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- <text id=93TT1798>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: Return Of The Lions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CONGRESS, Page 25
- Return Of The Lions
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the battle over taxes and health care, a handful of Senators
- will determine Clinton's success--or failure
- </p>
- <p>By STANLEY W. CLOUD/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Michael
- Duffy, Elaine Shannon and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Call it democracy. Call it anarchy. Call it gridlock. Call it
- another lesson in Governing 101 for Bill Clinton, now in the
- fifth month of his increasingly troubled presidency. Whatever
- it's called, the skirmishing between Clinton and Congress over
- the President's proposed deficit-reduction and tax plan threatened
- to erupt into all-out war last week as Republicans and several
- Democrats in both the House and Senate publicly attacked the
- proposal. If the Clinton package still has a fair chance of
- eventually passing in one form or another, that is less a tribute
- to the White House's political acumen than to the internal and
- external forces that make Congress the great, gaudy institution
- it is. As Republican Senator Alan Simpson put it, looking ahead
- to more fights yet over the upcoming Clinton health-care reform
- package, "It's what we used to call in football `gut-check time.'
- "
- </p>
- <p> This latest tussle was easily the most significant legislative
- debate so far in the 103rd Congress. At stake was the President's
- proposal, which Congress has approved in broad outline, to slice
- the deficit $496 billion with a blend of spending cuts and tax
- hikes. But as the revolt on Capitol Hill gained momentum, several
- alternative plans were put forth, both formally and informally,
- that had at least three things in common: they sought to minimize
- the tax bite, maximize budget cuts and reflect the mood of the
- voters, of which Congress is the all-time champion bellwether.
- And in Congress the word is that the voters most of all want
- the deficit reduced and their health-care system reformed, and
- to those ends are even willing to pay more taxes--provided
- government spending is truly curtailed.
- </p>
- <p> In the House of Representatives, where three-fifths of the seats
- are held by Democrats, a vote scheduled for this week seemed
- likely to go the President's way, despite the apostasy of such
- Democrats as Tim Penny of Minnesota, Charles Stenholm of Texas
- and Dave McCurdy of Oklahoma, who opposed an energy tax and
- said they favored an amendment that would cap spending on entitlements
- such as Social Security and Medicare. With Clinton enjoying
- the support of House Speaker Tom Foley and Ways and Means Committee
- chairman Dan Rostenkowski, however, and with the nearly ironclad
- protection of House rules discouraging amendments from the floor,
- most insiders thought the House rebellion could be contained.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed the biggest fear of House Democrats loyal to Clinton
- was that they may vote for the President's plan, only to see
- it defeated--and themselves embarrassed--by a later, negative
- vote in the Senate. That happened a few weeks ago with Clinton's
- $19.5 billion economic stimulus package, and a similar outcome
- for the tax bill is possible. "The Senate," says Representative
- John Dingell of Detroit, "has the same procedural rules as you
- would find on Monkey Island in the San Francisco zoo." Moreover,
- the Senate has only 14 more Democrats than Republicans, and,
- on the crucial Senate Finance Committee, the Democrats control
- only 11 of the 20 seats.
- </p>
- <p> In the battle over taxes and spending, as well as the upcoming
- battle over health care and other issues, a handful of Senators
- now holds the keys to success or failure for Clinton in his
- first year in office. This pride of new Senate lions differs
- substantially from the Lyndon Johnsons and Everett Dirksens
- of the past. With one exception, the new breed are committee
- chairmen rather than members of the formal leadership (which
- was all but reformed out of business a couple of decades ago).
- In cutting deals, the modern lions rely as much on suasion as
- brute political force, and when they have to fight dirty, they
- prefer the stiletto to brass knuckles. They are policy mavens
- who can match any calculator-toting Administration whiz kid,
- statistic for statistic and program for program. They command
- personal respect even in an institution crowded with overweening
- White House wannabes. And they have a far deeper and more sophisticated
- understanding of Washington and its folkways than most of Clinton's
- West Wing staff put together.
- </p>
- <p> What makes these legislators even more powerful than they otherwise
- might be are Clinton's declining approval ratings and the growing
- feeling on Capitol Hill that there is no reason to fear the
- President. The names of the most prominent lions are as familiar
- as the headlines in which they appear, and at least two are
- already looking ahead to 1996. They include:
- </p>
- <p> Robert Dole. The once stolid, sardonic and brooding Senate minority
- leader has seemed positively giddy since Clinton moved into
- the White House. Dole has never before enjoyed the luxury of
- being minority leader against a Democratic President--and
- he clearly likes the work. To be sure, the President has yet
- to make it difficult for him. Last month Clinton's decision
- to stick with his own so-called economic stimulus package, instead
- of an alternative proposal suggested by key Senate Democrats
- on the Finance Committee, made it possible for Dole to unify
- all his 43 Republicans behind a filibuster that led to a humiliating
- Administration defeat.
- </p>
- <p> "You certainly have more freedom if your party's not in the
- White House," said Dole last week. "When Bush was President,
- I got to carry those big, heavy buckets sent up from the White
- House. But I never got to splash any water. Now I see [Senate
- majority leader George] Mitchell carrying the buckets, and
- he's getting round shoulders." Meanwhile, Dole could sit back,
- enjoy the show and, in spite of his 69 years, entertain thoughts
- of running for President again.
- </p>
- <p> David Boren. Thorn-of-the-moment in Clinton's side, Boren, a
- conservative Democrat who represents the oil state of Oklahoma
- on the Senate Finance Committee, led last week's bipartisan
- Senate revolt against the Administration's tax plan. At a press
- conference he and three fellow rebels--Democrat Bennett Johnston
- of Louisiana and Republicans John Danforth of Missouri and William
- Cohen of Maine--unveiled a plan of their own. The so-called
- Boren-Danforth amendment features lower taxes and more spending
- cuts than the President's proposal, as well as a cap on entitlements
- spending. The Boren-Danforth bill would also completely eliminate
- Clinton's energy levy--the so-called BTU tax. Altogether,
- the plan would raise taxes $122 billion less than Clinton's
- proposal and would cut spending $163 billion more. Over five
- years, it would reduce the deficit $542 billion, compared with
- $496 billion under the Administration's plan.
- </p>
- <p> When the soft-spoken Boren opposes something, people listen.
- Senators James Exon and Bob Kerrey, both Democrats from Nebraska,
- said they backed the "basic thrust" of his plan. Still, a number
- of putative dissidents--notably John Breaux of Louisiana and
- Kent Conrad of North Dakota--declined to sign on to the amendment.
- Thus while Boren may be able to muster enough Democratic votes
- to join with Republicans in forcing Clinton to change his plan,
- there is little chance that the Boren-Danforth proposal can
- pass. Said Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen, a former chairman
- of the Senate Finance Committee: "The Boren-Danforth amendment
- will never make it out of the Finance Committee." What it could
- do, however, is be a starting point for negotiations. One possible
- compromise would be to substitute a gasoline tax--unpopular
- as that would be in the West--for a BTU tax. In any case,
- Boren predicted last week that "the BTU tax is dead."
- </p>
- <p> Daniel Moynihan. Having succeeded Bentsen as Finance Committee
- chairman, Moynihan, the former Harvard professor who was a "new
- Democrat" while Bill Clinton was still in Yale Law School, has
- fired a few broadsides of his own at the Clinton White House.
- Now, though, he may be able to help salvage the President's
- deficit-reduction package. Moynihan is passionately opposed
- to entitlement caps, and charges that the Boren-Danforth amendment
- would cut the "earned benefits" of more than 15 million Social
- Security recipients.
- </p>
- <p> The Democrat from New York has pledged to see that the President's
- bill is passed. "We have to get together on this," he says,
- "since the Administration has so much at stake." It will be
- Moynihan's job to get the bill through his committee. If he
- cannot, he and majority leader Mitchell will probably try to
- bring the bill, perhaps with compromises on taxation and spending,
- to the Senate floor anyway.
- </p>
- <p> Sam Nunn. Not a major player in the deficit-reduction debate,
- the good gray Nunn, chairman of the Armed Services Committee,
- has nonetheless given Clinton fits on the gays-in-the-military
- issue and believes the President is trying to cut too much,
- too fast out of the defense budget. Nunn, a Georgian, still
- harbors the thought of being called Mr. President one day. Some
- say his dogged opposition to the lifting of the ban on gays
- in the military--even if all sides seem to be heading toward
- a compromise on that issue--was fueled mainly by pique at
- being passed over by Clinton for Secretary of State. But that
- misses the essence of Nunn, who sees himself not merely as a
- dispenser of funds or a legislative traffic cop but as a benign
- steward of the military.
- </p>
- <p> As more items on Clinton's lengthy wish list of proposals work
- their way through Congress, other legislators will enjoy their
- moments in the spotlight. Republican John Chafee of Rhode Island,
- for example, will play a major role when the Administration's
- much discussed health-care reform package finally makes its
- debut later this summer. And on any number of issues, Senator
- Bob Kerrey, one of Clinton's opponents for the Democratic nomination
- last year, is busy establishing himself as the newest Democrat
- of all.
- </p>
- <p> The best way for Clinton to minimize the influence of congressional
- lions is to try to build Capitol Hill constituencies early and
- pay close attention to congressional prerogatives and sensitivities.
- As Dole advises from his sunny balcony, "If you really want
- cooperation [from Congress], don't bypass us until you suddenly
- need us." In other words, Bill Clinton must learn to pet the
- lions if he doesn't want them to bite.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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