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- <text id=92TT1931>
- <title>
- Aug. 31, 1992: Playing for The Big Bounce
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 31, 1992 Woody Allen: Cries and Whispers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WEEK, Page 14
- NATION
- Playing for The Big Bounce
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Bush cuts into Clinton's lead as he rallies his fractious party
- </p>
- <p> George Bush sees his life as a series of "missions assigned"
- and "missions accomplished." Accordingly, he set several goals
- for himself at the Republican Convention in Houston. He needed to
- reunite his splintering party after a brutal primary campaign.
- If he couldn't explain exactly what he wanted to do in a second
- term, he at least needed to remind a majority of Americans why
- they voted for him in 1988. And he needed to shave roughly half
- of Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton's 25-point lead in the polls.
- </p>
- <p> By the time the Republicans had executed what may have
- been the largest balloon drop in political history Thursday
- night, Bush looked ready to move three more missions to his
- "accomplished" column. In his acceptance speech, he played the
- stature card, reminding Americans that on his watch the Berlin
- Wall fell, communism crumbled and Kuwait was liberated. After
- wrangling for weeks with advisers over how to reconcile his
- respectable record abroad with his listless performance at home,
- Bush reduced his pitch to two sentences: "This election is about
- change. The question is, Who do you trust to make change work
- for you?" Translation: "I'm not perfect, but the other guy's
- worse."
- </p>
- <p> Striking themes more political than presidential, Bush
- attacked Clinton as a dangerous liberal who would raise taxes
- and has dithered at times of personal and national crisis. While
- perhaps not inspiring, Bush's lesser-of-two-evils pitch seemed
- to be working: by week's end polls showed that Bush was
- narrowing the gap as the relentless Republican attacks began to
- cut into Clinton's favorable ratings.
- </p>
- <p> But Bush skipped gingerly around any discussion of the
- economy in his 56-min. speech. And the centerpiece of his
- economic proposals was a familiar package of tax cuts he has
- proposed to Congress several times before, supplemented by a
- hokey plan to allow taxpayers to donate up to 10% of their
- income tax payments to reducing the federal debt.
- </p>
- <p> Before Bush's finale, the convention had a schizophrenic
- quality not often seen at G.O.P. gatherings. Night after night,
- the party's fault lines were laid bare for the nation to see.
- Patrick Buchanan's darkly apocalyptic speech Monday night all
- but raised the specter of race war, only to be followed minutes
- later by Ronald Reagan's soaring tribute to Bush and America's
- future. Wednesday, Barbara Bush gently prodded the conservative
- delegates to broaden their party's sometimes narrow definition
- of family, while warm-up act Marilyn Quayle championed a
- zero-tolerance approach to "family values." But it was Mary
- Fisher, the HIV-positive daughter of a top G.O.P. fund raiser,
- who held the Astrodome rapt with her insistence that AIDS
- victims "have not earned cruelty and do not deserve meanness."
- Coming after several days of antigay rhetoric, Fisher gave what
- many believed was the bravest speech of the week.
- </p>
- <p> Such divisions may be a harbinger for the G.O.P. Without
- communism to kick around, without the prosperity that has helped
- Republicans hold the White House for 20 of the past 24 years,
- the party is groping for a new philosophical glue to hold its
- various constituencies together. Even if Bush can unite the
- factions this year, their increasingly irreconcilable
- differences guarantee that the G.O.P. is itself in for some
- "change" before it gathers again in 1996.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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