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- <text id=92TT1898>
- <title>
- Aug. 24, 1992: The Best Days of Their Wives
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 24, 1992 George Bush: The Fight of His Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 26
- PRESIDENT BUSH
- The Best Days of Their Wives
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Though still the adoring spouse, Barbara Bush speaks her mind
- on abortion, thus joining Marilyn Quayle in sharing the spotlight--and the microphone--with their husbands
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Ann Blackman/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> The morning after the New York Post published charges
- that George Bush had an extramarital affair, Noelle Bush, 15,
- asked her grandmother what all the fuss was about. As the two
- sat by the White House pool Wednesday morning, Barbara Bush
- explained that the newspapers were reporting that Noelle's
- grandfather allegedly had a fling with a former staff member
- eight years earlier. "Come on, Ganny," said the girl. "That's
- what they're saying," Mrs. Bush replied. When Noelle broke into
- giggles, the First Lady upbraided her in mock horror. "That's
- sort of insulting to your grandfather." Replied Noelle: "That
- is so funny." Recounting the exchange a few hours later, the
- First Lady concluded, "Well, I guess he looks ancient to her."
- </p>
- <p> Score one more for Barbara Bush, master of the
- self-deprecating gesture--particularly in the midst of a
- crisis that might cause other political spouses to lose their
- sangfroid. In the course of two days, her husband faced
- accusations of adultery, backpedaled on abortion and overhauled
- his political team. Mrs. Bush leaped into the fray herself,
- staking out a position on abortion well to the President's left,
- criticizing a top Bush aide in public, and then getting in a
- lick or two of her own at Bill Clinton. "I'm feisty as the
- dickens," she said in an interview with newsmagazine
- correspondents.
- </p>
- <p> In a year when both parties are trying to appeal to
- disenchanted voters, Republican officials are hoping that
- Barbara Bush--who is roughly twice as popular as her husband--can bring back many of the disaffected when she speaks in
- Houston this week. Convention planners say they are counting on
- Mrs. Bush's 10-minute remarks--and a five-minute talk by
- Marilyn Quayle--to be nearly as appealing to female voters as
- her husband's much longer make-or-break address. "We sometimes
- fantasize," said a campaign official, "what it would be like to
- have Barbara and Marilyn on the ticket."
- </p>
- <p> Ever since the Clarence Thomas hearings last fall, the
- Republican Party has been struggling to overcome the perception
- that its regard for women is only a notch or two higher than
- that of the Navy's Tailhook Association. The hearings galvanized
- a long-struggling movement to put more women into the House and
- Senate, and Democrats have rushed to showcase a sizable ballot
- of women candidates. But the G.O.P. is woefully short on female
- office seekers, which is one reason why it is calling on Mrs.
- Bush and Mrs. Quayle to take high-profile convention roles for
- the first time. In addition, the two women can play the party's
- family-values card in a way their husbands cannot.
- </p>
- <p> By an ironic quirk of timing, Mrs. Bush was preparing her
- speech when the latest round of adultery stories erupted. But
- she was bearing up proudly in an interview the next day. "You
- know, we're talking about people's lives," she said. "It's
- really not a very nice thing. I should quickly tell you that the
- fact this comes up every four years is not an enormous surprise
- to me, but it's a disappointing one...I know it's a lie, so
- it doesn't bother me. But it bothers me that we've come to
- this."
- </p>
- <p> Asked to explain more fully her husband's relationship
- with Jennifer Fitzgerald, a former appointments assistant who
- now serves as deputy chief of protocol at the State Department,
- Mrs. Bush described it as "employer-employee." Says Mrs. Bush:
- "She's a good friend of mine. I mean, it's so ugly, the whole
- thing. And it's been very deceitful and harmful and ugly. I
- haven't seen Jennifer, but my heart goes out to her. This is
- just mean." She said the two had not spoken because Fitzgerald
- was out of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Mrs. Bush then dropped a bombshell of her own. The
- decision to have an abortion, she said, is a "personal choice,
- personal thing." The day before, the President had said he would
- support a granddaughter who decided to terminate a pregnancy--although his own party is trying to outlaw the procedure unless
- the mother's life is endangered. Mrs. Bush went well beyond
- that, saying all discussion of abortion should be removed from
- the political arena. "The personal things should be left out of,
- in my opinion, out of platforms at conventions...You can
- argue yourself blue in the face, and you're not going to change
- each other's minds. It's a waste of your time and my time."
- </p>
- <p> Mrs. Bush had been suspected of harboring pro-choice views
- for years, but she never before said it publicly to avoid
- unnecessary skirmishes with the Republican Party's conservative
- wing. Coming the day after the Fitzgerald boomlet, the
- pronouncement's timing was curious and set off a round of
- political speculation. Some thought the abortion comment was an
- attempt to change the subject from the infidelity flap. Others
- believed that G.O.P. campaign officials were attempting to have
- it both ways by having Mrs. Bush woo independent and Republican
- women who find the party's pro-life platform unrealistic.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the motivation, Mrs. Bush's remarks put her at
- odds with Marilyn Quayle. The Vice President's wife last month
- contradicted her husband's public comments by insisting that if
- their 13-year-old daughter ever became pregnant out of wedlock,
- she would "carry the baby to term." Mrs. Bush had little use for
- this inflexible logic. Said she: "You can't pin a child down and
- say, `You can't have an abortion; that's against the law.'" But
- the First Lady quickly added that any differences between the
- two women were a measure of the G.O.P.'s diversity. "[Marilyn]
- does it differently. That's what's big about our party."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Mrs. Quayle differs from the President's wife in
- many ways. While the First Lady's image is cuddly and
- grandmotherly, Marilyn Quayle can seem hard, intolerant and
- combative. "I'm a great devil's advocate," she explained in an
- interview with TIME. "I can pierce holes through anything."
- Convention organizers will try to turn her tough-as-nails
- reputation into a political asset. Her midweek address on health
- care and education will mark the first time a Vice President's
- wife has ever given an actual convention speech. "The idea,"
- said a planner, "is to show women voters that you can be a
- Republican and not just wear Talbots and pearls and join the
- Junior League."
- </p>
- <p> Ever since a Washington Post series on her husband last
- winter depicted her as a power-mad spouse who once kicked to
- shreds a framed picture of her husband playing golf, Mrs. Quayle
- has been trying to soften her Cruella De Vil image. She is
- cooler in interviews and slower to anger. She proudly announces
- that she saves money by shopping monthly at the Price Club and
- that her kids come home and eat tuna "right out of the can."
- Normally careful to shield her children from public scrutiny,
- she now admits the abortion gaffe was unfortunate and
- "embarrassing" to her daughter Corinne. "We have reared our
- daughter so this would have to be a hypothetical situation,"
- said Mrs. Quayle. But, she added, the girl "was not pleased."
- </p>
- <p> But Corinne's mother has her independent streak as well.
- She takes issue, for example, with the President's wish that
- philandering charges have no part in a political campaign.
- "That's all part of the character issues," she insisted. "And
- anyone who is going to be President--you do look at the
- character of the person. That's what makes a person whole." Such
- remarks led a party official to quip, "She's our answer to
- Hillary."
- </p>
- <p> The our-wife-can-top-your-wife game can be carried too
- far. No sooner had Bush been accused of infidelity than G.O.P.
- chairman Rich Bond attacked Mrs. Clinton for likening marriage
- to slavery--a gross distortion of an educational review
- article she wrote in 1973. But Mrs. Bush, as if she were waging
- a one-woman campaign to court the political middle, publicly
- chastised Bond for his remarks. "I didn't like it," she said.
- "She's not running for office." Mrs. Bush added, "I know a lot
- of wonderful men married to pills, and I know a lot of pills
- married to wonderful women. So one shouldn't judge that way."
- </p>
- <p> But it is bound to happen. In an era of sound bites and
- short attention spans, when complex issues like deficit
- reduction and health care often seem too difficult to
- understand, many voters will simply choose the candidate who
- best fits their "values." And one way to judge a man's values
- is to look at the woman he married.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-