home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1453>
- <title>
- Oct. 24, 1994: Elections:Governors on the Run
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 24, 1994 Boom for Whom?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ELECTIONS, Page 44
- Governors on the Run
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> If big-name Democrats fall in the largest states, the loss of
- local clout will hurt Clinton in '96
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Greg Aunapu/Miami, Laurence I. Barrett and James
- Carney/Washington, Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles, S.C. Gwynne/Austin,
- Jonathan Moody/New York and Sophfronia Scott Gregory/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> When political analysts predict a chilly November for Bill Clinton,
- they're usually referring to the congressional elections. Justifiably
- so: in a TIME/CNN poll, 41% of adults surveyed said if the vote
- were held last week, they would choose the Republicans in their
- district, vs. 35% who supported Democrats. Those figures, a
- stark reversal of the 42%-to-34% edge the Democrats held just
- two months ago, mark the first Republican plurality since 1952.
- </p>
- <p> But Congress is only one place where Clinton may feel frozen
- out. In Governor's mansions around the U.S., he may lose some
- of his most crucial supporters. Consider Zell Miller, the Democratic
- Governor of Georgia. In 1992 he was extremely helpful to candidate
- Clinton, barnstorming the state with his old friend and even
- changing Georgia's primary date to Clinton's advantage. When
- Clinton won Georgia by a scant 13,000 votes in November, thus
- grabbing the state's 13 electoral votes, many credited the margin
- to Miller.
- </p>
- <p> It's questionable whether he will be able to help Clinton again
- in 1996; last week polls gave Miller a narrow five-point lead
- in his own race against Republican Guy Milener. Yet for a Democrat,
- he's fortunate. With 36 states electing Governors next month,
- the Republicans are on the verge of controlling a majority of
- state houses for the first time since 1968. Of the eight most
- populous states, Pennsylvania is a toss-up; but Michigan, Illinois
- and Ohio will almost certainly go Republican. And in the four
- electoral-vote behemoths--California, New York, Texas and
- Florida--once favored Democrats, some of them political legends,
- are stumbling badly. If they fall, Clinton in '96 will forfeit
- the nitty-gritty, dig-out-the-vote effort he got from Miller
- in '92--in states he cannot afford to lose.
- </p>
- <p> The gubernatorial shift, unlike the upheaval in Congress, cannot
- be traced directly to fatigue with incumbents in general or
- Clinton in particular. Governors' races spotlight local personalities
- and such issues as immigration, gambling and state income taxes.
- But that is small solace for the Democratic leadership, which
- is wondering what went wrong in the Big Four.
- </p>
- <p> NEW YORK: If progressive Democrats maintained their own private
- Rushmore, Mario Cuomo, the immigrants' son who became his party's
- conscience, would be on it. New Yorkers, however, have had 12
- years to study the cracks in the granite. Cuomo's supporters,
- especially in New York City, still revere his full-blooded liberalism
- and bouts with presidential candidacy, his vetoes of the death
- penalty and defense of New York's generous social programs.
- But the same acts infuriate critics in rural areas and suburbs.
- And Cuomo has had trouble keeping businesses in the state or
- helping reduce local taxes.
- </p>
- <p> The result was what Republicans last summer called ABCD: Anyone
- But Cuomo, Dummy. Into the role of Anyone stepped a little-known
- protege of New York Senator Alfonse D'Amato's, a state senator
- named George Pataki. Pataki has presented a detailed crime-fighting
- plan and a fuzzy promise of a $5.6 billion tax cut.
- </p>
- <p> Cuomo has focused on the tax cut's vagueness, calling it a "con
- job" and a "political fantasy." But without waiting for details,
- many voters have been far more critical of Cuomo's own, more
- modest $1.6 billion cut, seen as cynical from a man who could
- have proposed it long before the election (much like his last-minute
- scheme to lower state electricity rates by buying the huge Lilco
- utility). Says Lee Miringoff of Marist College, one of many
- pollsters who have chronicled a Pataki lead of about 44% to
- 40%: "Cuomo has a problem: he's running on his past record.
- Pataki, on the other hand, has no appreciable past."
- </p>
- <p> Recently Cuomo received an endorsement from former New York
- City Mayor David Dinkins, which may mobilize black voters, a
- vital Cuomo constituency. In fact, Cuomo's wife Matilda has
- rather intemperately warned of "race riots" should he lose.
- Meanwhile, Cuomo has also profited from current Mayor Rudolph
- Giuliani's reluctance to endorse his fellow Republican; Giuliani
- apparently fears that the big tax cut may come at his city's
- expense.
- </p>
- <p> TEXAS: Back in 1988, Ann Richards seemed to have the Bush family
- number. Her comment that the Republican presidential candidate
- was born "with a silver foot in his mouth" gave a lively preview
- of what, by most accounts, has been an entertaining and competent
- governorship. And yet with the most recent polls awarding her
- only a two-point lead over Bush's eldest son George W., Richards'
- humor has sounded increasingly strained.
- </p>
- <p> She has grounds for frustration. In a year in which the No.
- 1 public issue is crime, Richards has already funded more new
- state-prison beds (104,000) than all previous Texas Governors
- combined. Despite bobbling a thorny school-financing issue,
- she enjoys a Clinton-should-be-so-lucky approval rating of 60%.
- </p>
- <p> Her failure to pull away from Bush may have less to do with
- her performance than with the state's shift toward the G.O.P.
- Since her election, Texas' most heavily Republican counties
- have added 120,000 voters to the rolls--and Richards' 1990
- margin of victory was only 100,000. In fact, she might have
- lost then, had her opponent, bumptious millionaire Clayton Williams,
- not compared rape to the weather ("If it's inevitable, just
- relax and enjoy it") and forfeited tens of thousands of votes
- by otherwise Republican-leaning women.
- </p>
- <p> Richards may have hoped to bait Bush, who is known as thin-skinned,
- into a similarly disastrous gaffe; she has goaded him by crediting
- his business successes to "his daddy's friends," calling him
- "that young Bush boy" and once, a "jerk." Yet Bush has stayed
- calm, politely staking out positions to her right on crime,
- welfare and the size of government. Against this, Richards,
- who is said to genuinely dislike Bush, appears adrift. Says
- Austin political consultant Bill Miller, who has worked for
- both parties: "Ann Richards is in serious trouble. Bush is taking
- the fight to her. She's on the ropes and getting hit all over."
- </p>
- <p> FLORIDA: Lawton Chiles, 64, is another larger-than-life pol
- under pressure from a Bush scion (Jeb, 41). But unlike Richards,
- Chiles has had crucial help from a highly placed official--Fidel Castro. Until refugee Cubans began braving the Florida
- Straits in early August, the folksy, eccentric Governor looked
- vulnerable to Bush's claims that he was out of touch with Florida's
- economic interests. By month's end, however, he was Florida's
- Horatius at the immigration bridge, prevailing upon a reluctant
- Clinton to intern at Guantanamo those rafters plucked from the
- sea. Almost overnight, Chiles commandeered Florida's red-hot
- immigration debate and became the only gubernatorial Friend
- of Bill's with valid anti-Bill credentials.
- </p>
- <p> All of which has merely brought him within five points of the
- front-running Bush in mid-September. Bush's proposal to build
- $1 billion worth of new jail cells without a tax increase may
- sound improbable, but the pro-life challenger has garnered many
- believers with talk of "family values," a draconian illegal-immigration
- policy and a philosophy on crime that almost excludes thoughts
- of rehabilitation.
- </p>
- <p> Chiles' handlers profess confidence, noting that he has just
- lately run his first TV spots, in part because he refuses PAC
- money or any individual contribution over $100. Indeed, few
- play the populist card better than Chiles, as Bush learned during
- a recent debate. The challenger switched briefly into Spanish
- and then turned to Chiles: "Governor, what I've just said was
- the Governor needs to lead. And the government needs to be able
- to sell."
- </p>
- <p> Chiles was all courtliness: "And if I might reply to you in
- Cracker?" (a slang term for descendants of white Floridian pioneers).
- "I know how to lead. I know how to sell," he said, launching
- into an example. "Now," he concluded, "do you understand Cracker?"
- If Bush wants to hand Chiles his first defeat in 36 years of
- public life, he may need a few lessons.
- </p>
- <p> CALIFORNIA: If the state's economy had stayed sour, little could
- have stopped Kathleen Brown. Pete Wilson, the incumbent, forced
- to raise taxes in his first term, had reaped a 20% approval
- rating. Brown, the state treasurer, as well as the daughter
- and sister of previous Governors Pat and Jerry, demanded fiscal
- overhaul and gleaned a 23-point lead in the polls.
- </p>
- <p> But then recovery arrived, and Wilson, a onetime Nixon advance
- man, staged a comeback his old boss would have admired. Freed
- of his fiscal straitjacket, he joyfully pressed the new hot
- buttons: crime and illegal immigration. His ads trumpeted his
- leadership of last year's triumphant three-strikes-and-you're-out
- movement and his enthusiasm for the death penalty. He signed
- on to Proposition 187, the tremendously popular, probably unconstitutional,
- California ballot issue that would deny the state's 1.6 million
- illegal aliens any health care, welfare grants or even public
- education.
- </p>
- <p> Brown spent weeks trying to outtough Wilson with positions ill-suited
- to the task. She seemed overly studied in her statement that
- if elected, she would enforce the death penalty despite her
- philosophical opposition to it. And, courageously but at great
- cost, she has attacked Proposition 187. By last week Wilson
- was enjoying a 50%-to-42% lead.
- </p>
- <p> Brown's hopes now rest on a detailed, 63-page booklet called
- Building a New California, which will be mailed to 1 million
- homes as a way of suggesting that, unlike her opponent, Brown
- "has a plan." Eric Schockman, an elections expert at the University
- of Southern California, is enthused. "Since Labor Day, I've
- seen a different Kathleen Brown," he says. "She's more candid."
- In fact, in a debate with Wilson last Friday night, Brown emphasized
- her tough attitude on crime by disclosing that years ago one
- of her daughters had been raped and her son had been mugged.
- </p>
- <p> At the White House, officials are monitoring the gubernatorial
- elections with a kind of desperate optimism. "We still win Texas,
- Florida and New York," predicts an official. Do the polls suggest
- otherwise? Well, he explains, "Governors' races are extremely
- volatile." Even he excludes California, effectively writing
- off Kathleen Brown and whatever influence a Democratic Governor
- would wield over the state's 54 electoral votes. Beyond Pennsylvania
- Avenue, however, more objective handicappers offer a different
- morning line: If Clinton wins any of the big states in '96,
- they say, he will do so despite their Governors, not because
- of them.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-