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- <text id=92TT1672>
- <title>
- July 27, 1992: Bill's Big Bash
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 27, 1992 The Democrats' New Generation
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE CAMPAIGN, Page 34
- Bill's Big Bash
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a rare show of unity and Hollywood razzmatazz, the Democrats
- pull off the perfect G.O.P. convention
- </p>
- <p>By MARGARET CARLSON -- With reporting by Priscilla Painton and
- Walter Shapiro/New York
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton came into Madison Square Garden with a
- second chance to explain who he is and what he cares about. He
- did it by grabbing control of the convention in a way only
- Republicans have known how to do until now: with an unapologetic
- appeal to sentiment and a relentless approach to organizing. For
- the first time, party chairman Ron Brown and the candidate were
- in total synch. Together they took charge of who would be on the
- podium and for how long; what would be said to the press (blue
- cue cards were given to delegates for that purpose); and what
- would be seen on many local stations, which were provided with
- taped video clips created in the Democrats' own satellite TV
- studio.
- </p>
- <p> All the energy Democrats usually expend fighting with one
- another went into a big-budget Hollywood production, complete
- with filmed biographies by Harry Thomason and Linda
- Bloodworth-Thomason, the creators of TV's Designing Women and
- Evening Shade. One of the highlights was a 1963 film clip
- showing John Kennedy shaking hands in the Rose Garden with the
- 16-year-old Clinton, a priceless piece of celluloid that Clinton
- aide Frank Greer dug out of the Kennedy Library.
- </p>
- <p> The convention was a hundred Fourth of July parades rolled
- into one, a pageant of family values and up-by-the-bootstraps
- success stories and patriotism, with silver confetti falling
- from the sky like diamonds and 60,000 balloons blown up by
- volunteers. Delegates heard The Star-Spangled Banner sung so
- often by stars like Aretha Franklin and Marilyn Horne that they
- may actually know all the words by now. The whole thing was as
- Republican as a capital-gains-tax cut, threatening to become at
- times as maudlin as Nixon's Checkers speech and as corny as
- Reagan's Morning in America campaign.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton dispensed with losers' night, a Democratic
- tradition whereby those vanquished in the primaries get to take
- one last prime-time swipe at the winner. Jesse Jackson's ranting
- took place off-camera at a Don't Mess with Jesse rally at
- Harlem's Apollo Theater. By the time he took to the convention
- stage on Tuesday, half-glasses perched professorially on his
- nose, the anger seemed to have gone out of him. He still had the
- lyrics, but the music was missing. The Democrats' other problem
- child, former California Governor Jerry Brown, got only 20
- minutes to put his name into nomination and have his
- antiestablishment say.
- </p>
- <p> New York Governor Mario Cuomo has also had his past
- differences with Clinton, causing some to worry that his
- nominating speech might lack his customary fervor. But the
- Delphic orator brought all his skills from Albany to Manhattan.
- His voice full of fury one minute and forgiveness the next, he
- called out Clinton's name no fewer than 30 times. He evoked the
- image of a national parade celebrating a victory over problems
- at home more joyous than the one that followed the gulf war. "So
- step aside, Mr. Bush!" Cuomo shouted. "You've had your parade."
- </p>
- <p> There was much grumbling -- especially among the 15,000
- journalists covering the event -- that this display of harmony
- was a boring contrast to the intrafamily feuds of conventions
- past. But for all its made-for-TV slickness and We Are the
- World-type finale, the effort to show that Democrats believe in
- the American Dream had its moments of authenticity: Senator Al
- Gore's father scooping up his blond-haired grandson Albert III,
- 9, whose horrible brush with death was evoked in the
- Tennessean's eloquent and moving acceptance speech; 12-year-old
- Chelsea Clinton breaking into a smile of relief after she
- reclaimed her mother's hand on the jammed podium; Hillary
- Clinton and Tipper Gore dancing like two teenagers to Fleetwood
- Mac's Don't Stop.
- </p>
- <p> The convention showed that the activist tie-dyed Democrats
- who wrested control of the party in 1968 are grown up now with
- children and mortgages. Middle America, with its ritual and
- sentiment and well-tended lawns, is less to be derided on
- Saturday Night Live than emulated. Four years ago, Clinton could
- not have been sure that when he recited part of the Pledge of
- Allegiance in his speech the audience would spontaneously join
- in and finish the final phrase with him.
- </p>
- <p> The scene on the podium after the two acceptance speeches
- was like a wedding reception where the bride and groom fan out
- to dance with the rest of the family. It was a Norman Rockwell
- tableau that could persuade older voters that the first
- all-baby-boomer ticket won't ignore them, signaling that while
- they may be the younger generation, they are still the type to
- bring the grandchildren home for the holidays.
- </p>
- <p> Bush's campaign staff back in Washington, wowed by the
- display, was hit with the realization that Clinton and Gore are
- prepared to fight for every bit of schmaltzy turf this time
- around. They learned that Clinton was ready to take aim at the
- President in what promises to be a brutal fall campaign. One of
- the most powerful passages in Clinton's acceptance speech was
- this challenge: "And so I say, George Bush, if you won't use
- your power to help America, step aside. I will."
- </p>
- <p> No amount of planning could have predicted the unexpected
- bouquet Ross Perot would throw conventioneers when he cited a
- revitalized Democratic Party as one reason he was dropping his
- campaign. Just before 11 a.m. on Thursday, strategist James
- Carville bounded into Clinton's 14th-floor suite at the Hotel
- Inter-Continental to announce that Perot was about to hold a
- news conference. Still dressed in his running shorts and
- tinkering with his acceptance speech, Clinton jumped up and
- turned on the television. "He was a little overwhelmed,"
- reported an aide.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton continued revising his speech, adding a few lines
- inviting Perot's followers into the Democratic fold. Late in the
- afternoon, when some aides complained that the speech was too
- long, the candidate defended it by claiming that it had fewer
- words than Michael Dukakis' 1988 oration. Actually, the
- Massachusetts Governor's text was shorter, and his
- lightning-fast diction made his delivery time shorter still. In
- his own laid-back drawl, Clinton took about 55 minutes to
- deliver his address. Recalling the fiasco of Clinton's
- interminable 1988 speech, his verbosity last week seemed on the
- verge of losing his audience, but a powerful delivery and some
- surefire applause lines saved the day.
- </p>
- <p> On a practical level, the lack of internal squabbling
- means the Democrats are already organizing for the fall, sending
- new staffers for a four-day training session in New Jersey.
- Overcoming the rivalries of previous election years, many state
- party and Clinton campaign staffs will work as one. At a
- fund-raising party in the wee hours of Friday morning, the first
- ever to capitalize on post-convention euphoria, Clinton and Gore
- collected at least $3.4 million.
- </p>
- <p> The Year of the Woman may be the most overworked cliche of
- the 1992 political season. But at this convention, as Clinton
- put it, the women made up "a league of their own." Mostly on
- the outside when the men in charge were creating the S&L mess,
- running up the deficit and awarding themselves a midnight pay
- raise, women candidates -- including the Democrats' Senate
- aspirants -- are now reaping the benefit of a widespread
- yearning for new faces and wholesale change. Women's rights --
- particularly the right to choose an abortion -- were one of the
- convention's most prominent themes. Apart from his formal
- acceptance speech, Clinton decided to give his only public
- address to the National Women's Political Caucus, where some of
- the nation's women office seekers were assembled onstage.
- Clinton is fond of pointing out that he is the son of a strong
- mother, the husband of a strong wife and the father of a
- daughter who wants to grow up to build space stations. He
- received a foot-stomping cheer when he said, "I don't believe
- it runs a man down to build a woman up."
- </p>
- <p> Most of all, the convention was about giving a fuller
- picture of Clinton's character after the beating it took in the
- primary season and the pummeling Republicans are sure to give
- it in the fall. If the Bush forces doubt that Democrats are
- prepared to engage them on the values front, they should play
- a video of the Clintons' triumphant two-block march from the
- basement of Macy's to the convention hall after the Ohio
- delegation put the nominee over the top at 10:54 p.m. Entering
- the Garden to a shower of confetti and 30 minutes of boisterous
- cheering, the couple and their young daughter looked as happy
- and wholesome as a family can be.
- </p>
- <p> Before the convention, Clinton said he wanted people to
- know that there is a central core in him that they can relate
- to and trust. "When they know me better, they will know that
- about me." Just by making it to the arena, after all the rough
- and bitter days and nights when he did not skulk away, Clinton
- has shown that there is some iron in that core. Unlike Perot,
- he does not quit when he tires of the ordeal or blame others
- for his troubles. Clinton will find out in November whether the
- public came to know him better this week and liked what they
- saw.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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