home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1837>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: Newswatch
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Newswatch, Page 27
- Clinton vs. the Press
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Stanley W. Cloud
- </p>
- <p> Three months ago, Bill Clinton was being compared to Ronald
- Reagan as a master of political communications. Now with all
- his troubles in Congress and the nation, Clinton has called
- in the Great Communicator's communicator to help. Journalist
- David Gergen, who served Reagan as communications director and
- helped sell Reaganomics to the voters, will soon be trying to
- do the same thing for Clintonomics. Gergen replaces George Stephanopoulos,
- who, along with press secretary Dee Dee Myers, has seen life
- turn decidedly sour.
- </p>
- <p> These past few weeks, only a sadist could take pleasure in watching
- Stephanopoulos sputter as he tried to explain to skeptical--and even scornful--reporters the abject reinstatement of five
- employees from the White House travel office who had been summarily
- fired a week earlier. And only Saturday Night Live's writers
- could enjoy the spectacle of Myers trying to defend the White
- House's farcical attempt to turn a female TV reporter into a
- presidential makeup artist during a Clinton visit to New Hampshire.
- Why had a White House staff member asked the local journalist,
- who was about to interview the President, to powder Clinton's
- nose? Because, Myers said, no one else was available.
- </p>
- <p> Such moments have become commonplace as relations between the
- President and the press have deteriorated. Many reporters and
- editors who once gave candidate and President-elect Clinton
- generally favorable coverage are today, like the country, underwhelmed.
- He and his staff are committing, in their view, the one unforgivable
- sin short of criminality: incompetence.
- </p>
- <p> But the chasm that has opened between Clinton and the men and
- women who cover him is explained by more than the White House
- mistakes and the press's bullyboy tendencies. For one thing,
- this President and his young staff don't really seem to like
- journalists very much. On election night a photographer asked
- campaign strategist James Carville to move slightly so he could
- get a shot of the victor. Carville refused and later bragged
- that since the Clintonites had won the election, they "didn't
- need the press anymore." That feeling was apparently shared
- by others. Practically the first thing Stephanopoulos did after
- occupying his West Wing office was to order reporters kept out
- of it unless they had an appointment. No presidential spokesperson
- had ever tried such a thing before, and last weekend Gergen
- said he would consider reversing the order. The Clinton White
- House also had its end-run press strategy, whereby Clinton used
- talk shows and electronic town meetings, rather than dreary
- old press conferences with the dreary old national press corps,
- to commune with the people. To aggravate things further, Stephanopoulos
- & Co. shook up the White House travel office, which, however
- mismanaged, did provide first-class creature comforts--at
- first-class prices--to reporters on presidential trips.
- </p>
- <p> Late last week, as things were collapsing around him, Stephanopoulos
- reflected on what he thought had to be done: "We need to make
- sure that the press knows Bill Clinton a little better and then
- do what we can to see that he doesn't present too good a target."
- Dave Gergen may be able to help there. In the end, though, it's
- not what a President's aides do to or for reporters that counts.
- It's what a President does to or for the country. In other words,
- where relations with the press are concerned, the only thing
- that really succeeds is success.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-