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- <text id=92TT0443>
- <title>
- Mar. 02, 1992: How Bush Will Battle Buchanan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 02, 1992 The Angry Voter
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- REPUBLICANS
- How Bush Will Battle Buchanan
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Despite the New Hampshire results, the President faces less
- of a threat from the conservative columnist than from the
- problems he inflicts on himself
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Nancy Traver
- with Buchanan
- </p>
- <p> On the morning after the New Hampshire primary, George
- Bush's campaign advisers were trying hard not to act badly
- shaken. Running against a field of fringe candidates led by
- conservative columnist Pat Buchanan, the President had managed
- to win only 53% of the vote. The confusion about what to do next
- was obvious. Bush began by implying that he would not stoop to
- personal attacks on Buchanan, then immediately dredged up a
- nine-year-old article in which Buchanan called for making Social
- Security "voluntary." A day later, Bush changed tactics again.
- Campaign officials explained that Bush would not squander one
- of his bigger campaign assets--the dignity of his office--by getting down and dirty with a man who once crafted verbal
- spitballs for Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.
- </p>
- <p> Once their hearts stopped fibrillating, Bush's aides
- remembered that the primary deck is stacked heavily in their
- favor. "The real struggle," said a Bush official, "is not to
- overreact." Nearly all the contests during the next 30 days
- award delegates on a winner-take-all basis, virtually assuring
- Bush of a sweep. In states where delegates are apportioned
- according to the vote, Bush has his opponent hopelessly
- outorganized. Unless Buchanan wins somewhere soon, last week's
- burst will soon be a memory: G.O.P. rules require that a
- candidate must win a majority of delegates in five states before
- his or her name can be placed in nomination at the convention.
- </p>
- <p> Still, Buchanan poses several formidable problems for Bush
- at a time when he had hoped to breeze to renomination. As in
- New Hampshire, Buchanan could become a lightning rod for voters
- eager to send the President an angry message about his inept
- handling of the economy, and Buchanan might attract enough
- right-wing votes to erode Bush's fragile conservative base.
- Worse yet, Buchanan's attacks have turned the primary season
- into a referendum on Bush's performance, highlighting weaknesses
- that the Democrats can exploit in the fall. Says a campaign
- official: "Buchanan is not the problem. We are."
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, Bush sometimes acted as if he were secretly
- Buchanan's campaign manager. During the early months of the
- recession, Bush refused to even acknowledge that the country was
- suffering hard times. He made three hurried campaign swings in
- hard-hit New Hampshire but never attempted to mask the political
- expediency of his visits. Said he, with typical inelegance: "But
- the message--I care." His deliberate attempts to mix with
- ordinary Americans seemed uncomfortable and awkward. Bush's poll
- numbers dropped every time he visited the state. Meanwhile,
- Buchanan exploited the President's decision to exclude a
- proposed $500 increase in personal income tax exemptions from
- the latest budget request he submitted to Congress. "Don't be
- fooled again," intoned a hastily put together Buchanan ad. "It
- is George Bush himself that's taxing and spending your future
- away." In a fit of hairsplitting, Bush denied that he had ever
- taken the New Hampshire pledge in 1988.
- </p>
- <p> The string of blunders probably accounted for Buchanan's
- surge in the final days of the campaign. "The President," says
- a top campaign official, "was paying the price for a very poor
- economy and a perception of noninterest, noninvolvement and
- nonunderstanding of the recession over a lengthy period of
- time."
- </p>
- <p> For a few hours, when early exit polls showed Buchanan in
- a dead heat with Bush, the President's advisers feared that he
- might be defeated. Campaign manager Robert Teeter telephoned
- Bush to warn him. Realizing that male voters were turning out in
- disproportionate numbers for Buchanan, Bush officials issued an
- emergency order to the campaign's massive phone banks: Call only
- women voters.
- </p>
- <p> The next Bush-Buchanan showdown is set for March 3 in
- Georgia, where House minority whip Newt Gingrich believes the
- challenger may strip as much as 30% from the incumbent's vote.
- Though it hardly seems possible, Buchanan has escalated his
- rhetorical blasts to new heights of populist rage. Late last
- week Buchanan was appealing to racial resentments by accusing
- Bush of signing a civil rights bill that would sanctify reverse
- discrimination against whites. "If you belong to the Exeter-Yale
- G.O.P. club, that's not going to bother you greatly because, as
- we know, it is not their children who get bused out of South
- Boston into Roxbury," Buchanan complained. "It is the sons and
- daughters of Middle America who pay the price of reverse
- discrimination advanced by the Walker's Point G.O.P. to salve
- their social consciences at other people's expense."
- </p>
- <p> Parrying Buchanan's bombast will require finesse. In New
- Hampshire, Bush declined to attack Buchanan directly and never
- mentioned him by name. The decision, according to a campaign
- adviser, was based on the belief that "people voted for Buchanan
- as a protest, so it wouldn't have mattered if we had gone
- negative on him in New Hampshire. Even if they'd thought
- Buchanan was a kook, they still would have voted for him." The
- same danger lurks in the South, especially in such states as
- Georgia, Mississippi and Texas, where Democrats are allowed to
- vote in G.O.P. primaries. Moreover, the President cannot afford
- to alienate conservatives whose support he will need in
- November, particularly in the South, where former Ku Klux Klan
- wizard David Duke may be able to slice off several percentage
- points should he run in the general election.
- </p>
- <p> Thus the job of pummeling Buchanan will fall to Bush
- surrogates, including Vice President Dan Quayle and former
- Marine Corps Commandant General P.X. Kelley. They will
- crisscross the South, appealing to the region's patriotism by
- depicting Buchanan as a neo-isolationist who opposed the Persian
- Gulf war.
- </p>
- <p> As he has long preferred, Bush will stick to the high
- road, stressing his handling of the Persian Gulf war and other
- foreign policy issues. In recent speeches, Bush has maintained
- that he was too busy personally turning "the world around"
- during his first term to devote himself to domestic problems.
- In his second term, he promises to do better. As he put it last
- week in Knoxville, "We stand today at what I think most people
- would agree is a pivot point in history, at the end of one era
- and the beginning of another."
- </p>
- <p> If only by sheer attrition, Bush will prevail over
- Buchanan and win renomination. In the meantime, the question is
- whether Bush's advisers can prevent the struggle from
- diminishing the President's chances in the fall. If Bush faces
- Bill Clinton in November, the President's aides think that their
- boss's World War II heroism and image as a devoted family man
- will compare favorably to the Arkansas Governor's record on at
- least those two scores. But the Democratic nominee, whoever it
- turns out to be, will be harder to beat if Buchanan keeps
- knocking the President off balance. Teeter likes to say that
- Americans "understand that George Bush is not about to let the
- wheels come off." If voters come to feel that Bush's stability
- is just another word for inertia, anything could happen this
- fall.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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