reduction on rich people generally, rather than taking on all
- the special interests at once."
- </p>
- <p> As policy, however, the "soak the rich" notion raised some questions.
- "Clinton starts off by talking about honoring work, but there's
- no way to sort out the people making $250,000 and say, `They
- don't deserve it, so let's tax them at a higher rate,' " says
- University of Houston economist Barton Smith. "They're not all
- fat cats. Some of them are people who have worked all their
- lives, developed a business and succeeded."
- </p>
- <p> The day after the speech, Ronald Reagan presented a scorching
- critique on the op-ed page of the New York Times. Responding
- to Clinton's vow to "raise taxes on the people who did well
- in the 1980s," Reagan let fly: "Did I hear that right? Do they
- really believe that those who have worked hard and been successful
- should somehow be punished for it?"
- </p>
- <p> Most important, lawmakers in both parties warned that raising
- the top rates on individuals and businesses threatens to undo
- one of the singular accomplishments of the '80s: the 1986 tax-reform
- act. Apart from simplicity and fairness, the theory behind keeping
- rates low and loopholes closed was to encourage people and corporations
- to focus on business opportunities rather than on how to avoid
- taxes. Economists warned that many investors will scramble for
- tax shelters and tax-free bonds or move their money abroad.
- Corporations will head back into debt to reduce their taxable
- profits. Offering tax credits to small businesses with sales
- of less than $5 million, predicts Charles Wolf Jr., director
- of international economic research at the Rand Corp., will mean
- that "a lot of $50 million companies will break up into ten
- $5 million companies."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's plan not only raises the top corporate tax rate to
- 36%, but also restores much of the fiscal macrame that enriches
- lawyers and tax accountants. The real estate industry, a staunch
- Clinton ally, makes out very nicely. A proposal to limit the
- mortgage-interest deduction for upper-income taxpayers ``received
- serious consideration" until late last week, Bentsen said. But
- it eventually "fell out" of Clinton's package because a limit
- even on mortgages above $300,000 might depress expensive housing
- markets. "What about New York, where so many of the mortgages
- are more than $300,000?" Bentsen asked. "What about California?"
- Clinton's proposal also restores incentives for commercial real
- estate developers. When asked last week just what the real estate
- industry would be "sacrificing," a top official smiled thinly
- and replied, "Well, a lot of them are in our new top-income
- brackets."
- </p>
- <p> All these objections and others were debated within the ranks
- of Clinton's advisers in the marathon strategy sessions leading
- up to Wednesday night. Underlying the philosophical questions
- was the political reality: that if there were such a thing as
- a perfect plan, it would be a waste of time to propose it if
- it cannot pass the Congress. A Democratic majority in no way
- assures success: even Budget Director Panetta gave the plan
- only a fifty-fifty chance of passing in something like its original
- form. That meant the opening pitch on Wednesday night was easy
- compared with the sales job that lies ahead.
- </p>
- <p> Bentsen assured his former colleagues in Congress that "when
- it comes to a tough vote, he's going to be with you and won't
- leave you out there hanging like some Presidents have done."
- Ground zero is the House Ways and Means Committee, where lobbyists
- hover over the 38 members as they yank and pull at each spending
- proposal. "At Ways and Means, we're looking at the most important
- six months of the committee's existence," says Texas Congressman
- Bill Archer, the ranking Republican. "If lobbyists can organize
- so much turmoil over a little tax loophole, just imagine what
- they'll do with Clinton's plan."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's wooing of Ways and Means is complicated by the troubles
- of its powerhouse chairman, Dan Rostenkowski, who sat through
- Wednesday night's speech looking as if he were in genuine pain.
- U.S. Attorney Jay Stephens is expected to indict Rostenkowski
- this spring or summer on charges of illegally converting House
- Post Office money to personal use. If that happens, his likely
- successor, Sam Gibbons of Florida, has neither the stature nor
- the knowledge of the tax code that will be needed to sell the
- Clinton plan to Congress. And since Clinton opened the door
- to new "incentives" and special tax breaks, without Rostenkowski's
- discipline the bill that eventually emerges from the committee
- is bound to be even more byzantine than the one Clinton proposed.
- </p>
- <p> The President did everything he could to outflank the lobbyists--except for those he meant to enlist in his cause, like the
- environmentalists, the children's activists, the consumer groups.
- White House officials were proud of their willingness to flush
- the enemy out into the open. "We've already changed the debate
- from `Can we take them on?' to `How much do we dare to do?'
- " said an official. But it was Ross Perot, in giving his tentative
- blessing to Clinton's plan, who acknowledged, "More lobbyists
- will get rich in the next 90 days than in the history of man,
- trying to manipulate what starts out to be a great idea and
- turn it into something that's just filled with special-interest
- exceptions."
- </p>
- <p> The prime target will be the energy tax, a broad-based levy
- on the heat content of fuel designed to raise $49 billion through
- 1997. It was sure to pinch not only transportation but also
- steelmakers, tire manufacturers and other heavy industries.
- "We're going to get it taken care of," says Tom Donohue, president
- of the 7.8 million-member American Trucking Association. "No
- point in talking to members of Congress right now," he adds
- airily. Wait until they get the paperwork, he says, and then
- he and his associates will weigh in.
- </p>
- <p> Even as his proposals were being raked over in Washington, Clinton
- could take some comfort from the reviews in the bars and coffee
- shops around the country. "I feel better about being bled,"
- said Anne Bellamy, 40, as she sat at the bar of the Rusty Pelican
- in suburban Los Angeles. "I'm one of those girls who make $50,000
- a year. I voted for the man fully understanding that my taxes
- would go up. It's a trade-off. The quality of life in America,
- not for myself but for everybody, is a real concern to me."
- </p>
- <p> But along with the support came a common cry for accountability.
- Too many hopes had been raised and crushed for people to believe
- that politicians would really use the money as they promised.
- Dick Johnson in Dallas wants to see a periodic report card.
- "And I don't want to wait four years," he said. "I want the
- government to show me how many of these goals have been met."
- But by that time, if it's proof he's looking for, Johnson probably
- won't need a government report. He can take a time-honored political
- test and ask, with a Clintonesque twist, "Are we better off
- than we were four years ago?"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-