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- <text id=92TT1196>
- <title>
- June 01, 1992: Dan Quayle vs. Murphy Brown
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 01, 1992 RIO:Coming Together to Save the Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WEEK, Page 20
- NATION
- Dan Quayle vs. Murphy Brown
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Vice President takes on a TV character over "family values"
- </p>
- <p> If for nothing else, Dan Quayle deserves points for audacity.
- In modern America taking on a popular TV character, even a
- fictional one, is politically more precarious than taking a
- clear stand on a substantive campaign issue. And yet the Vice
- President dared to argue last week in a San Francisco speech
- that the Los Angeles riots were caused in part by a "poverty of
- values" that included the acceptance of unwed motherhood, as
- celebrated in popular culture by the CBS comedy series Murphy
- Brown. The title character, a divorced news anchorwoman, got
- pregnant and chose to have the baby, a boy, who was delivered
- on last Monday's episode, watched by 38 million Americans. "It
- doesn't help matters," Quayle complained, when Brown, "a
- character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly
- paid professional woman" is portrayed as "mocking the importance
- of fathers, by bearing a child alone, and calling it just
- another `life-style choice.'"
- </p>
- <p> Quayle, aides explained, meant to "stir a debate" over
- "family values" and Hollywood's treatment of them. And so he
- did. A New York Daily News headline set the tone: QUAYLE TO
- MURPHY BROWN: YOU TRAMP! Switchboards at the White House and on
- TV and radio talk shows lit up with callers, pro and con. Carl
- Rowan, a liberal black columnist, sided with Quayle, while
- Hillary Clinton, wife of the Democratic presidential contender,
- panned him as typical of "an Administration out of touch with
- America" and its growing ranks of single mothers.
- </p>
- <p> Other critics suspected that the Vice President's remarks
- fit into a calculated strategy to suggest that L.A.'s rioters,
- who were mostly black and Hispanic, have in common with
- feminists and other Democrats a shoddier moral standard than
- nice people (who therefore should vote Republican). But Quayle
- denied any such intention, and the subsequent flip-flopping by
- the White House looked anything but calculated. Press secretary
- Marlin Fitzwater at first criticized Murphy Brown for "the
- glorification of life as an unwed mother," then later told
- reporters that the TV character was "demonstrating pro-life
- values which we think are good." That in turn brought an angry
- denial from Quayle, who, in some backpedaling of his own,
- insisted that he had "the greatest respect" for single mothers.
- </p>
- <p> President Bush, who can read a Nielsen rating as well as
- an opinion poll, declined to criticize "a very popular
- television show." He praised Quayle's speech in a private call
- to the Vice President, but failed to adopt the message as his
- own. Throughout the improbable spectacle of a White House pitted
- against a sitcom character and her real-life defenders, there
- was a serious undercurrent. The growth in fatherless families,
- after all, is encouraged less by television than by welfare
- policies that punish poor mothers who marry -- policies that
- Bush and Quayle should change if they are serious about this
- subject.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-