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- <text id=92TT1850>
- <title>
- Aug. 17, 1992: Star-Crossed Lovers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 17, 1992 The Balkans: Must It Go On?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- U.S. CAMPAIGN, Page 33
- Star-Crossed Lovers
- </hdr><body>
- <p> It sounds like something from a screwball comedy: two
- sweethearts coo at each other by night and then turn around and
- try to demolish each other by day. But that's the life of Mary
- Matalin, George Bush's campaign field director, and James
- Carville, Bill Clinton's chief strategist. The two are in love,
- and at war, at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> The relationship was Washington's most talked-about
- liaison long before Matalin sparked a political fire storm last
- week with a scathing personal attack on Clinton. Contrary to
- George Bush's no-first-sleaze rule, Matalin drafted a sophomoric
- memo that mocked Clinton's girth, branded his campaign "lower
- than a snake's belly" and noted his problem with "bimbo
- eruptions." Carville, who serves as one of Clinton's top
- strategists and phrasemakers, quickly fired back, calling his
- inamorata's memo "new evidence that the Bush campaign is out of
- control." Carville, obviously pained by the situation, added,
- "You can hate the sin and love the sinner."
- </p>
- <p> A gravel-voiced, tough-talking street pol from Chicago who
- learned her trade under Lee Atwater, Matalin, 38, oversees the
- Bush campaign's links to 50 state operations while helping to
- hone its message machine. Carville, 47, is a Louisiana Cajun
- with a taste for the jugular. According to an article in Vogue,
- when Carville informed Matalin at a Washington dinner party
- that he was going to work for Clinton, she excused herself and
- promptly threw up.
- </p>
- <p> But the two aren't really the odd couple that they seem.
- Each is the closest thing either campaign has to someone with
- street smarts. Just as Matalin is politically more liberal than
- Bush, Carville is more conservative than Clinton. Both are
- up-by-the-bootstraps white ethnics whose rough-cut personalities
- don't always fit neatly in a business that has been dominated
- by slick schmoozers. Both love to cook and jog and escape to a
- mountain hideaway near Front Royal, Va., on weekends. Says
- Matalin: "We have plenty of things besides politics to argue
- about."
- </p>
- <p> Being a woman in what are still male-dominated G.O.P.
- political circles, Matalin has suffered far more for the
- relationship than Carville has. Last year several top
- Republicans pressed Bush to dismiss her lest pillow talk undo
- his re-election. But the President stuck by Matalin and gave her
- a big hug after last week's tempest passed.
- </p>
- <p> No one knows what the pair said to each other in private,
- but Matalin's biggest fan in the Clinton camp sent her a large
- bouquet of flowers. Said Carville: "She'll be O.K. She's always
- O.K."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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