home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1654>
- <link 93TO0092>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Urging The Boss To Lighten Up
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 32
- Urging the Boss to Lighten Up
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> The annual retreat for Democratic Senators in the
- Virginia Tidewater is usually a relaxed affair, with the
- attractions of golf, beer and barbecue. But for Bill Clinton it
- was a chance for another 12-hour day of nonstop talk about
- health care, Bosnia and the deficit. As his hosts tried to sneak
- in a drink or a bite of supper from the buffet, Clinton was all
- business and going strong, guzzling mineral water straight from
- the bottle and grilling individual Senators about how they would
- reform campaign finance or move the pesky crime bill.
- </p>
- <p> Senators normally prize that kind of courtship, but by 10
- p.m., Patrick Leahy had heard enough. The playful Vermont
- Democrat took the floor and suggested to Clinton, "Mr.
- President, you can't keep up this pace. The best advice I can
- give you is, Relax, take a day off once in a while, and get some
- sleep. It would be good for you, it would be good for the Vice
- President, and it would sure be good for your staff."
- </p>
- <p> Sitting next to Hillary Rodham Clinton, Alabama's Howell
- Heflin rose and joined in: "The First Lady wants to go to bed.
- If you would just stop answering questions, you could go to bed
- and take the First Lady with you." The room broke into applause.
- </p>
- <p> But the battle for the President's metabolism was far from
- over. Instead the final week of Clinton's first 100 days
- resembled a special edition of an Oprah Winfrey show on
- "Presidents Who Try to Do Too Much and the People Who Love
- Them." Clinton's desire to accomplish five or six major
- legislative initiatives this year galvanized Democrats in
- Congress, Cabinet officers and White House aides into
- intervening with the policy-addicted President. A show of force,
- went the thinking, might budge Clinton into lightening his
- legislative load. Otherwise, Clinton's many cherished proposals
- might all go the way of his defunct economic-stimulus package.
- </p>
- <p> Budget Director Leon Panetta led the charge. In an
- interview with a dozen reporters last Monday, the plainspoken
- former Congressman declared that the President's Russian-aid
- bill was in trouble, the North American Free Trade Agreement was
- "dead" and cherished health-care reforms were in for tough
- sledding. Panetta noted that elements of Clinton's economic plan--the energy tax, spending plans, key tax credits--were in
- jeopardy. To overcome these challenges, Clinton must "define his
- priorities" more clearly, Panetta said.
- </p>
- <p> Such startling candor shook the White House just as it was
- warming up the 100-days fog machine. But behind the scenes, many
- officials were quietly grateful. Panetta's comments echoed
- warnings from top aides in recent weeks that Clinton was, as one
- put it, "everywhere, and nowhere, at once." Though officials
- dutifully huffed that Panetta was "off the message," they
- hastened to note that they concurred fully with his conclusions.
- Within days, Clinton had throttled back; his proposal for
- reforming campaign finance had been postponed, and measures on
- crime and welfare reform were sidetracked. As a relieved
- Democrat put it, "What Leon did was help the patient out of the
- denial phase."
- </p>
- <p> The lighter agenda is in keeping with public sentiment. In
- a TIME/CNN poll last week, only 37% of those surveyed believe
- Clinton has had the right priorities and 49% think he is
- overextended. Another worrisome sign for the President is that
- Americans are growing skittish about his economic plan. In late
- February, a TIME/CNN poll found that only 35% believed that
- Clinton's plan would increase taxes too much, but by last week
- that number had grown to 57%. Overall, Clinton's job-approval
- rating has slipped from 56% in late February to 48% last week.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the struggle over presidential pacing is
- whether the Administration should push ahead quickly with
- Hillary Clinton's soon-to-be-announced plan to reform the
- nation's health-care system. Clinton's team and its
- congressional allies are deeply divided over the matter and
- extremely reluctant to talk about it. One faction, led by House
- Speaker Tom Foley and backed quietly by officials at Treasury
- and the Budget Office, would prefer to put health-care reform
- off indefinitely, certain that the vast majority of Americans
- are going to pay more to get less. A White House official
- dismissed the faction, regarded internally as reactionary, with
- a wave: "We're just going to have to drag them along for the
- ride."
- </p>
- <p> The liberal faction wants to move health care immediately,
- despite the costs. This group, which includes Mrs. Clinton,
- Health Secretary Donna Shalala, Labor Secretary Robert Reich,
- Veterans chief Jesse Brown and various members of Congress,
- argues that it is too expensive and risky to wait until next
- year. They believe the long-term, deficit-reducing potential of
- health reform is essential to meet Clinton's economic goals.
- And, they point out, passing health care in an election year
- will be next to impossible because of the taxes that will be
- required. One member of this group argued last week that by
- pushing for health-care reform, Clinton will "get credit for
- being bold."
- </p>
- <p> In the middle are the straddlers, a large group that
- agrees health care must be reformed but is concerned that a big
- push now will cause Clinton to lose control of his already
- shaky economic plan. In this category fall the likes of top
- White House economic officials and political advisers who warn
- that Congress can deal with only one big problem at a time.
- Asks a White House aide, "We're going to have a big fight over
- all these painful taxes and then, suddenly, we're going to add
- health care too?"
- </p>
- <p> For now, Clinton is siding with the straddlers. Aides say
- he may not fully unveil health care until June, hoping that by
- then the House and Senate will have nearly finished wrestling
- with unpopular tax increases and spending cuts in the economic
- plan. But they add that Clinton will then have no choice but to
- push hard for reform, even if he harbors doubts about his
- ability to win passage this year. Any hesitation, aides say,
- could doom the plan.
- </p>
- <p> Opponents shouldn't count on it, though, for part of
- Clinton resists giving in to skeptics. He has talked
- increasingly of late about "changing the way Washington works,"
- and he sees health care as a powerful weapon in that task. As
- he said to one Senator last weekend in Virginia, "I don't have
- to have this job. I like it, and I wanted it. But I didn't take
- this job not to change things. That's what I want, and that's
- what I think we Democrats, with some Republicans, can do. I'm
- willing to take the risk, and I hope you'll take it with me."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-