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- <text id=93TT1290>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: Breaking Through
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ADMINISTRATION, Page 25
- Breaking Through
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton pushes his economic plan through the House and gains
- a chance to reshape the Supreme Court
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Michael Duffy and Julie
- Johnson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton might not relish comparisons of himself with
- either Lyndon Johnson or Ronald Reagan. As a Rhodes scholar at
- Oxford, he demonstrated against Johnson's Vietnam policy, and
- he is now pushing a deficit-cutting program that specifically
- aims to stand Reaganomics on its ear. But as a bandwagon
- driver, Clinton is getting off to a start that either of his
- quick-off-the-mark predecessors might envy. Like them, he is
- capitalizing on a combination of shrewd planning, guile in
- bargaining and no little luck to put a stamp on policy that
- could be lasting.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, for example, with the aid of last-minute phone
- calling and arm twisting from the White House, Clinton and his
- aides persuaded the House to whoop through by heavy margins not
- only his raise-taxes, cut-spending budget plan but also his
- program to first spend an additional $16.3 billion to give an
- immediate boost to the economy. That the heavy Democratic
- majority in the House would prevail over even united Republican
- opposition had never been in doubt. That Clinton's lieutenants
- could prevent damaging defections by conservative Democrats was
- nowhere near so certain. A number of conservatives echoed G.O.P.
- arguments that the stimulus was unnecessary because the economy
- is recovering well on its own and harmful because the package
- will at least temporarily swell the very deficits Clinton has
- made it his top priority to reduce.
- </p>
- <p> Yet when the crunch came, most swallowed their doubts and
- supported the President. "It was a wonderful beginning," Clinton
- said, extolling the House votes as a "victory for ordinary
- Americans and for the proposition that this government can work
- for them again, that we don't have to be mired in gridlock, that
- we don't have to spend all of our time posturing and dividing
- and running for cover instead of moving into the future."
- </p>
- <p> Simultaneously, Clinton got a stroke of luck when Supreme
- Court Justice Byron White, 75, on Friday announced that he will
- retire after the court's current term ends in early summer.
- White had not been one of the more memorable justices, but he
- had provided a swing vote that pushed the court in a
- conservative direction on such issues as abortion and
- church-state relations. His retirement will give Clinton an
- opportunity to appoint a Justice (New York Governor Mario Cuomo?
- Legal scholar Laurence Tribe?) who might help turn the court in
- a far more liberal direction. And the President has some time
- to ponder his choice and line up support. He need not have an
- appointee confirmed until the court's next term begins in
- October.
- </p>
- <p> What makes Clinton's fast start the more remarkable is
- that it has been achieved without overwhelming public support.
- Quite the contrary: the latest Time/CNN poll conducted by
- Yankelovich Partners shows the President losing favor in some
- key respects during the past month. Overall, 53% of the
- respondents approve of Clinton's performance, down a
- statistically insignificant 3 points from February. But 49% of
- those polled now say he is doing a "poor job" of keeping
- campaign promises, vs. 39% who think he is doing a good job; a
- month earlier the split was 44% vs. 38% the other way. His
- economic plan in general is favored by 52%, down 10 points in
- a month. Only 38% believe he is doing a "good job" of reducing
- the deficit, also down 10 points, and 49% now think he wants to
- raise taxes "too much," up 14 points from February. Some of the
- reflexive back-the-President support Clinton garnered when he
- announced his deficit-cutting plans clearly has evaporated.
- </p>
- <p> Some, but by no means all. Perhaps paradoxically, 65% of
- those surveyed think Clinton is doing a good job "providing
- strong leadership for the country," up 9 points from February.
- Apparently the hunger for a confident, sure sense of direction
- from the top is so strong that for many people it overwhelms
- doubts about specific aspects: movement, in almost any
- direction, is better than policy gridlock. Clinton and his
- lieutenants have been astutely playing that feeling for all it
- is worth. Witness House majority leader Richard Gephardt's
- successful plea to his colleagues to vote for the
- Administration's budget resolution: "I think we have a President
- who has a plan. You may not agree with it, but I think he
- deserves a chance."
- </p>
- <p> If the White House brandishing of as much popular support
- as it can claim is reminiscent of Reagan, its guileful
- combination of open blandishment and implied threat to win over
- potential opponents, or at least neutralize them, smacks
- powerfully of L.B.J. Take, for instance, Clinton's wooing of
- business, a constituency that Democratic Presidents do not
- ordinarily court. In the past two weeks, officials from nearly
- every Cabinet department have quietly fanned out to gauge the
- reaction of business constituents to Clinton's economic plans
- and have made lists of possible changes that might win some
- support. Says a White House official: "It's a twofer. By going
- after business, you blunt its opposition to the plan. And if you
- pick up its support, it's a bonus."
- </p>
- <p> The pitch is simple: Play along with us, and we can make
- good things happen for you. Oppose us, and...well, watch
- out. Delivering the first part of the message, Treasury
- Secretary Lloyd Bentsen on March 12 welcomed into his airy
- office executives of seven major oil companies: Amoco, Ashland,
- Chevron, Conoco, Phillips, Shell and Unocal. "We're willing to
- adjust our fuel tax in ways that will help you," said Bentsen.
- He noted that his department had already promised to revise the
- way it proposed to collect a new energy tax to favor U.S. oil
- refiners over foreign competitors. He vowed to consider half a
- dozen other changes urged by oil and gas interests and
- encouraged his guests to fax him any further ideas that occurred
- to them. The quid pro quo: "We want your support for our
- economic program." Shell, at least, got the message quickly. A
- company statement endorsed "President Clinton in his effort to
- cut spending, reduce the deficit and encourage economic growth...We are prepared to continue working to fashion energy-tax
- policies that achieve the President's stated objectives."
- </p>
- <p> And what of those businessmen who do not go along? Bentsen
- rather ominously noted that he had not invited "some members of
- the oil industry who had expressed public opposition" to
- Clinton's energy tax. He went no further, but another senior
- Administration official observes that "if they oppose us, every
- industry knows there is a price to pay." Several lobbyists say
- their clients are spooked by the prospect that unless they
- cooperate with the White House, they could suffer the fate of
- drug companies, whose stocks have been hammered in part because
- of criticism from the President and his wife about alleged price
- gouging.
- </p>
- <p> No pressures of that kind, of course, can work with the
- Supreme Court: White's retirement might have happened, or not,
- regardless of anything Clinton did. Even so, the President
- played what hand he had astutely. White had been rumored to be
- about to retire at least twice in the past 10 years, so when the
- latest buzz of reports began, they were not taken especially
- seriously. The Justice, however, came to the Oval Office the
- week before last for what was described as a courtesy call. The
- President engaged him in a chat that a White House aide
- described as "warm. It was clear the President really admired
- him." Despite their differences over such issues as abortion
- rights? Yes, says the aide: they shared in particular a deep
- admiration for President Kennedy, who had inspired Clinton with
- a desire to go into politics when he was a young student and who
- appointed White to the court. White is the only member of this
- Supreme Court to be named by a Democratic President, and, says
- a senior court official, "he said he really did prefer, given
- the choice, to retire when there was [another] Democrat as
- President." Clinton somehow apparently managed to confirm White
- in that desire, even though the Justice must have known that the
- President is likely to appoint someone with a strikingly
- different legal approach (a standard Washington gag is that
- while White was named by Kennedy, he was philosophically Richard
- Nixon's first court appointee).
- </p>
- <p> Can Clinton keep up his winning streak? To the extent that
- it reflects sheer luck, perhaps not; no gambler can keep
- rolling sevens. To the extent that his early success reflects
- political skill and adroitness--well, maybe. The Senate, where
- Democrats lack the votes to break Republican filibusters, will
- surely modify some of his programs. It has already forced a
- weakening of the Administration's cherished "motor voter" bill;
- as passed by the Senate, the measure would still allow people
- to register to vote while receiving or renewing driver's
- licenses but no longer require registration forms to be passed
- out to those applying for welfare or unemployment compensation.
- With the help of the big, disciplined Democratic majority in the
- House, though, the President and his aides can probably fashion
- compromises that Senate Republicans could block only at the cost
- of painting themselves as stubborn obstructionists. Given the
- feel for the popular mood and the adeptness at defusing or
- co-opting opposition that he has already displayed, the
- President can probably win the opportunity to put his programs
- into practice. Thereafter, the fate of his Administration should
- be decided by the stern pragmatic test: Do those programs work?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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