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- <text id=89TT2268>
- <title>
- Sep. 04, 1989: America's Dubious Export
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 04, 1989 Rock Rolls On:Rolling Stones
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 72
- America's Dubious Export
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Walter Shapiro
- </p>
- <p> The historical counterpoint is perfect: 50 years almost to
- the day after Nazi tanks roared across the border into Poland,
- that long-suffering nation has given birth to a freely elected,
- non-Communist government. No metaphor better symbolizes the
- triumph of democracy over totalitarianism. Even the horrific
- memory of the bloodstains in Tiananmen Square cannot eradicate
- the impression that most of the world is emulating the Western
- form of government -- or wants to desperately, even to the
- point of death. Not only the Communist bloc is awash in
- democratic ferment; nine Latin American nations have held or are
- scheduled to hold free elections in 1989. For the first time in
- memory, there is reason to hope that the doddering Communist
- Party boss in his shapeless dark suit may be as much an
- anachronism as the strutting military strongman with his
- chestful of ersatz ribbons.
- </p>
- <p> Amid such a global transformation, it is only natural for
- Americans to feel proud and perhaps even a trifle smug. After
- all, hotly contested democratic elections are as American as,
- well, campaign consultants, TV sound bites and 30-second spots.
- That, alas, is precisely the problem. For lost in the euphoria
- over this upsurge of freedom are some impolitic questions about
- America's own role in fostering free elections abroad.
- Democracy is indisputably good for the world, but are U.S.-style
- campaign techniques necessarily good for democracy? Should
- Americans feel elated if election campaigns from Manila to
- Moscow become as vacuous as the contest between George Bush and
- Michael Dukakis?
- </p>
- <p> These unfortunately are not abstract questions. For just as
- it was in 1940 when Franklin Roosevelt coined the phrase, the
- U.S. remains the world's "arsenal of democracy." But these
- days, rather than sending bundles and battleships to Britain,
- America is aggressively exporting political technology and
- campaign expertise. Whether it is bringing exit polls to the
- Soviet Union or the first negative spots to Argentine TV,
- Americans are there -- on the ramparts of freedom -- trying to
- turn the world into one vast Super Tuesday primary.
- </p>
- <p> This is one high-tech arena where the Japanese and the West
- Europeans still cannot compete: America leads the world in the
- sophisticated techniques of manipulating voters in free
- elections. The "booming market abroad for U.S. campaign
- operatives" was the subject of a recent cover story in the
- political-industry trade journal Campaigns & Elections. As the
- magazine enthused, "State-of-the-art television commercials and
- computerized voter files are spreading rapidly to other
- countries. American research firms are conducting focus groups
- for politicians worldwide." Like old-time vaudeville acts
- playing the Orpheum circuit, most of the top consultants have
- popped up somewhere in Latin America (primarily Venezuela,
- Costa Rica, El Salvador, Argentina and Bolivia) since the U.S.
- elections last November.
- </p>
- <p> In this world of the endless campaign, pretty soon no
- candidate anywhere will ever again risk uttering an impromptu
- thought in public. For a hefty fee, U.S. advisers will
- market-test every word and gesture to achieve the proper level
- of dynamic blandness. And since media consultants tend to
- recycle endlessly any technique that works, it is easy to
- envision future political spots that begin, "It's morning again
- in Poland." But equally disturbing is the way that during the
- 1980s, the political handlers have wrung the last droplets of
- spontaneity out of U.S. politics, as passion and ideology have
- become increasingly suspect. Perhaps the U.S. can survive
- irrelevant politics and low-turnout elections. But fledgling
- democracies cannot afford such decadent luxuries.
- </p>
- <p> In their off-year forays abroad, American consultants are
- largely motivated by avarice, arrogance and adventure. Perhaps
- their most high-minded justification is the contention that
- teaching the effective use of TV allows democratic leaders to
- communicate with the voters and mobilize political support. But
- this brings to mind the old joke about the small-town attorney
- who was going broke until another lawyer showed up, and they
- both got rich suing each other. Similarly, one media adviser in a
- foreign country may be a boon for democracy, but bring in a
- rival and you create that lucrative state known as consultant
- gridlock. Before long the airwaves will be dominated by dueling
- commercials, each more shrill and negative than the last, until
- foreign elections pivot on the local equivalents of Willie
- Horton and the Pledge of Allegiance.
- </p>
- <p> Such private political meddling abroad is not without
- foreign policy implications. There is the real risk that
- consultants will naively misjudge a foreign leader's commitment
- to democracy. Joseph Napolitan, one of the pioneering global
- political operatives, helped mastermind Ferdinand Marcos' 1969
- re-election campaign in the Philippines. As Napolitan gushed in
- his 1972 memoir, "(Marcos) is bright, knowledgeable, handsome,
- charismatic -- the kind of candidate you like to work with." At
- least Napolitan had the belated good taste to turn down the
- Marcos account in 1986. Instead, the aging dictator's last
- hurrah was handled by Black, Manafort, Stone & Kelly, a firm
- established in the afterglow of helping elect Ronald Reagan in
- 1980. This created a bizarre situation in which the Reagan
- Administration was overtly backing Cory Aquino (managed by
- Sawyer Miller, a Democratic firm) while some of the President's
- own political handlers were trying to prop up Marcos.
- </p>
- <p> Over the years, American popular opinion has recoiled at
- revelations that the CIA, beginning with Italy in the late
- 1940s, has manipulated foreign elections. But in the
- laissez-faire 1980s, no one seems to notice or care that almost
- all of the U.S.'s leading political consultants are now doing
- roughly the same thing for fun and profit. Either way, U.S.
- intervention may undermine the very democratic values the
- nation so loudly proclaims. Maybe that old American truism
- should be amended to read "Politics -- and political consultants
- -- should stop at the water's edge."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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