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- <text id=94TT1370>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Congress:Tough Time for Teddy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CONGRESS, Page 32
- Tough Time for Teddy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Sam Allis/Boston
- </p>
- <p> Blessed by his bloodlines, Edward Moore Kennedy should have
- been able to count on the adjective "incumbent" as a perpetual
- political heirloom. Even in this season of electoral discontent
- with the vagaries and pomposities of politics, his Kennedy and
- Fitzgerald legacy retains magic. In spite of scandal, the Senator
- still polls a "favorable" rating of 57%. But Kennedy is discovering
- that admiration no longer translates into support.
- </p>
- <p> It seems a particularly vicious irony that Kennedy's political
- opponent is the mirror image of the veteran Senator's former
- self. Republican Mitt Romney is young, trim and drop-dead handsome.
- His life mocks Kennedy's controversial past: the Republican
- is a teetotaler, a never-divorced family man and a self-made
- millionaire. That should be trouble enough on the campaign trail.
- But Kennedy faces a far stiffer obstacle: his constituents crave
- change simply for the sake of change.
- </p>
- <p> In Massachusetts, the hunger is not fueled by the sweep-the-bum-out
- mentality that is rattling other incumbents. Rather, it is a
- vague sense that Kennedy's time is up. Months before Romney
- gained his lock on the Republican candidacy, veteran G.O.P.
- pollster Richard Wirthlin came up with some surprising statistics:
- while 43% of voters favored Kennedy's re-election, 50% did not.
- "His numbers are perfectly good," says Boston Globe pollster
- Gerry Chervinsky, "but half the people think it's time for a
- change." And a poll released last week by the Globe shows that
- while 52% of voters think Kennedy is doing an excellent or above-average
- job, 49% believe it is time to give someone else a chance. The
- contest is a statistical dead heat, with Kennedy running 48%
- to Romney's 46%--in a state where Republicans account for
- only 13% of registered voters.
- </p>
- <p> Bay Staters hold Romney's business experience in high regard:
- 52% believe it to be appropriate preparation for a job in the
- Senate, compared with just 39% three months ago. The son of
- former Michigan Governor and 1968 presidential candidate George
- Romney, young Romney made his millions during the '80s as a
- venture capitalist in Boston. He argues that while his businesses
- have helped create 10,000 jobs, Kennedy's activities only funnel
- in federal grants: that is, funds derived from taxes. "Ted has
- never had a job in 32 years," Romney charges. "He has no idea
- how to create jobs, except with government money."
- </p>
- <p> To counter Romney's image as a family man, Kennedy is campaigning
- with Victoria, 40, his telegenic wife of two years. He is also
- fighting back with the first negative campaign of his political
- life. He is skeptical about Romney's job-creation claims. He
- has noted that while Romney says he favors universal health-care
- coverage, none of the part-time employees at Staples, the successful
- office-supplies chain that Romney helped establish, receive
- such coverage from the company. (Then again, part-timers usually
- don't.) Last week Kennedy even introduced religion into the
- race, demanding to know if Romney, a member of the Mormon Church,
- supported church policies that until 1978 excluded black men
- from serving as priests. Romney quickly reminded voters how
- the Democrat's brother had to fend off questions about his Catholicism
- during his run for the presidency.
- </p>
- <p> The battle is going to escalate. Romney, who expects to invest
- $7 million in the ad wars, has outspent Kennedy up till now.
- Michael Kennedy, the Senator's nephew and campaign manager,
- vows this imbalance will be stopped. "We will not be outspent
- in this regard."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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