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- <text id=93TT1670>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Standing Tall
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUSTICE, Page 46
- Standing Tall
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The capital is all agog at the new Attorney General's
- outspoken honesty and toughness
- </p>
- <p>By STANLEY W. CLOUD WASHINGTON--With reporting by Cathy
- Booth/Miami and Michael Duffy, Julie Johnson and Elaine
- Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno was a young woman,
- so the story goes, she arrived one day at the family home near
- Florida's Everglades to find blood on the steps and a note on
- the door. "Don't go in," the note warned. "Dangerous alligator
- inside." No big deal, Reno's brother Bob told her: their
- mother, an alligator wrestler from way back, had been bitten
- while trying to cram a four-footer into a crate for shipment to
- the London Zoo. Mom was at the hospital having her hand sewn up.
- Janet and Bob found the offending alligator in the fireplace
- and, with the help of some local Indians, managed to send the
- beast at last on its way to England.
- </p>
- <p> Washington, a city that pulses with conformity, loves
- exotic visitors with colorful pasts, which helps explain the
- reception Reno has received in her two months on the job. But
- it is her performance under pressure that has sealed her stature
- in the capital. During a House Judiciary Committee hearing on
- the Waco disaster last week, Reno found herself under fire from
- Congressman John Conyers Jr. The outcome at Waco, Conyers
- declaimed, was "a profound disgrace to law enforcement in the
- United States of America." As for Reno, he continued, "You did
- the right thing by offering to resign. And now I'd like you to
- know that there is at least one member of Congress that isn't
- going to rationalize the death of two dozen children."
- </p>
- <p> Listening to Conyers' attack, the 54-year-old, 6-ft. 2-in.
- Reno thrust out her jaw and glared. Then, her voice quavering,
- she replied, "I haven't tried to rationalize the death of
- children, Congressman. I feel more strongly about it than you
- will ever know. But I have neither tried to rationalize the
- death of four ((Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms))
- agents, and I will not walk away from a compound where ATF
- agents had been killed by people who knew they were agents and
- leave them unsurrounded." Then she added, "Most of all,
- Congressman, I will not engage in recrimination."
- </p>
- <p> In that instant, Reno, who had already pretty much
- captivated Washington with one gutsy performance after another,
- achieved full-fledged folk-hero status. She was cheered by
- people throughout official Washington who had endured similar
- assaults by Conyers and other posturing lawmakers. She was
- cheered in the Clinton White House, where a welter of bad news
- had soured what was supposed to have been a celebration of the
- President's first 100 days in office. She was cheered on both
- sides of the aisle in Congress and in her own Justice
- Department, where a succession of 25-watt,
- responsibility-ducking Attorneys General had left morale lower
- than--well, lower than an alligator's belly.
- </p>
- <p> After the hearing, when Reno arrived back at the Justice
- Department on Pennsylvania Avenue, she received a standing
- ovation from the employees in her office. The next day Clinton
- paid a call on her at the department to announce his nomination
- of seven people to her senior staff and to bathe in a little of
- her reflected political glory.
- </p>
- <p> It is a measure of Washington's leadership drought that
- Reno--who has, after all, only stood her ground in defense of
- a decision that led to a disaster, said what she believes, and
- taken responsibility for her actions--is the toast of the
- town. Moreover, says a senior White House official, "the great
- thing about liberal lawyers who have been elected from southern
- Florida is that they know how to talk about political goals in
- ways that Americans find acceptable." In her new job, the
- anti-capital-punishment, pro-choice Reno will doubtless test
- that notion. But at present, the praise is all but unanimous.
- </p>
- <p> Reno, her sister and two brothers grew up on the family's
- acreage near the Everglades in a sprawling, un-air-conditioned,
- wood-and-stone house that her parents built by hand from the
- ground up. (Today the Reno spread is also home to about 35
- peacocks and peahens, all named Horace after the original pair
- that Jane Wood Reno hatched from a couple of eggs in 1946.)
- Janet's father Henry, a Danish immigrant who moved to Florida
- and worked as a reporter for 26 years at the Miami Herald, died
- in 1966. Jane Wood Reno was also a hard-drinking, chain-smoking
- reporter. When she died in December at 79, one local obituary
- described her as an "honorary Indian princess, prize-winning
- journalist, gator wrestler, peacock raiser, certified genius,
- carpenter ((and)) skunk trapper."
- </p>
- <p> The obit did not note that Jane Wood, like her mother
- before her, could also don white gloves and sip tea with the
- best of them. As Janet Reno, who likes to throw parties where
- her guests drink wine and read Shakespeare, commented to TIME
- last week, "The prime focus of my life has not been in watching
- my mother wrestle alligators." In any case, she comes from a
- wonderfully unorthodox family. Her sister Maggy is a county
- commissioner in central Florida, while her brother Bob is a
- columnist for New York Newsday, and brother Mark is a tugboat
- captain.
- </p>
- <p> Contradictions don't seem to bother the Attorney General
- at all. She opposes capital punishment, but as state attorney
- in Miami sought the death penalty in 80 cases. She is known as a
- tough crime fighter, yet she supports programs aimed at
- eradicating the social causes of crime. Even defense attorneys
- admire her. Says Jeffrey S. Weiner, immediate past president of
- the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers: "I predict
- she'll be such a good Attorney General that she'll end up on the
- Supreme Court."
- </p>
- <p> The Waco aftermath is only one of Reno's concerns. She
- wants to re-establish the Justice Department as a defender of
- civil rights and to lift the morale of that vast,
- 90,000-employee department, with an annual budget of $10
- billion. She still has a number of unfilled positions among her
- senior staff, including chief of the all-important criminal
- division. Moreover, a preponderance of the top political
- appointments that have been filled have gone not to people whom
- Reno selected but to Friends of Bill's--or Hillary's. Said
- Reno tactfully last week: "I have had continuing discussion with
- the White House to develop a team that represented agreements
- between us both."
- </p>
- <p> The choice of candidates suggested that the White House
- has yet to draw many lessons from the process that gave them--belatedly--their most popular Cabinet member. Clinton chose
- Reno only after two other candidates, Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood,
- went down in flames. Reno's background, like Clinton's, is far
- more multifaceted than those of many of the liberal, highbrow,
- public-interest-minded Yale Law School crowd who are the core of
- this Administration. ``Reno's success is a condemnation of the
- process by which the original choices were made," said a senior
- White House official. "It turns out that their buddies don't
- have a monopoly on all the legal talent in America."
- </p>
- <p> In the months ahead, Reno is going to have to wage major
- political offensives on behalf of legislation that she and
- Clinton support, notably the so-called Brady gun-control bill
- and the omnibus anti-crime package that would, among other
- things, place 100,000 more police officers on the nation's
- streets. She will play a role in filling retiring Justice Byron
- White's seat on the Supreme Court as well as 100 other
- federal-court vacancies, and she will have to advise Clinton on
- whether or not to retain the embattled William Sessions as
- director of the FBI. It is an agenda that will sorely test the
- staying power of her current popularity.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of the long, terrible day on which Ranch
- Apocalypse was reduced to ashes along with those in it, Janet
- Reno went home to the furnished apartment she is currently
- renting near her office. "I don't think I've ever been so--I
- guess lonely is the word," she said. Then she received two phone
- calls. The first message, from her sister: "That-a girl." The
- second, from the President: "That-a girl." By the end of last
- week's bravura performance, it was a sentiment that even John
- Conyers admitted sharing.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-