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- <text id=91TT0525>
- <link 91TT0617>
- <link 90TT3370>
- <title>
- Mar. 11, 1991: Bush's Republican Guard
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 11, 1991 Kuwait City:Feb. 27, 1991
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 54
- DOMESTIC IMPACT
- Bush's Republican Guard
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Hoping to reap big political gains from a spectacular military
- victory, G.O.P. strategists draw up an electoral battle plan
- for 1992
- </p>
- <p>By DAN GOODGAME
- </p>
- <p> George Bush proved last week that he's not reluctant to
- press an advantage on the battlefield -- and the same is true
- in the domestic political arena. With Bush's public approval
- rating having soared to around 90% since he declared victory,
- his handlers are already working to sustain that support into
- 1992 and translate it into Republican gains across the board.
- Their battle plan calls for at least three aggressive thrusts:
- </p>
- <p> -- Exploit the vote by most congressional Democrats against
- the war by contrasting the Democrats' "carping pessimism" with
- Republican can-do confidence in America's armed forces,
- industrial competitiveness, schools and future role in the
- world.
- </p>
- <p> -- Encourage the swelling national mood of celebration and
- renewed optimism as an engine to pull the economy out of
- recession and eliminate the only potential obstacle to Bush's
- re-election.
- </p>
- <p> -- Recruit potential new Republican candidates for Congress
- and other offices from among the 539,000 returning heroes of
- the war against Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> The President is attempting to appear above the fray. In
- declaring military success, he stressed that this was "not a
- time to gloat." Yet even as Bush's victory address was being
- composed, his chief of staff, John Sununu, was meeting with the
- half a dozen top Republicans who help plot political strategy
- and are known informally as the Wednesday Group. The day after
- the speech, Sununu summoned Republican lawmakers to the White
- House to consider ways to link Bush's foreign success to his
- domestic policy.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Bush and Defense Secretary Dick Cheney had already
- begun that effort in little-reported passages of recent
- speeches. "We hear so often how our kids and our schools fall
- short, and I think it's about time that we took note of some
- of the success stories," Bush said on Feb. 15 in a speech to
- the Massachusetts workers who built the Patriot missile system.
- "For years we've heard that antimissile defense won't work .
- . . Some people called it impossible. But you called it your
- job. And they were wrong and you were right."
- </p>
- <p> Two days earlier, Cheney had told a business group, "It's
- important to remember that virtually every one of these
- [weapons] programs and systems was targeted somewhere along the
- line in the early stage of its development by critics." He
- added that observing highly competent U.S. soldiers in the gulf
- had left him "less pessimistic about our basic educational
- systems." Summarizing the Administration's new line of attack,
- Cheney said, "We need to be less critical of ourselves than we
- have been . . . We have done a better job as a nation than we
- often give ourselves credit for, and the proof of that is what
- we're able to do over there in the gulf today."
- </p>
- <p> By lashing out at naysayers, says Republican Party spokesman
- Charles Black, Administration officials are highlighting "some
- of the policies that we've supported and that are proving
- successful despite the opposition of the Democrats." Says party
- chief of staff Mary Matalin: "The Democrats are going to try
- to beat us on domestic policy, but they're so divided that they
- can't speak with one voice and put forward a coherent plan of
- their own. They'll end up just complaining, and I don't think
- people want to hear that right now."
- </p>
- <p> G.O.P. strategists and pollsters have been impressed during
- the war by opinion surveys and focus groups that show strong
- public revulsion toward expressions of criticism or even
- skepticism by Democrats in Congress and by news reporters.
- "We're seeing a rejection of the cynicism that's been with us
- for so long," says Bush pollster and adviser Robert Teeter.
- "The most important thing that has occurred as a result of this
- war is a watershed change in the way the country thinks about
- itself."
- </p>
- <p> Most Democrats in Congress voted against the resolution
- authorizing the use of force against Iraq, but many say they
- did so only because they wished to give economic sanctions more
- time to work; once the resolution passed, they voiced clear
- support for U.S. troops. Republican spokesmen have made it
- clear, though, that they will not let the Democrats off the
- hook. Says former Drug Control Director William Bennett, who
- now serves informally as a G.O.P. adviser: "The votes for or
- against this war were important political acts, and they should
- have consequences."
- </p>
- <p> Several Democratic Senators who opposed the force resolution
- have already seen their ratings drop as much as 17 points in
- state polls. And two potential presidential candidates, House
- majority leader Richard Gephardt and New York Governor Mario
- Cuomo, badly wounded themselves before the war started by
- suggesting, respectively, that Congress might cut off funds for
- the war and that Saddam might go away if given part of Kuwait.
- "The best part," cackled one White House official, "is that
- they did it on camera." Republicans have obtained copies of
- those tapes for use in campaign spots and might also
- rebroadcast Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz's thanking
- lawmakers who opposed President Bush.
- </p>
- <p> Republican strategists doubt that the President's
- skyrocketing approval ratings will translate into clout with
- the Democrat-controlled Congress. Thus Bush will not squander
- his popularity in bold attacks on the country's myriad domestic
- problems. Instead, he will submit modest domestic proposals
- like last week's warmed-over housing and educational
- "opportunity" initiative, so that, in the words of one White
- House official, "nobody can say we don't have a domestic
- agenda." Still, Bush will try not to let the Democrats shift
- the national focus to social issues.
- </p>
- <p> The President's only real domestic concern will be the
- economy, which Republicans hope will get a boost from increased
- consumer and investor confidence, lower oil prices and
- free-spending soldiers back from the gulf. Those returning
- G.I.s are also expected to offer a fertile new field for
- candidate recruitment, especially considering that retirement
- and redrawing of districts will result in 50 to 100 open seats
- in Congress by 1992. Says David Carney, a White House political
- operative: "It's a tremendous phenomenon that we haven't seen
- since World War II, where you have hundreds of thousands of
- soldiers returning as war heroes." Many of the reserve officers
- were prominent in their communities before the war and now have
- a valuable new credential. Though the Democrats may also try
- to woo returning soldiers, observes Republican pollster Linda
- DiVall, "we will have the upper hand because of the clear party
- division on this war and the President's popularity."
- </p>
- <p> Party spokesman Black says that while some "research" on
- recruitment of soldier-statesmen "can and will be done by the
- Republican National Committee," there is no central plan to
- court potential candidates -- at least not yet. Most of the
- effort, he says, is concentrated in local party organizations,
- which know "who's over in the Persian Gulf who might make a
- good candidate."
- </p>
- <p> One good prospect might be the unnamed U.S. officer who
- colorfully described his mission last week as "pursuit and
- exploitation" of fleeing enemy forces. For the Iraqis, that
- unhappy fate ended with a cease-fire. For the Democrats, it's
- just beginning.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-