home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0154>
- <title>
- Aug. 09, 1993: Buddy, Can You Spare a Vote?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 09, 1993 Lost Secrets Of The Maya
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUDGET, Page 22
- Buddy, Can You Spare a Vote?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite all his compromises, Clinton still must push hard to
- get his budget passed
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Even by his talk-'til-they-drop standards, Bill Clinton was
- in danger of developing laryngitis. In less than a week the
- President had met with 30 different groups to build support
- for his embattled budget and had telephoned scores more. Yet
- he was still several votes short of a majority in the Senate.
- So as conferees from the House and Senate haggled over the remaining
- differences between their versions of the budget plan, the President
- scheduled more lunches, dinners and jogging dates with lawmakers.
- </p>
- <p> For the third time in as many months, the President found himself
- scrounging for two or three votes for a half-trillion-dollar
- package. The compromise was virtually complete, but reluctance
- by rank-and-file Democrats to go along could spell defeat when
- the House and Senate vote on the plan this week. Party discipline
- might work in the House, but White House officials expected
- Al Gore would have to cast the tie-breaking vote in the Senate.
- "The big question," joked a senior official, visibly exhausted
- from hours of lobbying, "is whether we can hold Gore."
- </p>
- <p> Even as the conferees pared down the budget to better satisfy
- key Senators, liberal House members claimed that the compromise
- was cutting too deep into spending for social-welfare programs.
- The marketing marathon, meanwhile, was already showing signs
- of diminishing returns: an invitation to 40 moderate Democrats
- on Tuesday generated 19 regrets. Hours before a small White
- House dinner for 14 Thursday night, two undecided Democratic
- Senators begged off. "You know," fretted a White House official,
- "we might be overdoing this."
- </p>
- <p> Though the compromise was clearly falling short of the $500
- billion deficit-reduction target, Clinton embraced the final
- package even before the conference committee had concluded negotiations.
- In an Oval Office interview with TIME Friday afternoon, the
- President pronounced himself "very pleased with the basic outlines"
- of the plan. "This is a big first step," he said, "but only
- a first step. Most Americans will see this as a very modest
- price to pay for getting the deficit under control and keeping
- interest rates down."
- </p>
- <p> Four hours after Clinton spoke those words, conference co-chairman
- Daniel Patrick Moynihan appeared with Senate majority leader
- George Mitchell and House Speaker Thomas Foley at the Capitol
- to announce agreement on the "broad outline" of a deal that
- cuts $250 billion in spending, raises $243 billion in new revenues
- and promises to reduce the deficit about $490 billion over the
- next five years. While some details remained to be worked out
- Monday, the big breakthrough came Thursday night when Moynihan
- and House Ways and Means Committee chairman Dan Rostenkowski
- agreed to accept the Senate proposal for a 4.3 cents-per-gal.
- hike in the cost of gasoline. Senators from rural states, led
- by Montana's Max Baucus, had declared the 4.3 cents hike a ceiling
- and refused to support anything higher. Though Moynihan floated
- 6.5 cents and 6 cents alternatives, both failed. White House
- aides were disappointed, but recognized that the smaller tax
- would help keep Baucus and Connecticut's Joseph Lieberman on
- board.
- </p>
- <p> But the smaller increase in energy taxes meant that the conferees
- had fewer revenues to pay for Clinton's cherished "investments"
- in new programs and tax deductions for business. That development
- set off a second round of negotiations Friday that left conferees
- between $10 billion and $13 billion short of Clinton's cherished
- $500 billion deficit-reduction goal. Knowing that his shaky
- coalition might not hold together for long, Clinton urged speedy
- action in a Rose Garden speech Saturday morning: "We have talked
- and dawdled long enough."
- </p>
- <p> The immediate problem was that even this tenuous deal left Clinton
- well short of the 51 votes he needs to gain Senate approval.
- With the slim margin afforded by a 56-to-44 vote in the Senate,
- Democrats can afford to lose only six colleagues if they hope
- to save the measure. Already, Richard Shelby of Alabama, Frank
- Lautenberg of New Jersey and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona have
- made it clear that they cannot support the President. Of the
- six other Democratic votes up for grabs, Clinton must win three.
- Louisiana's Bennett Johnston voted against the package in June,
- and the White House expects him to do so again. Georgia's Sam
- Nunn, who has been a thorn in Clinton's side for weeks on the
- issue of gays in the military, hasn't been sounding any more
- supportive on the budget. "The package is not making a whole
- lot of economic sense," Nunn said. But a senior Senate aide
- had another interpretation, saying Nunn is still angry that
- a multiyear budget-reform plan he proposed last year received
- little attention.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton hopes to woo Nunn with promises of additional cuts that
- he says Al Gore will propose this fall when he unveils his scheme
- for "reinventing government." "There are more cuts coming,"
- Clinton told TIME. If that doesn't work, Clinton will try party
- loyalty. "They aren't going to get Nunn or Johnston," said a
- Democratic Senator, "unless it's clear that it's going to fail
- without them."
- </p>
- <p> Oklahoma's David Boren, who thinks the deal relies too heavily
- on taxes, has been getting the VIP treatment: he met with Clinton
- on Saturday, with David Gergen on Sunday, spoke with chief of
- staff Mack McLarty on Monday, and even received a prized visit
- from Janet Reno on Tuesday. Two days later, he had lunch with
- Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen. Boren seems to be undergoing
- something of a personal crisis over the vote, talking at length
- to nearly everyone and acknowledging, "This isn't fun for me.
- Everyone is very cordial to my face, then I hear they say things
- about me behind my back."
- </p>
- <p> There is some truth to that. White House officials hoot at Boren's
- idea that Clinton convene a bipartisan deficit summit. They
- believe they will win Boren over, but they don't know exactly
- how. "He's playing an emotionally needy game," said an official.
- "He just wants attention."
- </p>
- <p> The man who has the White House really guessing is Bob Kerrey
- of Nebraska. White House officials believe that Kerrey, Clinton's
- onetime rival in the Democratic primaries, resents the fact
- that Clinton campaigned for a middle-class tax cut and against
- a gasoline tax, only now to call upon Kerrey to bail him out
- on the Senate floor. Kerrey has been telling friends in the
- Senate that Clinton "doesn't deserve this" and has confounded
- Administration lobbyists by not asking for any concessions in
- exchange for a vote. "Kerrey," said a top White House political
- operative, "is the least predictable."
- </p>
- <p> Late last week Clinton's team was concentrating its fire on
- Richard Bryan of Nevada and Herbert Kohl of Wisconsin. Worried
- about the impact that limited deductions for entertainment would
- have on Nevada's casinos, conferees wrestled with an exemption
- on "live entertainment" that they dubbed the "Wayne Newton provision."
- Kohl, who wanted more tax cuts and incentives for business,
- dined at the White House last Thursday night but was surprised
- to find that Clinton didn't ask him for his vote. "There was
- not a word said about the budget bill," said Lieberman, who
- attended the same dinner. "If this had been Lyndon Johnson,
- we would have been pulled into a private room."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton said last week that the string of close votes is unpleasant
- but inevitable. "((I am)) asking these people to be very brave
- and very tough, cut spending and raise new revenues," he told
- TIME. "I don't like anything about this part of it." What does
- Clinton like? "I like the fact that we've put in a lot more
- tax fairness, we've done something for poor people, and we've
- got some business incentives to generate jobs and income. I
- like that a lot."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton surely hopes the rest of the nation will too. White
- House adviser Paul Begala is working on a speech to be broadcast
- from the Oval Office this week. More than 20 senior officials
- have been installed in a "war room" in the Old Executive Office
- Building, where, aided by telephones, computers, faxes and printers,
- they are spreading the gospel of deficit reduction. Cabinet
- officers and senior officials were scheduled by war-room operatives
- for radio interviews and courtesy calls on lawmakers. The Democratic
- National Committee released a 30-second television ad that will
- run in four states--Arizona, Nebraska, Nevada and Wisconsin--blasting the "forces of gridlock" without mentioning that
- the chief culprits are a handful of Democrats.
- </p>
- <p> But it is Clinton who will have to make the difference. Two
- weekends ago, deputy White House communications chief David
- Dreyer dug up videotapes of George Bush literally running away
- from a controversial deficit-reduction deal in October 1990,
- when he dismissed the package with a glib invitation to "Read
- my hips" during a jog in Florida. Bush's diffidence at the time
- was an invitation for members of his own party to revolt, and
- infuriated Budget Director Richard Darman, who later called
- it the "biggest mistake of Bush's presidency." After watching
- the Bush tapes, Clinton's aides vowed to make sure that Clinton
- sells--and if necessary oversells--his plan, if that's what
- it takes to convince Americans of the plan's wisdom.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-