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- <text id=91TT1072>
- <title>
- May 20, 1991: Is He Really That Bad?
- </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 21
- COVER STORIES
- Is He Really That Bad?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Quayle does more--and does better--than his public image
- suggests, but sometimes he chafes at the need to be Bush's Bush
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> Less than a week after Saddam Hussein's tanks smashed into
- Kuwait last August, Dan Quayle found himself on a plane to
- Bogota, Colombia. Initially Quayle had not been keen about
- making the trip. Jetting off to South America while war clouds
- gathered in the Persian Gulf was not the sort of assignment that
- would show that the Vice President was "in the loop" at the
- White House. But George Bush insisted that his Vice President
- go. There was more to the trip than representing the U.S. at
- the inauguration of the new Colombian President.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle's real mission called for considerable diplomatic
- skill. He lobbied Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez to
- increase his country's oil production to make up for any
- shortfall resulting from the disruption in the gulf. Then, in
- two separate meetings, he pressed the leaders of Brazil and
- Argentina to stop transfers of ballistic-missile technology to
- Iraq. Within days, all three nations had complied with Quayle's
- requests.
- </p>
- <p> The Bogota trip was not a major turning point in pre-gulf
- war diplomacy. Nor should anyone confuse Quayle for a member of
- Bush's first string on international or domestic affairs. But
- the secret chores he performed on the Latin swing demonstrated
- that Quayle does more--and does better--than he is usually
- given credit for.
- </p>
- <p> Since taking office 27 months ago, the Vice President has
- sat on the bench like a sixth man, anxiously watching the
- action and filling in for the starters only as necessary. If he
- is not ready to step in for George Bush, he has taken advantage
- of every opportunity to learn on the job. Even as late-night
- comedians make him a laughingstock, Quayle has quietly
- established himself as the Administration's point man on a
- handful of issues. He has become a vigorous White House envoy
- to constituencies the President ignores. He has shrewdly begun
- to lay the groundwork for his own 1996 run for the White House.
- Quayle has become a Vice President in the Bush mold: a
- self-effacing, dutiful sidekick who will stand where the
- President points, as Bush sometimes does to Quayle in Rose
- Garden ceremonies, and will perform secret missions as needed.
- In other words, he has become the kind of Vice President Bush
- himself was.
- </p>
- <p> Once derided as a wimp, Bush can sympathize with Quayle's
- dilemma. Last week the two men spent 10 minutes in the Oval
- Office alone discussing the nation's latest "President Quayle
- scare." The next day Bush gave Quayle a public vote of
- confidence. "I see him in action," said Bush. ``I know what he's
- doing. He has been extraordinarily helpful, and I can't ask any
- more of him." Quayle's friends say he is calm about the
- controversy, sustained by Bush's unflagging endorsement. Notes
- one: "It would be psychologically impossible to explain his
- genuine confidence were he not sure of the President's support."
- </p>
- <p> But Bush's words did not calm the jitters most Americans
- have had since Quayle, looking like a groupie greeting a rock
- idol, manically accepted Bush's invitation to become his running
- mate in a bi zarre riverside ceremony in New Orleans. The
- string of verbal gaffes that followed only deepened the
- impression that Quayle will never be ready for the presidency.
- </p>
- <p> Nor has Quayle been helped by the President's marching
- orders: Rebuild your reputation, but stay out of sight. As one
- senior Bush official puts it, "He got maximum national
- visibility when he was announced, and that was all negative.
- Now, as Vice President, he gets minimum national visibility to
- redeem himself. The vice presidency doesn't give you an
- opportunity to get out of the hole that was dug for him."
- </p>
- <p> The Vice President's dismal approval ratings have exposed
- a conflict between the way Bush and Quayle seem to view the No. 2
- job. Quayle is no George Bush. He does not sit quietly at
- Cabinet meetings as Bush did. Instead, he injects his opinion
- frequently, often disagreeing with Administration heavyweights
- such as Secretary of State James Baker and White House chief of
- staff John Sununu. His speeches, particularly on foreign policy,
- are often well ahead of White House guidance, and not always by
- design. He chafes a bit under Bush's low-visibility model. "He's
- frustrated that he doesn't get more press coverage,'' says one
- of Quayle's closest friends. In a brief chat with TIME, Quayle
- admitted that "the job of the Vice President is an awkward one.
- There is no doubt about it that there is some frustration, but
- having said that, I love this job and I love working for this
- President."
- </p>
- <p> Amid this tug of war Quayle has carved out an influential
- role behind the scenes. "The irony is that the things people
- thought were Quayle's strengths turned out to be his weaknesses--his looks, his speaking and his campaigning," says a senior
- Administration official. "The things people thought were his
- weaknesses have turned out to be strengths--he really does
- have good grasp and attention for issues."
- </p>
- <p> Taking advantage of ties that date back to his own days in
- the House and Senate, Quayle has established himself as a badly
- needed back channel to congressional Republicans. He twists arms
- in close votes and, more important, serves as an early warning
- system about the mood in Congress. Last month, after the
- National Academy of Sciences criticized a Quayle-led redesign of
- the proposed Space Station, the Vice President hurriedly
- organized a quiet lunch on Capitol Hill. Over sandwiches and
- cookies, Quayle secured from top lawmakers a commitment to the
- orbiting platform's new design. When the lunch broke up, he
- announced the bipartisan consensus to awaiting reporters. "It
- was a very smart little play," said one participant.
- </p>
- <p> "Even in foreign policy," says a Bush official, Quayle is
- "always thinking about the politics." Bush believes in acting
- secretly on foreign problems and then unveiling diplomatic
- solutions to Congress and the public. But Quayle has frequently
- argued that the White House must do more to build public support
- in advance for its actions overseas. That was one reason why he
- helped forge an unlikely coalition of arch-conservative
- Republicans and liberal Democrats that united behind Bush's
- policy of using force against Iraq last fall. The other motive
- was to help Democrats who support Israel to break ranks and
- support a Republican President. Quayle's Nov. 9, 1990, speech
- in New Jersey at Seton Hall University on the moral case for
- going to war against Iraq struck themes that Bush, then
- frantically searching for a convincing rationale for using
- force, eventually adopted. A few weeks later, Quayle again
- pressed a reluctant Bush to seek congressional authorization for
- military action should negotiations fail. The President had been
- unwilling to risk a vote without a guarantee of a unanimous
- endorsement, but Quayle argued that even a simple majority
- would help. In the end the Vice President was right.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle has appointed himself unofficial ambassador to
- Israel. Ignoring long-standing U.S. policy, Quayle brashly
- referred to the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza as Judea and
- Sumaria in a 1990 speech to the American Israel Public Affairs
- Committee. That brought Quayle the gratitude of the powerful
- Israeli lobby, but it angered the White House and the State
- Department and risked a backlash from America's Arab allies.
- Later it was Quayle who, against widespread opposition, won
- approval for a $700 million weapons shipment for Israel in the
- early months of the gulf conflict. "Quayle," said a top Israeli
- lobbyist, "is a friend and a factor."
- </p>
- <p> Careful to keep one eye on his political future, Quayle
- has made a pet project out of California, a key state George
- Bush has never particularly liked or understood. The Vice
- President has made 16 trips to California, establishing contacts
- with a wide network of corporate chiefs and junior executives.
- "He's developing relations with people who in five, six, seven
- years will very likely be running their companies," said one
- fund raiser. He has also turned a bureaucratic backwater known
- as the Council on Competitiveness into a powerful body that
- reviews new federal regulations--and thus can reward
- businesses with lucrative regulatory relief and industrialists
- with government favors.
- </p>
- <p> Clearly, these are not the acts of a stupid man. Nearly
- everyone in the White House credits the Veep with being quick,
- well read and hardworking. But Quayle continues to display an
- unsettling lack of political judgment. A case in point: his
- flying off on an Air Force plane to play a few rounds of golf
- at Augusta National at the height of the public furor over
- Sununu's liberal use of military aircraft for personal
- recreation. Asked for an explanation, Quayle's aides could only
- crack, "We were trying to deflect flak from the chief of staff."
- </p>
- <p> Some officials privately contend Bush owes Quayle a higher
- profile, a chance to prove to Americans that he is more than
- just a pretty face. That is unlikely for now. Quayle, Bush
- predicted just before his Inauguration, would find "the same
- kind of constraint and the same kind of fulfillment" he
- experienced while laboring in Reagan's shadow. Those conditions
- may help Bush get re-elected while Quayle is on the ticket. But
- they won't help Quayle convince a skeptical public that he is
- qualified to be President.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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