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- <text id=94TT1088>
- <title>
- Aug. 22, 1994: Politics:Bringing Tough & Tainted Pol
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 32
- Bringing Back a Tough and Tainted Pol
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Laurence I. Barrett--Reported by Nina Burleigh/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Cherubic and wide-eyed, David Wilhelm, 37, lacks the public
- ferocity usually expected of a party's national chairman. "The
- White House wants to hear a Great Dane barking," said one of
- Wilhelm's friends. "David often sounds like a Chihuahua."
- </p>
- <p> And so in the end he proved to be no match for Barbara Mikulski.
- On July 26 the diminutive but unquestionably ferocious Senator
- from Maryland went to the White House with several Democratic
- colleagues to review major legislative problems like health
- care with Bill Clinton. But she pressed a different priority:
- removal of Wilhelm as party chairman. If the Democratic caucus
- were polled, she said, it would be unanimous--Wilhelm must
- go. Party elders, notably Senate majority leader George Mitchell,
- demurred. But Mikulski's complaints had wide resonance. Last
- week the White House informed Wilhelm that Tony Coelho, a tough
- and controversial political pro, would be given a large role
- at the Democratic National Committee. Hurt and angry, Wilhelm
- then announced that he would go home to Chicago after this fall's
- congressional elections. Wilhelm's fate made for constant speculation
- inside the Beltway. The Clinton loyalist has been made a scapegoat
- for election losses since 1992 and is disdained by Democrats
- who believe he wasn't doing enough to prevent a rout in November's
- ballot. Some congressional Democrats complained that Wilhelm
- was so intent on using D.N.C. funds to promote Clinton programs
- like health-care reform that he has given short shrift to Democratic
- candidates hungry for support. Mikulski, who sees herself as
- the protector of the Senate's women, griped about Wilhelm's
- refusal to spend another $1 million on advertising in California,
- where Senator Dianne Feinstein is facing an extremely rough
- challenge from Republican Congressman Michael Huffington. Wilhelm
- had already invested $1 million in California. Overall, in fact,
- he has devoted a total of $10 million to date to the midterm
- races. That exceeds by far what previous chairmen spent. But
- Democrats are desperate this year.
- </p>
- <p> So anxious that last week the White House called on a sullied
- though solid political operator. When Tony Coelho quit the House
- in 1989, he held the third-ranking party post and seemed destined
- to be Speaker. But he had accepted a questionable loan to buy
- junk bonds. Rather than undergo an ethics probe, he embarked
- on a successful investment-banking career.
- </p>
- <p> Though the Justice Department found no cause for action against
- him, the lingering memory kept Coelho from an official role
- in the Administration. But he is much admired by several of
- Clinton's younger aides, including senior adviser George Stephanopoulos,
- who were House staff members during Coelho's congressional heyday
- as adroit fund raiser and campaign tactician. He has served
- as an informal adviser for more than a year. Coelho's stock
- at the White House rose higher when Leon Panetta became chief
- of staff. They had once been twin stars of the California House
- delegation--Panetta the policy wonk, Coelho the practical
- politician.
- </p>
- <p> With the party facing serious losses this fall and Clinton's
- relations with Congress tenuous, Panetta looked to his old buddy
- for help. The slot as unpaid "senior adviser" to the national
- committee--strategist as well as front man--is a way of
- easing Coelho back into action on a trial basis. If Coelho's
- 1989 problem fades as a public issue, he will be eligible for
- full rehabilitation next year. Insiders are already predicting
- that he will wind up with a plum assignment: heading Clinton's
- re-election committee.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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