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- <text id=92TT0771>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Democrats:Watch Yer Back
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- DEMOCRATS
- Watch Yer Back
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Lurching through the streets of New York, Brown and Clinton
- discover it is better to mug than be mugged
- </p>
- <p>By Sam Allis
- </p>
- <p> On a day last week when Bill Clinton took his campaign
- uptown to deliver a sober foreign-policy address, Jerry Brown
- and Jesse Jackson were downtown in Greenwich Village behaving
- like a couple of overactive children. They planned to march
- together to the city's board of elections and deliver 100,000
- new voter applications. The mayhem potential in this maneuver
- was high, even by the chaotic standards of New York City.
- </p>
- <p> Sure enough, Brown lurched along carrying the American
- flag in an eddy of reporters and supporters. Then he and
- Jackson, flanked by his own entourage, linked up in the middle
- of a street like the two construction gangs completing the Union
- Pacific Railroad. The significance of this union was unclear,
- but all hell broke loose anyway. Both men were delighted with
- the media frenzy they had ignited. "Everything is perfect,"
- intoned Jacques Barzaghi, Brown's spooky alter ego, clad in his
- trademark black beret.
- </p>
- <p> The New York primary has always been surreal. Front
- runners get squashed there. Jimmy Carter was up 27 points four
- days before the 1980 voting but got flattened by Ted Kennedy.
- That is why Clinton arrived with a huge delegate lead (1,021 to
- 164) and much dread. He wanted to put Brown away in convincing
- fashion. This was not to be. In the last days of the campaign,
- a quarter of New York voters remained undecided, and Clinton's
- healthy lead in the polls had the feel of crepe.
- </p>
- <p> In some other life Jerry Brown must have been born in New
- York City. Unlike Clinton, he immediately navigated the city's
- politics with the Zen of a cabdriver weaving his way around
- potholes. "California is the hurly-burly closest to New York,"
- he explained. He defined his constituency and mauled his
- opponent. He grafted disaffected strains of labor, minority and
- environmental blocs with those voters who are simply furious at
- everything. "Someone like Jerry Brown is the future of politics
- in this country," says Michael Manza, 31, a New York Stock
- Exchange clerk.
- </p>
- <p> For Clinton, New York was a must-win state. A loss to
- Brown would reignite efforts among Democratic insiders to find
- another candidate. But Brown's slashing street attacks have
- eroded Clinton's claim to be the agent of change against Bush's
- ancien regime. "Clinton is the personification of a system and
- a politics that don't work," Brown barked. "I constitute a
- challenge to the failed status quo." Only in the last few days
- of the campaign, when Clinton loosened up and displayed more
- passion on the stump, did he seem to hit his stride.
- </p>
- <p> At least initially, Clinton also confronted the ominous
- silence of Governor Mario Cuomo, who professed neutrality the
- way a cobra claims no interest in a passing mouse. Clinton,
- after all, called Cuomo a "mean son of a bitch" in the now
- famous taped telephone conversation with Gennifer Flowers. Cuomo
- is a man who holds a grudge, and it was no surprise when he and
- Brown had their picture taken together nine critical days
- before he met with Clinton. After meeting Clinton in Albany at
- week's end, however, Cuomo not only said their differences had
- been buried but paired glowing praise for the Arkansan with an
- extremely tepid mention of Brown. "As a package, Bill Clinton
- will make in my opinion a superb President," said Cuomo. "Jerry
- Brown, I will support if he is the candidate, given the
- alternative."
- </p>
- <p> Finally there was the ghost of Paul Tsongas, whose name
- remains on the New York ballot despite the suspension of his
- candidacy last month. In one poll, Tsongas retains a higher
- favorability rating (40%) than either Brown or Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> Both Clinton and Brown got caught in the jaws of the New
- York media, which seemed determined to trap them in a game of
- trivial pursuit. CLINTON ON THE S-POT, blared the New York Post
- about his recent admission that he tried marijuana as a graduate
- student. The Daily News chimed in about Brown's lack of support
- for New York City during its fiscal crisis in 1975: HE
- MOONBEAMED BIG APPLE. Appearing on Donahue, which is taped in
- Manhattan, Clinton was subjected to a half-hour interrogation
- about his sex life that seemed endless. The next day Brown came
- on the program and was asked if he was gay. "If you want to
- know, Do I go out with girls? Yes, I do."
- </p>
- <p> The worst self-inflicted wound was Clinton's marijuana
- confession. The damage flowed less from the admission than from
- the way Clinton phrased it. In the past, when asked if he had
- ever used drugs, Clinton replied that he had never broken any
- state or federal laws. Only when a reporter crafted a surgically
- worded question asking if he had ever broken the laws of another
- country did Clinton finally acknowledge trying pot "a time or
- two" while a graduate student in England more than 20 years ago.
- He added that he hadn't enjoyed it and "didn't inhale it"--touching off skeptical guffaws from baby boomers across the
- land.
- </p>
- <p> Brown has credibility problems of his own. A New York
- Times poll showed that 59% of voters think he says whatever
- voters want to hear. His opportunistic shifts on issues over the
- years led one local writer to conclude that he has more
- positions than the Kama Sutra. Clinton sought to exploit Brown's
- reputation for shiftiness by harping on his rival's plan for a
- 13% flat tax to replace the current tax code. The flat tax has
- been pilloried by most economists as regressive and disastrous
- to the poor. It would be especially costly for New Yorkers
- because deductions for state and local taxes, which are hefty
- in the state, would not be allowed in Brown's scheme. Clinton
- says that what he calls "Jerry's tax" is "the most reactionary
- proposal in a presidential campaign in my lifetime." Even
- Brown's supporters have problems with it. One sign at a Brown
- rally read, JERRY, I'M VOTING FOR YOU BUT PLEASE DROP THE FLAT
- TAX.
- </p>
- <p> While Brown hectored voters like Savonarola about the
- corrupt political system in Washington, Clinton worked two key
- blocs of Democratic primary voters--blacks and Jews. At the
- end of last week he held a 2-to-1 lead over Brown with both
- groups. Clinton stands to benefit among Jews, who constitute
- about 30% of the Democratic primary vote, from Brown's offer to
- Jackson to be his running mate (an offer Jackson has coyly
- avoided accepting thus far). Brown felt the heat when he
- addressed the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York two
- days after Clinton had received a warm reception from the group.
- The mere mention of Jackson, who offended Jews by referring to
- New York as "Hymietown" in 1984, triggered boos, hisses and
- outbursts from the audience. "This is good," observed Brown, who
- craves conflict as much as Clinton avoids it. But he had no
- comeback when a member of the audience stood up and told him,
- "We are certainly not opposed to a black Vice President. We are
- opposed to the person. We think you have not chosen wisely."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's fears about his campaign unraveling under
- Brown's relentless assaults were reflected in a startling
- reversal of debate strategy. After avoiding a rich diet of
- face-to-face confrontation with Brown, Clinton suddenly
- challenged Brown to six debates. Two of the resulting showdowns,
- earnest discussions of urban problems, showed how close both men
- are on most domestic issues. They agree that Bush has abandoned
- the cities. Both nod vigorously to virtually any question about
- increased funding for urban needs.
- </p>
- <p> But the similarity between the two candidates on some
- issues is a mirage. There is, in fact, a huge gap between
- Clinton's laundry list of proposals on the economy, education
- reform, foreign policy and other issues and Brown's mercurial
- tendency to invent policy on the fly. In New York those
- differences were often overwhelmed by campaign hoopla and media
- sideshows--useful training for the general election in the
- fall.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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