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- <text id=91TT1070>
- <title>
- May 20, 1991: Five Who Fit The Bill
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 20, 1991 Five Who Could Be Vice President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Five Who Fit the Bill
- </hdr><body>
- <p>If Bush wanted a new Vice President, he would not have to look
- far for candidates who are competent and compatible
- </p>
- <p> Savvy, Gravitas And a Good Resume--DICK CHENEY
- </p>
- <p> Pros: Experience in Congress, the White House and Cabinet;
- proven loyalty; solid right-wing credentials.
- </p>
- <p> Cons: Heart problems; home state of Wyoming has few electoral
- votes.
- </p>
- <p> Scenario: By having a savvy pro as backup, Bush can reassure
- conservative voters.
- </p>
- <p> The President could choose no more experienced
- man-in-waiting than Dick Cheney. Consider his resume: Secretary
- of Defense; former White House chief of staff; former Republican
- whip in the House of Representatives; co-author with wife Lynne,
- who heads the National Endowment for the Humanities, of a
- lively book about past leaders of the House. Cheney is a
- pragmatic conservative who earned the respect of liberal
- Democrats with his good humor and willingness to hear--if not
- heed--opposing arguments.
- </p>
- <p> At 50, Cheney is a political generation younger than Bush.
- Yet he conveys a sense of assurance and gravitas--what the
- British call bottom--that the callow Quayle may never attain.
- </p>
- <p> The son of a former Department of Agriculture employee,
- Cheney was born in Nebraska but grew up in Caspar, Wyo. He won
- a scholarship to Yale but dropped out after three semesters. "I
- wasn't a serious student," Cheney told the Washington Post.
- After bumming around the West for a couple of years, he enrolled
- at the University of Wyoming and graduated in 1965 with a B.A.
- in political science.
- </p>
- <p> While working toward a doctorate in that subject at the
- University of Wisconsin, Cheney plunged into politics and hardly
- ever looked back. He went to Washington in 1968 as a staffer to
- a Republican Congressman, who soon loaned him to Donald
- Rumsfeld, head of the Office of Economic Opportunity. When
- Rumsfeld moved to Nixon's White House as counsellor, Cheney went
- along as his deputy. He escaped the Watergate tarnish by
- resigning in 1973 to work for a firm of Washington lobbyists.
- </p>
- <p> A year later, Rumsfeld and Cheney were back in the White
- House as part of Gerald Ford's transition team. Cheney succeeded
- his old pal as chief of staff, gaining a reputation as a cool,
- self-effacing, politically shrewd manager. After Ford's loss to
- Jimmy Carter, Cheney ran for Wyoming's one seat in the House.
- He won, although during the G.O.P. primary he suffered the first
- of his three heart attacks, at the age of 37.
- </p>
- <p> In his six terms in Congress Cheney built a rock-solid
- conservative record, supporting such favorite Reagan programs
- as Star Wars and military aid to Nicaragua's contras. Despite
- his lack of military expertise, the Senate easily confirmed him
- as Secretary of Defense after rejecting Bush's first choice,
- John Tower. Cheney quickly showed his mettle by publicly
- censuring the Air Force chief of staff for appearing to
- negotiate strategic missile-deployment options with Congress
- without authorization. In joint TV appearances with General
- Colin Powell during the gulf war, Cheney impressed Bush--not
- to mention millions of other Americans--as a captain in
- command.
- </p>
- <p> Cheney's record and his proven skills at stroking Congress
- would be solid pluses for the Defense Secretary as a running
- mate for Bush. Some Washington insiders believe he would take
- the job if offered it. He is very low key as a campaign orator,
- however, and three years ago he underwent a heart bypass
- operation. His doctor says he's fine. But Democrats could, not
- unfairly, ask whether the men on a Bush-Cheney team had a good
- ticker between the two of them.
- </p>
- <p> First in War, Second in Peace?--COLIN POWELL
- </p>
- <p> Pros: A war hero with experience in foreign relations; a
- black candidate with "crossover" appeal to whites.
- </p>
- <p> Cons: Has never held elective office; may be a closet
- liberal.
- </p>
- <p> Scenario: If Bush feels confident of winning, the choice of
- Powell would allow him to lure the black vote while
- putting Willie Horton behind him.
- </p>
- <p> No sooner had the Persian Gulf war ended when polls showed
- that a large majority of Americans preferred Colin Powell to
- Dan Quayle as a running mate for Bush in 1992. Powell's
- response was double edged. "I have no interest in politics at
- the moment," he declared. At this moment, at least, no one is
- even sure whether Powell leans toward the Republicans or the
- Democrats. (He's registered as an Independent.) But if the
- Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff could be persuaded to
- reconsider his not quite Shermanesque refusal, Bush could hardly
- choose a more symbolically powerful running mate--or a more
- capable one. During the war, Powell not only became a national
- presence but emerged as a model of Americans as they like to
- imagine themselves. He seemed a man of action who was deeply
- reflective as well--direct, lucid and unflappable. His
- presence on the ticket would be a palpable reminder of the
- (mostly) successful U.S. war in the gulf.
- </p>
- <p> While Quayle sometimes brings to mind Bush's own
- privileged background and occasional air of pale inaction,
- Powell could underscore the side of Bush that the President
- would like voters to keep in mind: the grave and decisive
- commander. The tale of Powell's childhood in the South Bronx,
- where his parents were Jamaican immigrants, could even provide
- a countervailing mythology if the Democrats nominate Mario
- Cuomo, with his famous saga of growing up in nearby Queens as
- the son of an immigrant Italian grocer.
- </p>
- <p> Powell is perceived by some critics as a "political
- general," closely attuned to congressional sensitivities and the
- slow drag of the legislative process. But such proclivities
- could just as easily be read as assets for a Vice President.
- Though he has never held elective office, he can claim almost
- two decades of political experience in Washington. After
- completing two tours in Vietnam and serving in a series of other
- military posts, Powell came to the attention of official
- Washington in 1972, when a White House fellowship placed him in
- the Office of Management and Budget. He rarely ventured outside
- the Beltway again, meanwhile filling some of the most powerful
- jobs in America, including National Security Adviser to Ronald
- Reagan and his current post as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
- Staff. "I don't know anybody in this town who's served so long
- in such sensitive jobs who's been as free of criticism as
- Colin," says former Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger,
- Powell's onetime boss.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his impressive credentials, the most potent
- quality that Powell would bring to the Bush ticket would be his
- race. For the most part the general has sidestepped any attempt
- to categorize him as a prominent African-American. And for the
- most part he has succeeded. Yet the significance of making
- Powell the first black nominee for the vice presidency would be
- profound. In narrow political terms, it would almost certainly
- attract large numbers of black voters who could otherwise be
- counted on to support the Democrats. It would go far toward
- allowing George Bush to put behind him the dismal misuse of
- Willie Horton in 1988. But no matter what Powell's presence
- might mean for the Republican ticket, more important by far is
- what it would mean for the nation.
- </p>
- <p> Talk Softly and Carry a Big State--PETE WILSON
- </p>
- <p> Pros: Activist Governor of big state, appeals to
- independents.
- </p>
- <p> Cons: Not close to Bush, limited executive experience.
- </p>
- <p> Scenario: California's big lode of Electoral College votes
- is essential to recapturing the White House.
- </p>
- <p> If Bush were to dump Dan Quayle for Pete Wilson, voters
- might be forgiven for thinking the new G.O.P. ticket was
- composed of clones. Drawling a speech on the hustings, the
- recently elected Governor of California sounds amazingly like
- the President. When he screws up his face, he even looks a bit
- like Bush. There is a political resemblance as well: both are
- moderates distrusted by the Republican right wing.
- </p>
- <p> Conservatives' misgivings might not dissuade Bush from
- selecting Wilson if Republican strategists concluded that the
- President's re-election chances were in jeopardy. Because
- California's population grew 6 million, to more than 29 million
- during the 1980s, the state will have 54 electoral votes in the
- 1992 election--nearly one-fifth the 270 needed to capture the
- White House. Despite a lack of charisma so glaring that the Los
- Angeles Times recently dubbed him Robopol, Wilson, 57, knows how
- to carry California. He has won three tough statewide elections,
- including a 49%-46% defeat of feisty Democrat Dianne Feinstein
- in last year's Governor's race.
- </p>
- <p> Wilson would also be an appropriate choice if Bush wants
- to beckon to the political center outside California. Wilson is a
- solid supporter of a strong U.S. military and reduced
- government spending. But his approval of abortion and advocacy
- of limits on oil drilling would appeal to youngish suburbanites,
- who, for the first time, may be a majority of voters in next
- year's race. G.O.P. conservatives are not likely to abandon a
- Bush-Wilson ticket, but there is a political risk: if it won,
- Wilson would have to leave California in the hands of a
- Democratic Lieutenant Governor and the Democratic-led
- legislature.
- </p>
- <p> Like countless other Californians, Wilson came from
- someplace else: Chicago born, he grew up in St. Louis. He got
- his start in politics as a law student at the University of
- California, Berkeley, where he organized a campus Young
- Republicans Club. In 1971, after serving five years in the state
- assembly, Wilson was elected mayor of San Diego. During three
- terms in city hall, he imposed restrictions on the city's
- untrammeled growth.
- </p>
- <p> In 1982, Wilson ran for California's then vacant Senate
- seat and beat ex-Governor Jerry Brown. Wilson was a true-blue
- Reaganite in backing the Strategic Defense Initiative and Robert
- Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court. But he also voted to
- override the President's veto of civil rights legislation.
- </p>
- <p> In his four months as Governor, Wilson has sought to
- establish himself as a tough fiscal manager. Confronted by a
- stagnating state economy, a $12.6 billion budget gap, and a
- drought that has threatened California agriculture, Wilson has
- proposed slashing welfare payments and state aid to local school
- systems. The state's voters appear impressed by his activism,
- even though the success of such proposals remains to be seen.
- </p>
- <p> Wilson's aides say the Governor would not leap to join the
- ticket, although he makes little effort to conceal his plans to
- run for President in 1996. But Wilson might be tempted, since
- the exposure he would gain by serving as the President's
- standby could help him to achieve that goal.
- </p>
- <p> From Kansas with Plenty of Moxie--NANCY KASSEBAUM
- </p>
- <p> Pros: An independent woman from a conservative corn-belt
- state.
- </p>
- <p> Cons: Her pro-abortion, pro-ERA stands have offended the
- Republican right wing.
- </p>
- <p> Scenario: If early polls show women voters leaning toward the
- Democrats, Bush may look for a magnet to attract
- them.
- </p>
- <p> It's hard to imagine Nancy Kassebaum playing second
- fiddle, even on a national ticket. The three-term Kansas Senator--one of just two women in the upper house of Congress--is
- famous for the independent streak that led her to oppose Ronald
- Reagan on school prayer, Star Wars and a balanced-budget
- amendment while supporting abortion rights and sanctions against
- South Africa. Despite powerful pressure from her own party, she
- was the only Republican to vote against George Bush's choice of
- John Tower to be his Secretary of Defense.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps she inherited her ornery side from her late
- father, Alf Landon, the 1936 Republican presidential candidate
- and longtime icon of Plains state Republicanism. Wherever it
- came from, her independence has helped make Kassebaum her
- state's most popular elected official--take that, Robert Dole!--while at the same time leaving the G.O.P. right wing deeply
- suspicious of her.
- </p>
- <p> Her undoctrinaire conservatism could be just the thing,
- however, to help the G.O.P. attract suburban swing voters who
- may identify with the party on economics but are put off by the
- more strident right-wing positions on social questions like
- abortion rights. Kassebaum's unemphatic but unmistakable
- feminism could also help Bush close the gender gap by luring
- female voters away from the Democratic Party. Her recognized
- talent for building coalitions would make her an effective
- lobbyist for the Administration on Capitol Hill, which is one
- role that Vice Presidents customarily play.
- </p>
- <p> Kassebaum is not the only prominent Republican woman whom
- Bush might consider. The short list could include U.S. Trade
- Representative Carla Hills; former Secretary of Transportation
- Elizabeth Dole; and Secretary of Labor Lynn Martin, a Bush
- favorite who helped him prepare for his 1984 vice-presidential
- debate against Geraldine Ferraro.
- </p>
- <p> None of them, however, can boast the legislative
- experience and proven vote-getting ability of Kassebaum. But if
- Bush chooses the Kansas Senator, he should not expect a retiring
- running mate. After she was named deputy chair of the 1988
- Republican National Convention, she passed up the opening night,
- preferring instead to attend a county fair in Abilene, Kans. As
- she pointedly told a Wichita newspaper, "I'm happy to speak on
- substantive issues. But to be treated as a bauble on the tree
- is not particularly constructive, is it?"
- </p>
- <p> Where He Goes Dixie Follows?--CARROLL CAMPBELL
- </p>
- <p> Pros: A leading force in the G.O.P. push for electoral
- supremacy in the South; a conservative with strong
- views on education.
- </p>
- <p> Cons: An unknown to most voters; little experience outside
- his state.
- </p>
- <p> Scenario: Bush needs to counter a Democratic ticket that
- includes a Southerner.
- </p>
- <p> If few Americans are familiar with the South Carolina
- Governor, the President knows him well. Bush included Carroll
- Campbell on his short list of vice-presidential possibilities
- in 1988. Since then, the 50-year-old Governor has only enhanced
- his image as a prime mover in the G.O.P. effort to push the
- South more firmly into the Republican column.
- </p>
- <p> Campbell's political fortunes have been a bellwether of
- the Southern white voter shift away from the Democratic Party.
- In 1978 Campbell became the first Republican ever to be elected
- to Congress from his state's fourth district. Eight years
- later, when Democrats still outnumbered Republicans in the state
- legislature 6 to 1, he became just the second Republican to be
- elected Governor since Reconstruction. Though he squeaked by
- with 51% of the vote, he racked up 71% last November after a
- re-election campaign that pitted him against a black opponent,
- state senator Theo Mitchell.
- </p>
- <p> An early and vocal supporter of Ronald Reagan, Campbell
- has attempted to position himself as a nondoctrinaire
- conservative. Though he sides with the right against abortion
- and for school prayer, he has linked himself to issues like
- education and the environment. In a state whose per pupil
- expenditures rank near the bottom nationally, Campbell has
- helped increase state funding for schools. He has also provided
- money for public health programs to combat infant mortality.
- </p>
- <p> Campbell has known Bush since the early 1970s. A man who
- can spin some of the funniest shaggy-dog stories ever heard
- around a cracker barrel, he has the shoes-up-on-the-coffee-table
- style that the President likes. More important for a campaigner,
- he's a relaxed and confident speaker in public.
- </p>
- <p> He could still be vulnerable over lingering charges that
- he exploited anti-Semitic sentiments during his 1978
- congressional campaign, in which the Democratic candidate was
- Jewish. Campbell angrily denies the charge, though there remain
- suspicions that his unofficial campaign adviser, the late Lee
- Atwater, may have done some underground Jew baiting on
- Campbell's behalf. A more immediate problem for Campbell is that
- he's an unknown to most voters. Then again, so was Dan Quayle
- in 1988.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-