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- <text id=91TT0840>
- <title>
- Apr. 22, 1991: Back To Reality
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 22, 1991 Nancy Reagan:Is She THAT Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- Back to Reality
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Americans focus again on problems at home, Bush's approval
- rating is falling. But that won't necessarily help Democrats.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington,
- Marc Hequet/St. Paul and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> No role was ever so becoming to George Bush as the one he
- played during the war against Iraq: resolute and successful
- Commander in Chief of America's armed forces. It was an
- opportunity that came just in time. After a long honeymoon with
- the American people, the President's baffling flip-flops on
- taxes and a gathering recession caused his approval rating to
- fall to a so-so 53% by last autumn. The buildup to war followed
- by the breathtaking weeks of combat made Americans forget all
- that. Soon after Kuwait was liberated in February, Bush's
- popularity rocketed to an unprecedented 86%. Democrats could
- only gape in awe at his upward trajectory.
- </p>
- <p> But now the euphoria is wearing thin. As the troops head
- back to the U.S., misgivings about the nation and its future
- have also come marching home. A TIME/CNN survey conducted last
- week by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman indicates trends that are
- not totally unexpected but are nonetheless significant: Bush's
- popularity is eroding and the public is increasingly concerned
- about the economy. Democrats may want to think twice before
- conceding the 1992 election in advance.
- </p>
- <p> The TIME/CNN poll shows Bush still enjoying an
- extraordinary approval rate of 76%--even Ronald Reagan stood
- at just 38% at a comparable point in his first term. But that
- represents a 10-point drop from March 7, one week after American
- and allied troops rolled into Kuwait City. White House officials
- took the dip in stride, claiming that they never put too much
- stock in the President's incredible postwar approval ratings and
- had always expected them to settle down to more realistic
- levels. "When he was at 70% it was great," said an official last
- week. "But 90% was just plain silly."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, growing concerns about domestic problems were
- starting to deflate Bush's gulf war bubble. Fears about the
- economy in particular were appearing increasingly nettlesome for
- the White House. Nearly half those questioned on March 7 said
- they thought the economy was in "fairly good" shape. By last
- week that number was down to 36%. At the same time, those who
- thought it was in "poor" condition had risen from 38% to 46%.
- </p>
- <p> Though there are a few glimmers of hope for economic
- recovery--housing starts in February were up 16.4% over the
- previous month--the present pain is nearer at hand.
- Unemployment went to 6.8% last month, up from 5.2% in June. All
- around the country, cities and states are contemplating new
- taxes and making painful cuts into budget funds for schools,
- police and other government services. Every time a bank totters
- or an S&L tumbles or an insurance company collapses into
- bankruptcy, a shudder goes through the nation. The old concerns
- about Bush's feckless approach to domestic issues are beginning
- to reappear. "The serious problems haven't been addressed," says
- Houston lawyer Patrick Dugan, a Bush supporter who usually votes
- Republican. "The deficit, S&Ls, plummeting real estate. People
- were scared during the war. All the Saddam rhetoric, they
- focused on that. Now all of a sudden, the problems are back and
- they're big, big, big."
- </p>
- <p> Still the picture is not entirely gloomy. The gulf war
- offered evidence of skillful American leadership and successful
- U.S. technology. To some, Bush's success in the gulf raised
- confidence in his potential on the domestic front. "He seemed
- like a different person during the war," says Watertown, Mass.,
- elementary school principal John Degnan. "He took tough
- positions and held to them." Concludes George Browning, an
- accountant in the La Canada-Flintridge suburb of Los Angeles:
- "He's no longer the wuss he once was. The war did close the
- books on that."
- </p>
- <p> White House aides point out that even as Bush focused on
- the gulf war, he did not neglect his domestic responsibilities.
- Since January, they note, he has laid the groundwork for a new
- banking plan, a new energy plan and a reduction in the number of
- military bases around the country, and has begun a big push for
- a free-trade zone for North America. This week he is scheduled
- to unveil a much anticipated national education strategy. Even
- before his popularity began to sag, Bush knew that he would have
- to attempt at least some domestic leadership in order to keep
- Democratic challengers at bay in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> In the international arena, however, Bush must be careful
- not to squander the political capital gained in the gulf war.
- Images of the President bonefishing in Florida while he
- formulated his slow and equivocal reaction to Saddam Hussein's
- crackdown on the Kurds have already raised some doubts. Bush
- also declared that progress on the Arab-Israeli question would
- be a priority immediately after the war ended. But during his
- trip to the region last week, Secretary of State James Baker
- made the kind of microscopic progress that is typical of
- movement through that quagmire.
- </p>
- <p> "What's back in the picture is the wimp factor," observes
- Robert Dallek, a professor of American political history at the
- University of California, Los Angeles. "We had a hand in
- creating these problems. Now President Bush is pulling back. It
- raises questions once again in people's minds as to what kind
- of strength he has as a leader." In part perhaps to thwart such
- criticisms, Bush last week ordered the U.S. military to take
- charge of relief efforts for Kurdish refugees in northern Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Democrats were quick to make the most of the poll results.
- "The public focus has changed from the situation in the gulf to
- our challenges back home," declared Democratic national
- chairman Ron Brown. "The 1992 presidential campaign will be
- decided on kitchen-table issues because Americans are concerned
- about their economic well-being." For weeks Tennessee Senator
- Albert Gore, a likely Democratic contender, has been telling
- anyone who would listen that Bush would turn out to be
- vulnerable in '92. "The decline in the President's poll numbers
- was inevitable," he says. "Real take-home pay after taxes is
- lower today than it was in 1959, the year before John Kennedy
- called for America to get moving again."
- </p>
- <p> Democrats, however, are poorly positioned to exploit the
- tiny cracks in Bush's armor. To do that, the party needs
- attention-getting spokesmen who can make a persuasive case
- against the Administration. But no leading Democrat has yet
- dared accept the challenge of running against Bush. The party
- has fielded just two contenders, who so far seem weightless:
- Virginia Governor Douglas Wilder and former Massachusetts
- Senator Paul Tsongas. When asked about their attitudes toward
- some Democratic candidates, 74% of those who took part in the
- TIME/CNN poll said they did not know enough about Tsongas to
- offer a judgment. For Wilder the number was only slightly
- better, 69%.
- </p>
- <p> "The Democrats could drive these numbers more if they had
- a few aggressive candidates, as they did in 1988, hammering us
- on the economy," says Linda DiVall, a Republican pollster. "In
- the absence of that, our side sets the agenda."
- </p>
- <p> The dearth of serious opposition, should it persist, could
- be Bush's greatest asset as he seeks to win a second term. The
- problem the Democrats face is neatly expressed by Barbara
- Kantorowicz of Shoreview, Minn., a single mother who ended nine
- years on welfare last year when she started work for a local
- social-service organization, the Family Violence Network.
- Meanwhile, her own day-to-day financial struggle goes on. "I'm
- struggling just as much as when I was on welfare," she sighs.
- Would she vote again for George Bush, as she did in 1988? Maybe.
- "There's no better person in sight," she shrugs. "Democrat or
- Republican." Now that Bush has begun to appear vulnerable,
- perhaps one or two more formidable challengers will decide to
- take him on.
- </p>
- <p>TIMEPOLL
- </p>
- <p>How well do you think things are going in the country these days?
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>March<cell>April
- <row><cell type=a>Very/fairly well<cell type=i>74%<cell type=i>59%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Do you approve of the way Presient Bush is handling his job as President?
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>March<cell>April
- <row><cell type=a>Approve<cell type=i>86%<cell type=i>76%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>How would you describe economic conditions in the country today?
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>March<cell>April
- <row><cell type=a>Very good<cell type=i>3%<cell type=i>3%
- <row><cell>Fairly good<cell>49%<cell>36%
- <row><cell>Poor<cell>38%<cell>46%
- <row><cell>Very poor<cell>8%<cell>13%
- </table>
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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