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- <text id=93TT1729>
- <title>
- May 17, 1993: Remaking of the President
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 41
- Remaking of the President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Accused of lacking focus, Clinton hires a new aide, pushes back
- the health-care plan and apologizes to Bob Dole. But will he
- go to bed earlier?
- </p>
- <p>By MARGARET CARLSON/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> In the middle of the afternoon last Wednesday and in a
- rare break from meetings on Bosnia, the White House first team
- met in the Roosevelt Room to get the Administration back "on
- message." There were the President and Hillary, Vice President
- Al Gore and Tipper and the senior staff, plus Democratic
- National Committee chairman David Wilhelm and campaign
- consultants Paul Begala and James Carville. The day before, the
- President had surprised reporters by admitting in the Oval
- Office that he could use a little "tighter coordination" and "a
- little better focus."
- </p>
- <p> Hillary, the Clinton who has both focus and coordination
- already, said people had to understand what the President was
- trying to accomplish and the best way to do that was for him to
- resume trips outside the Beltway. Thus Clinton is scheduled to
- visit Cleveland, Chicago and New York City this week to sell his
- budget proposals. One of those present said Carville pointed to
- Clinton and said it was important that the President should not
- become part of the "culture of Washington" that prefers more of
- the same over change. Clinton has begun quoting some of
- Carville's latest folk wisdom: "If you never want to stumble,
- stand still."
- </p>
- <p> The White House knew matters had deteriorated when
- Clinton, making a routine appearance at the White House
- Correspondents Association's annual dinner the previous weekend,
- bombed with jokes about Senate minority leader Robert Dole and
- radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh that turned out not to be
- funny. The dinners are one of the few times that the permanent
- Washington establishment is primed to fawn over the President.
- But the range of acceptable presidential behavior is narrow,
- from self-deprecation to groveling, and by no means can the
- evening be used to settle scores--even with the person who
- killed your stimulus package. The dinner produced three days of
- apologies and re tractions and gave Dole the opportunity to
- charge that Clinton has a bunch of "sophomoric kids working for
- him, engaging in minor-league politics."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton moved quickly to add one major grown-up to his
- staff: Roy Neel, the top adviser to Vice President Al Gore for
- the past 15 years, joined Mark Gearan as deputy to chief of
- staff Thomas McLarty. Neel and Gearan will handle the day-to-day
- operations, allowing McLarty to concentrate on minding Clinton
- and worrying about long-range planning, which will initially
- mean holding three-day-a-week 8:30 a.m. conferences aimed at
- shepherding what remains of Clinton's economic plan through
- Congress. Neel at 47 exceeds the median age in the White House
- by at least a decade and brings adult supervision to the place.
- But no one has a mean word to say about Neel, and therein may
- lie a problem. Says a White House aide: "We now have the three
- nicest guys in the world--Mack, Mark and Roy--in the chief
- of staff operation."
- </p>
- <p> One of the people who could make the White House stop
- behaving like a dorm on a perpetual all-nighter is Harold Ickes,
- who took himself out of the running for the deputy chief of
- staff job in January when an old allegation surfaced about a
- union he once represented having ties to organized crime. The
- President consults Ickes frequently, and he will be spending
- time at the White House this week. Associates urging Ickes to
- do more say that he does not want to until the union inquiry is
- completed.
- </p>
- <p> The other gray-haired presence called in by the President
- is old friend and former Inaugural chairman Harry Thomason, who
- will temporarily move into an office in the Old Executive
- Office Building. One aide says Thomason is the perfect person
- to bring in: "He has three hit television shows, $40 million and
- so no agenda but the President's." What will Thoma son be
- doing? "Whatever is asked," Thomason replies.
- </p>
- <p> The wisdom about Clinton is that he doesn't make the same
- mistake twice, but he can make the same mistake for a long time.
- Even in a week when the President was trying to focus, he
- introduced an $8 billion city-renewal plan, legislation for
- campaign-finance reform, a scaled-back immunization program and
- prepared to send up a pared-down stimulus package. He is as slow
- to criticize his staff as to end a meeting, as quick to solicit
- advice as to ignore it, and he has a weakness for imposing
- unrealistic deadlines on himself. He admitted to this final
- failing last week, remembering that it was his self-imposed
- Christmas deadline on filling his Cabinet that led him to pick
- Zoe Baird as Attorney General. When he decided this week to
- postpone announcing his health-care plan until mid-June, he did
- so because he doesn't want to have a legislative pileup. But he
- also admitted, says an aide, that "getting it right is more
- important than getting it out on time."
- </p>
- <p> Staff changes are likely to continue this week while
- Clinton takes his program on the road again, trying to shore up
- his 48% job-approval rating. But the one thing the toughest
- staff can't do is put him to bed. On Wednesday, after the
- President finished a round of late-night meetings on Bosnia, he
- went back to the residence and unwound watching the Los Angeles
- Clippers-Houston Rockets basketball game. He did not get to bed
- until well after midnight.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-