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- <text id=92TT1558>
- <title>
- July 13, 1992: Ross Perot and the Call-In Presidency
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 13, 1992 Inside the World's Last Eden
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 84
- Ross Perot and the Call-In Presidency
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> It is conventional usage to refer to Ross Perot as a
- third-party candidate. In fact, he is nothing of the sort.
- Unlike the classic third-party candidates -- say, Strom Thurmond
- and Henry Wallace, who in 1948 formed right- and left-wing
- offshoots of a real political party (the Democrats) -- Perot
- represents no party. He does not even pretend to.
- </p>
- <p> Perot is a one-man band. The fact that one man alone could
- have had such a meteoric rise begs explanation. Yes, the
- country is disgusted with Washington gridlock. Yes, both parties
- have put up maddening mediocrities. Yes, America lionizes
- tycoons and is occasionally seized with the belief that they --
- Henry Ford, assorted Rockefellers, most recently Lee Iacocca --
- can save the country. And, yes, Perot has $100 million to blow.
- </p>
- <p> But the Perot phenomenon signifies something larger,
- deeper. It signifies a geologic change in American politics: the
- growing obsolescence of the great institutions -- the political
- parties, the Establishment media, the Congress -- that have
- traditionally stood between the governors and the governed. The
- traditional way to achieve and wield power in America is to tame
- or charm or capture these institutions. Perot's genius was to
- realize that for the first time in history, technology makes it
- possible to bypass them. Win or lose, knowing or not, Perot is
- the harbinger of a new era of direct democracy.
- </p>
- <p> First Perot bypassed the parties. He has no use for them,
- except as foils for his own pristine independence. He deigned
- to enter not a single primary, and yet was hailed by exit polls
- as the winner of California's.
- </p>
- <p> As for the media, he realized that the proliferation of
- outlets has created a new game: a way to reach the American
- people directly, without the mediation of Dan Rather and the New
- York Times. The Perot campaign owed much of its amazing start
- to its call-in, soft-news-show launch, which allowed it to get
- its message out unfiltered.
- </p>
- <p> And as for Congress, Perot promises to bypass it and go
- directly to the American people in the "electronic town hall"
- -- Nightline with President Perot playing Ted Koppel. It is
- here, says Perot, that the American people will, in direct
- communion with the leader, solve those knotty problems that have
- eluded a clumsy, corrupt Congress.
- </p>
- <p> Coming two-way TV technology will one day make it possible
- for Perot's town hall to be more than a glorified national talk
- show. It could be a place where, as in the original New England
- town hall, people don't just talk but vote. For bombing
- Baghdad, press 1. For continued sanctions, press 2. For punting
- until next week's show, press 3.
- </p>
- <p> In 1789 the Founders contrived a deliberately cumbersome
- political system (elected representatives, separated powers,
- bicameral legislature, indirect election of the President) to
- make sure that popular passions were filtered before they could
- explode into national action. Over the next two centuries, party
- and press evolved as additional filters between rulers and
- ruled. Now, announces the Perot phenomenon, these filters face
- technological obsolescence.
- </p>
- <p> Take the parties. They arose in the 19th century as a
- two-way transmission belt. They gathered grass-roots sentiment
- and sent it up to the governing elites, who in turn used them
- to mobilize an otherwise unreachable mass electorate. A century
- ago you needed party rallies and precinct captains to get the
- message out. In the age of television and satellites, you don't.
- </p>
- <p> Little wonder that the parties are moribund, that party
- affiliation is so brittle, that congressional candidates are now
- political entrepreneurs beholden to no one. The party convention
- has become positively quaint. Traditionally it was here that the
- elders gathered to pick their presidential candidates. That role
- having long since been forfeited to the primaries, the parties
- have turned the convention into a made-for-TV show. Perot
- understands that this new contraption -- parties manipulating
- media to send out the parties' message under cover of "news" --
- is Rube Goldberg inefficiency. Why not let one man go on Larry
- King and send the message out himself, directly?
- </p>
- <p> Big Media? The democratization of communications, from CNN
- to MTV to C-SPAN, means that these dinosaurs can now be
- bypassed. Congress? A fen of stagnant waters, a den of special
- interests. To the town hall!
- </p>
- <p> Of course the electronic town hall, like the other
- trappings of direct techno-democracy, is an illusion. A New
- England town hall works because the town is small. Real
- interaction between people, between governors and governed, is
- possible. In a vast continental nation like the U.S., it is not.
- Mass electronic communication is really one-way communication,
- top-down. For the practiced performer the call-in show is the
- most easily manipulated forum.
- </p>
- <p> It is precisely because direct democracy is such a
- manipulatable sham that every two-bit Mussolini adopts it as his
- own. Pomp and plebiscites. The Duce and the people. No need for
- the messy stuff in between. Not for nothing did the Founders
- abhor direct democracy. They knew it to be a highway to tyranny.
- </p>
- <p> The American experiment has always been an experiment in
- democratic indirectness. The people do not get instant
- gratification for their political wants. They have them filtered
- first. The passing of these filtering institutions may be
- inevitable, but it is no cause for celebration. The parties, Big
- Media and Congress are, Lord knows, unwieldy, obtrusive and
- often offensive. But they're all we've got. Until we find
- something else to stand between us and the maximum leader, we
- should be loath to throw them away.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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