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- <text id=94TT0902>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Administration:Minding the President
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ADMINISTRATION, Page 20
- Minding the President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Even people who know and like Leon Panetta aren't sure he can
- bring order to the devolutionary Clinton White House. Like Mack
- McLarty, Panetta appears unfailingly polite. Like Clinton, he
- comes from modest roots, and straddles his party's left and
- moderate flanks. His self-deprecating humor is disarming: top
- aides say he cannot go more than a few minutes in meetings without
- making some self-critical wisecrack. Reporters lost track of
- the number of times Panetta, who turned 56 last Tuesday, observed--with a roll of his eyes--how his new job was "one hell
- of a birthday present."
- </p>
- <p> But there is a tougher side to Panetta too. He has a ferocious
- temper that has been known to reduce aides to tears when balls
- are dropped or questions go unanswered. He insists on punctuality,
- and, as chairman of the House Budget Committee, once required
- all staff members to clock in and out--an unheard-of regimen
- on Capitol Hill. "He wanted an honest day's work out of us,"
- said a longtime aide. Another OMB official admitted last week
- that Panetta's criticism can be so withering that she sometimes
- takes "the long way around" the rectangular corridor of the
- Old Executive Office Building rather than risk running into
- him outside his nearby office. Asked last week whether little
- things or big things seemed to set Panetta off, an associate
- OMB director, quickly replied, "Yes."
- </p>
- <p> The son of Italian immigrants, Panetta grew up in Monterey,
- California, where his parents owned and ran a small cafe that
- served Calabrian fare to Army troops at Fort Ord. Panetta attended
- the University of Santa Clara for his undergraduate and law
- degrees and afterward joined the Army, serving in the intelligence
- branch. He came to Washington in 1966 as an aide to a Republican
- Senator and, after the 1968 election, became Richard Nixon's
- chief civil rights officer at the old Health, Education and
- Welfare Department. When Panetta aggressively sought to coerce
- Southern school districts into complying with court-ordered
- busing plans, Nixon fired him. Panetta learned of the decision
- when press secretary Ron Ziegler announced his departure to
- reporters.
- </p>
- <p> After working for a year for New York City Mayor John Lindsay,
- Panetta returned to California, practiced law and became a Democrat.
- He won a seat in Congress in 1976 and rose quickly, tangling
- with Tip O'Neill when he and a group of other Young Turks grew
- impatient with the speaker's stewardship of the chamber. Though
- he fell out of favor with O'Neill, Panetta fought back, eventually
- taking control of the House Budget Committee in 1989. One longtime
- Panetta advantage has been his wife Sylvia, who ran his district
- office in California as an unpaid aide while raising three boys.
- </p>
- <p> Panetta has had his run-ins with Clinton too. In April 1993
- it was the OMB director who first complained in public that
- the nascent Clinton team was losing its way amid a host of false
- starts and foolish early moves. That's the kind of candor Panetta
- will need if he is to bring order to Clinton's sprawling management
- style. But Panetta insists that Clinton longs to be better managed.
- More discipline, Panetta said last week, "is something he wants."
- </p>
- <p> Though he likes to swim and is addicted to C-SPAN, Panetta stays
- close to his hardscrabble roots--literally. He tries to get
- back to California twice a month, where his idea of relaxing
- is to climb onto his Ford tractor and work the ground on his
- family's 11-acre walnut ranch in the Carmel Valley. "He gets
- unspeakably cranky if he doesn't get back regularly," said an
- associate, who joked that aides have taken up inner-office collections
- for airfare when Panetta has been in Washington too long.
- </p>
- <p> Now that Panetta is Bill Clinton's chief of staff, his beloved
- weekends in Carmel will be rare indeed. At the White House they
- may want to start passing the plate immediately.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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