home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2000>
- <title>
- July 05, 1993: A Marriage Of Convenience
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 05, 1993 Hitting Back At Terrorists
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 36
- A Marriage Of Convenience
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Perot's dalliance with the G.O.P. gives Clinton grief, but in
- the end it may hurt Republicans too
- </p>
- <p>By LAURENCE I. BARRETT/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Richard Woodbury/Houston
- </p>
- <p> Ross Perot was a bit tired. For months he had been traveling
- and making TV appearances at a more frenetic pace than when
- he was running for President, so he had been planning to take
- a break. Instead he abruptly decided to rush to Washington last
- Thursday to fulminate on the Capitol grounds against Bill Clinton's
- budget. The program was moving through Congress faster than
- Perot had anticipated, so he personally displayed a truckload
- of petitions--bearing 2.5 million signatures by his count--demanding that Washington cut spending before raising taxes.
- Minority leader Bob Dole gave Perot's show an unusual plug on
- the Senate floor. As Dole argued for his own doomed deficit-reduction
- plan, which contained no tax increases, he said, "Ross Perot
- has got the message...He's been out among real people."
- A dozen Republicans from both houses joined Perot's photo op.
- They were eager to be seen with the rebel who savaged their
- own presidential candidate last year but is now the enemy of
- their enemy.
- </p>
- <p> Politicians sweating in the hot sun as they waited for Perot
- to appear were the latest weird scene in the marriage of convenience
- between the Dallas billionaire and the G.O.P. The alliance is
- an uneasy one. Many senior Republicans are worried that Perot's
- advocacy group, United We Stand America, is a powerful weapon
- that he may aim at them whenever it suits his purpose. Dole
- has warned associates that the mercurial independent is a threat
- to the G.O.P.'s status as the focus of opposition to Clinton.
- William Bennett, like Dole a possible presidential candidate
- in 1996, says, "It's a big mistake for Republicans to legitimize
- Ross Perot, because sooner or later we'll have to delegitimize
- him."
- </p>
- <p> Yet as long as Perot's public standing remains robust, he is
- a magnet for politicians--particularly those up for election
- next year. Association with him draws publicity, builds up an
- independent image and helps in courting his local supporters,
- who may be pivotal in some House and Senate races next year.
- </p>
- <p> A TIME/CNN poll completed last week explains the eagerness of
- many candidates to cuddle with Perot. Since February his favorable
- rating has declined, from 58% then to 51% now, probably because
- his harsh attacks on Clinton's policies and persona make him
- seem too partisan to some people. But Perot's numbers remain
- strong compared with Clinton's wan ratings. Many voters are
- aware of Perot's foibles--wobbling on issues and overreacting
- to criticism--but they like his anti-Washington message
- anyway. As a potential presidential candidate, Perot has actually
- pulled ahead of Clinton. In the survey, 46% said they would
- be very likely or somewhat likely to vote for the Texan; for
- the President, the figure was 33%.
- </p>
- <p> Months ago, the White House gave up its naive notion that Clinton
- might establish personal rapport with Perot. For the President
- to attack him frontally is also futile. So the Clinton circle
- is studying Pe rot's constituency with extensive polling and
- focus groups, looking for ways to win over a large segment of
- it. The main conclusion: only when Clinton demonstrates that
- he can lower the deficit and genuinely reform government will
- he get a hearing from Perot's minions.
- </p>
- <p> The TIME/CNN poll, comparing those who voted for Perot last
- year with the rest of the public, demonstrated that the billionaire
- remains in tune with the disenchanted. Though Perotistas include
- many independents skeptical of both major parties, the group
- displays a Republican tilt on critical issues. Further, when
- asked their current party preference for Congress, they give
- Republicans an edge (40% vs. 32%), while other voters lean slightly
- toward Democrats (41% vs. 37%). Perot draws heavy support among
- men and younger voters, the same portions of the electorate
- that provided Republican majorities in the 1980s.
- </p>
- <p> In interviews and at the mass rallies he has staged in two dozen
- states since January, Perot has sounded increasingly conservative.
- Talking about the immigrants of the early 1900s, he drew cheers
- from a Virginia audience by asking rhetorically, "Do you think
- they wandered around the streets of New York City saying, `Is
- there some kind of welfare program that will take care of me?'
- No!" In the past Perot avoided making points at the expense
- of welfare recipients or recent immigrants. No longer. His platform
- last year called for tax hikes tougher than Clinton's and even
- some spending increases in critical areas, but these days he
- almost never volunteers such facts. Instead he gushes sympathy
- for angry taxpayers who yearn for smaller, cheaper government:
- "Money does not fall out of the sky. Money comes from the sweat
- of the brow of millions of hardworking Americans, right?"
- </p>
- <p> Aside from appealing to diehard Republicans, that message also
- pleases many uncommitted people. Tom and Debbie Knight, both
- 38, paid their $15 to join United We Stand when Perot appeared
- recently in Fairfax, Virginia. She drives a school bus, he is
- a cabinetmaker, and neither had ever voted for President before
- Perot won their ballots last year. Why? "He's not a politician,"
- said Debbie. "He's against government spending," said her husband.
- </p>
- <p> The need to reach voters like the Knights has propelled a dozen
- Republican members of Congress, including House whip Newt Gingrich,
- to become dues-paying members of United We Stand. Perot is threatening
- to make his organization an active player in next year's election.
- "We have got to be the swing vote in every congressional-district
- race in 1994," he tells supporters. There are practical obstacles
- to that ambition. It is uncertain that Perot can plant functioning
- chapters in all 435 congressional districts, as he hopes to
- do. Moreover, United We Stand is applying for official status
- as a tax-exempt, nonprofit group of the kind barred from overt
- politicking in federal elections.
- </p>
- <p> Still, his Texas organization provided what amounted to an endorsement
- of Kay Bailey Hutchison, the Republican who won a special Senate
- election in early June by a vote of 2 to 1. Perot now claims
- credit for the size of Hutchison's victory. Analysts, along
- with Hutchison's advisers, note that she was already far ahead
- when Perot announced that his members favored her. Nonetheless,
- Hutchison has joined United We Stand.
- </p>
- <p> Many of next year's elections are expected to be genuine contests
- rather than easy calls. Thus small groups of motivated activists
- can have impact. Henry McMaster, the Republican chairman in
- South Carolina, observes that "Perot sounds more Republican
- every day." McMaster thinks Perot's minions could give the G.O.P.
- a shot at controlling the state's congressional delegation.
- In Florida operatives on both sides are compiling lists of Perot
- supporters to court.
- </p>
- <p> Some incumbents now embracing Pe rot's movement acknowledge
- having reservations about the man himself. Republican Congressman
- John Doolittle of California, another member of United We Stand,
- says that signing up does not amount to an endorsement of Perot's
- own ambitions. "He's kind of an enigma to me," Doolittle says.
- "I'm not sure what he represents." But Doolittle got just 50%
- of his district's vote in 1992. Publicizing his membership in
- United We Stand is Doolittle's way of telling local Perot followers
- that he is sympathetic to their desires.
- </p>
- <p> But because Perot's views follow no party line, an alliance
- with him is problematic for mainstream Republicans. From minority
- leader Dole to backbenchers like Doolittle, many Republicans
- support the pending North American Free Trade Agreement. Perot
- denounces NAFTA vehemently, even accusing lobbyists for the
- pact of "economic treason." On other major issues, Perot is
- also out of step with consensus Republican positions.
- </p>
- <p> Some former Perot associates and admirers think his primal instincts
- are opportunistic and contrarian. Says John White, the Harvard
- professor who was Perot's chief economic adviser last year:
- "Sure he's sounding more Republican, but all he's doing is getting
- to the right of Clinton. If Bush were still President, Perot
- would be talking like Bill Clinton." Nothing about Perot's politics
- is simple except his determination to impose his agenda on the
- system. Doing that requires subtle maneuvers and temporary alliances,
- as those Republicans now dallying with him will discover when
- he tires of the romance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-