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- <text id=93TT0315>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: Picture Of Health
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 28
- Picture Of Health
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton wows the crowds with his vision of reform, but can he
- persuade Congress to help him deliver his dream?
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett and Julie Johnson/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton had just finished signing some letters in the
- Oval Office last Tuesday night when he paused for a moment to
- take stock. Earlier in the day he had signed his cherished national-service
- bill, and he was preparing to spend the evening making more
- than 60 changes to a draft of the health-care speech he would
- deliver the following night. Obviously pleased to return to
- two issues that had served him well in the campaign, Clinton
- shoved some papers into his briefcase and said to an aide, "I
- think things are really coming together. We're doing what we
- were elected to do."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the Clinton presidency is just getting under way. After
- a nearly disastrous start that left him questioning his own
- performance, Clinton has repositioned himself as a problem solver.
- He and his aides are learning that they can frame the debate
- on only one issue at a time, and sometimes not even then. And
- while there are plenty of questions outside the White House
- about the wisdom of Clinton's course, there is also palpable
- relief inside that the President is finally on the move. As
- Hillary Clinton told 150 White House officials at a midnight
- East Room celebration following the speech Wednesday, "It's
- the end of the first quarter, and we're in the game."
- </p>
- <p> Though short on specifics, Clinton's speech Wednesday night
- proved that he is remarkably persuasive at making the case for
- his policies--a key test of leadership. "If Americans are
- to have the courage to change in a difficult time, we must first
- be secure in our basic needs," he said. "The health-care system
- of ours is badly broken, and it is time to fix it." By personalizing
- a complex subject with stories of people who had lost their
- health insurance or faced a choice between medicine and food,
- Clinton asserted what a senior official described as "moral
- passion" and established that the cost of doing nothing will
- exceed the cost of change. White House officials admit that
- Clinton must still explain how the plan will be financed. But
- there is resistance to being too precise. "I would not assume
- that the public is going to want to know every detail," said
- a senior Administration official. "The public is far more interested,
- as far as we can tell, in knowing that the plan is rooted in
- sound values."
- </p>
- <p> The White House is monitoring public opinion closely. The Democratic
- Party invited nearly 100 disaffected Clinton supporters and
- Perot backers in Dayton, Ohio, to watch the speech Wednesday
- night and use hand-held dials to register their approval and
- disapproval. Though such sessions aren't as reliable as telephone
- polls, the results encouraged the White House that its message
- was on target. Support for Clinton's health-care plan more than
- tripled over the evening, several officials reported; Clinton's
- personal approval rating among the group jumped nearly 50%.
- </p>
- <p> A new TIME/CNN poll supports this conclusion. In the survey,
- 57% said they favor Clinton's health-care plan. And for the
- first time in four months, Clinton's overall approval rating
- exceeds his disapproval rating: 50% of those polled on Thursday
- night approve of his performance as President, in contrast to
- 41% who disapprove. To a White House that believes 43% is a
- "mandate," this is good news. "People feel he is trying," said
- George Stephanopoulos, the President's senior adviser. "Whether
- they agree with him or not, they feel he is doing big things."
- At the same time, a nettlesome rival is losing steam. In the
- TIME/CNN poll, the portion of those surveyed who have a favorable
- impression of Ross Perot dropped to 44%, down from 52% in August.
- </p>
- <p> According to Stan Greenberg, the White House pollster, Americans
- believe the prospect for change is improving now that Clinton
- has turned his attention to such middle-of-the-road concerns
- as health care, free trade and "reinventing" government. A day
- after his health-care speech, Clinton flew to Florida for a
- Nightline-televised national town meeting on health care and
- for more than two hours demonstrated his formidable grasp of
- the problem. "It has been a long time since the public has seen
- him wrestle with the problems of everyday working Americans,"
- said a White House official. "They didn't see it on gays, and
- they didn't see it on the budget. Now they see it." Mandy Grunwald,
- an outside political adviser, put it more succinctly: "He's
- fighting the right fight."
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton team has lately improved its lot by tempering its
- relations with Congress, where members of his own party have
- been giving him fits since the day he was inaugurated. After
- 12 years out of power, Democrats have had trouble getting accustomed
- to being part of a governing majority and felt free to treat
- any President like the opposition. "It takes an adjustment,"
- admits Senate majority leader George Mitchell. "There's a substantial
- difference when the President is of your party. The necessary
- discipline and restraint are not in the tradition of the Democratic
- Party."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton exacerbated the problem several ways. By slaloming between
- liberals and moderates during the spring and summer, Clinton
- appeared to be just a middle-aged Democrat, rather than clearly
- old or new. Such artful ambivalence is often necessary in Washington,
- but Clinton's was on display all the time, and he gave both
- factions license to carp at him as inconsistent. In addition,
- he gave insufficient deference to committee chairmen like Sam
- Nunn and Pat Moynihan and paid dearly for the slights: Nunn
- has nearly shut down Clinton on gays in the military, and Moynihan
- last week suggested that Clinton's health-care financing scheme
- was spun from whole cloth.
- </p>
- <p> The White House would have dismissed such criticism in March,
- but Clinton is more solicitous now. Two days after Moynihan
- took his potshot, Clinton invited the Finance Committee chairman
- and Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey to the Oval Office, where they
- urged him to level with Americans about the costs of his health-care
- plan. Americans must be told, Kerrey said, that they will have
- to pay more for better health care either in the way of higher
- premiums or in lost benefits. Otherwise Clinton would run the
- risk of overpromising and underdelivering. Clinton did not go
- as far as Kerrey wanted, but within hours he beefed up the section
- in the speech on "personal responsibility."
- </p>
- <p> The White House is also going easy on Democrats who go astray
- on the North American Free Trade Agreement. Clinton's manifold
- agenda makes it impossible to do otherwise: the White House
- made no move to punish Senator Don Riegle, who opposes NAFTA
- and gave Ross Perot a platform to blast the President in Michigan,
- in part because he was marking up Clinton's community-development
- banking bill three days later. Though House majority leader
- Richard Gephardt and whip David Bonior have announced they will
- oppose Clinton on NAFTA, both supported the President on the
- budget, and will repeat the favor on health care. The day Gephardt's
- announcement appeared on page 17 of the Washington Post, Clinton
- joked privately that "the only thing good about Boris Yeltsin
- knocking national service off the front page was that it knocked
- Dick's speech off too."
- </p>
- <p> Given Clinton's appetite for taking on policy challenges, White
- House officials say they have no choice but to build a separate
- coalition for each measure he sends to Congress and then work
- behind the scenes to minimize the conflicts of interest. "It
- isn't pretty," said a White House official, "but people are
- getting used to it.".
- </p>
- <p> Looking back, top aides see the turning point in Clinton's effectiveness
- as his August vacation, when he decided to concentrate less
- on the day-to-day operation of the White House. For months Clinton
- had functioned more or less as his own chief of staff, insisting
- on seeing dozens of aides daily despite warnings that he needed
- a stronger doorkeeper. During his vacation on Martha's Vineyard,
- Clinton tried a new approach for two weeks: talking only to
- chief of staff Mack McLarty and, on occasion, Treasury Secretary
- Lloyd Bentsen. Since then, said an aide, "he's just let go."
- Says a top aide: "He doesn't have to micromanage as he once
- did. He doesn't have to be the organizer-in-chief, the actuary-in-chief,
- the commentator-in-chief. That's not what they elected him to
- do."
- </p>
- <p> It will take discipline to make the new discipline work. The
- Clinton White House can still resemble a continuous fire drill.
- The health-care speech was conceived amid the usual creative
- chaos that the Clintons call home. Disappointed by the initial
- draft, Clinton asked Deputy Assistant to the President David
- Dreyer to work on a new version with Jeremy Rosner, a National
- Security Council staff member with a background in health-care
- policy. With an outline all but dictated by Hillary Rodham Clinton,
- Dreyer and Rosner on Tuesday night turned in their draft, which
- concentrated on six principles: security, simplicity, savings,
- choice, quality and responsibility.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton edited the second draft overnight and began practicing
- the speech Wednesday afternoon. More changes were made as Clinton
- practiced for top aides and a video crew in the small theater
- in the East Wing. He would cut and add new material off the
- top of his head as he talked, while aides tried to write it
- all down nearby. After three dry runs, his wife, dressed in
- a blue sweatsuit, walked in to listen. When he reached the part
- about choosing a "talented navigator" with "a rigorous mind"
- and "a caring heart," both Clintons burst out laughing. "Oh
- please, stop, enough," said the First Lady, hiding her face
- in her hands.
- </p>
- <p> Dreyer added the latest changes by 8:30, copying the speech
- onto three small diskettes and the hard drive of his laptop
- computer. Clinton made more changes during his limousine ride
- to Capitol Hill; Stephanopoulos typed those directly into the
- TelePrompTer. What no one realized was that a White House communications
- aide had already accidentally merged the new speech with an
- old file of the Feb. 17 speech to Congress. Then they simply
- scrolled to the top of the document and waited for Clinton to
- begin.
- </p>
- <p> When Clinton took the podium minutes later, he was understandably
- alarmed to see a seven-month-old speech on the TelePrompTer's
- display screens. Clinton told the news to Gore, who didn't believe
- it at first. "You're not reading it," said Clinton. "Read it."
- Gore did, and then said, "I believe that's the February speech."
- Gore summoned Stephanopoulos, who scrambled to fix the mistake,
- eventually downloading the correct version from Dreyer's laptop.
- But for seven minutes, Clinton vamped with just notes. "I just
- kind of thought," Clinton told an aide later, " `Well, God,
- you're testing me tonight.' "
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's aides let it be known last week that the President
- worried aloud during speech preparation that he had to deliver
- the bad news along with the good. But he is already being criticized
- for sugarcoating his plan, and some advisers add that Clinton
- may have raised expectations too much. "It's heresy to say it
- around here," said a White House official, "but there's some
- worry that the speech was a little too good. The plan may not
- live up to the speech."
- </p>
- <p> That is a danger, but the Clintons seem to sense it. After the
- speech, the Clintons and the Gores returned to the White House
- and made a triumphant visit to the troops in the health-care
- "war room" in the Old Executive Office Building. Greenberg and
- Grunwald pulled Clinton into an adjacent office to deliver the
- results of the networks' instant polls. But the new challenge
- was summed by Mrs. Clinton, who stood on a chair in the middle
- of the room and said, "After tonight, this is no longer the
- war room. It's the delivery room."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-