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- <text id=91TT2445>
- <title>
- Nov. 04, 1991: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 04, 1991 The New Age of Alternative Medicine
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- What Makes Cuomo Different
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Before his death, President Kennedy was so certain of
- trouncing Barry Goldwater in 1964 that he issued strict
- instructions to his staff: Don't spook the scenario. Don't say
- anything that might encourage the Republicans to select someone
- else. Today, as Democrats around the country salivate at the
- possibility of New York Governor Mario Cuomo heading their 1992
- ticket, George Bush's aides cannot contain their glee. "What a
- simple campaign it would be," says Rich Bond, the Bush adviser
- who knows Cuomo best. "Roger Ailes already has the TV spots
- conceived. Pictures of decaying streets; rotting buildings and
- homeless people everywhere; clips of Mario's well-known
- testiness and bullying; voiceovers talking about New York's tax
- burden and the state's bond rating, which is the third worst in
- the nation. And all of it tied together with a nifty tag line:
- `Cuomo: he'll do for America what he's done for New York.'"
- </p>
- <p> Why have Bush's aides rejected Kennedy's advice? The
- answer is easy: Cuomo is not Goldwater. Far from being Bush's
- dream, Cuomo could turn out to be the President's nightmare.
- </p>
- <p> Students of the electoral map describe a game plan that
- sees Cuomo avoiding G.O.P. regional strongholds as he exploits
- the weaknesses apparent from Bush's 1988 victory. The first
- targeted group is the 10 states plus the District of Columbia
- that Michael Dukakis won in 1988, which would give Cuomo 110
- electoral votes. He could pick up 99 more by capturing the three
- large states Bush narrowly won in 1988: California, where the
- President got 51.1%, and Pennsylvania and Illinois, where he
- squeaked by with 50.7%.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is a third cluster of eight states with 51
- electoral votes where Bush's popular vote did not exceed 53%.
- If Cuomo won all those electoral votes, he would be just 10 shy
- of the 270 needed for victory. Two other states won by Bush
- could provide the difference: Louisiana, where a third-party
- presidential race by David Duke could deflect enough Bush
- support to tip 10 electoral votes to Cuomo, and Michigan (20
- votes), where the automobile-based economy is so depressed that
- a coalition between labor and minorities could doom Bush's
- prospects.
- </p>
- <p> While any Democratic candidate could follow this electoral
- strategy, Republican campaign experts believe that Cuomo is
- especially well positioned to pursue it. First, they reason,
- Cuomo's name recognition offers him the chance to quickly close
- the stature gap with Bush. Second, Cuomo's fund-raising
- abilities are legendary, and it is estimated that about 25% of
- the $3.8 million in Cuomo's political-action committee could
- immediately be applied to a presidential race. Third, his
- experience as a state chief executive and his unmatched
- rhetorical skills ("Cuomo speaks poetry, while everyone else
- speaks prose," says Richard Nixon) guarantee that a Bush-Cuomo
- debate would be a bruising battle, in which the President could
- be rattled by the Governor's portrayal of him as a protector of
- the rich.
- </p>
- <p> Will Cuomo run? Like a child talking out loud, he debates
- the pros and cons with himself in a tiresome spectacle of
- self-examination. Nevertheless, Cuomo's public agonizing is both
- revealing and purposeful. By exposing his thinking to anyone
- who'll listen, he invites the feedback required to reach an
- informed judgment. He has already indicated that he finds the
- current field wanting, which was not true when he decided
- against a 1988 race, and that he thinks Bush is beatable, which
- he didn't believe four years ago. Holding him back is his
- governorship and New York's sorry fiscal condition. (Just last
- week it was estimated that the state faces a potential $800
- million shortfall.) Cuomo is loath to resign but says running
- for President while serving as Governor would be "virtually
- impossible." He supposes he could campaign part time but adds,
- "New York and every state I campaigned in would, and should,
- resent my doing so. It would be like trying to be a part-time
- father or husband," he explains. "You can't do it. In many ways
- I've been doing that all my life, and it's wrong."
- </p>
- <p> Egging Cuomo on is his disdain for Bush--and his dislike
- of most other politicians, including many Democrats. He admits
- to having "grudgingly respected" Ronald Reagan as "at least
- someone who believed in the silly ideas he mouthed," but he
- finds Bush "almost hopelessly cynical." The refusal of most
- Democrats to strike back at Clarence Thomas for the Justice's
- "patently ridiculous charge that he was being race-baited"
- causes Cuomo to conclude, "The problem isn't the process, it's
- the players. Unless and until you change them, nothing else
- will change."
- </p>
- <p> Cuomo's anger is not extraordinary. A lot of people were
- turned off by the Thomas confirmation hearings. What's different
- is Cuomo's willingness to excoriate some of the very
- politicians whose help he could dearly use if he reaches for the
- White House. "When you have Democrats like Joe Biden and Ted
- Kennedy who remain mute in the face of Thomas' absurdities,"
- says Cuomo, "and when you have Sam Nunn, Bennett Johnston, Wyche
- Fowler and Fritz Hollings vote for Thomas when he clearly wasn't
- qualified--I guess because they're scared of losing black
- support in their states--then you have to consider changing
- them as well as Bush. No process reform can give people the
- courage to do what is right, which is to stand up and say
- Democrats will not permit Republicans to pack the court.
- Ideological balance is a value worth fighting for, and as long
- as Democrats control the Senate, we can and we must ensure it."
- </p>
- <p> It is exactly this frankness--and Cuomo's eagerness to
- defend unpopular positions, like his opposition to the death
- penalty--that many Democrats find endearing. Cuomo might not
- win; he might not even get the Democratic nomination. But if he
- ran, the country would pay attention, and for a time at least,
- the pervasive cynicism that views all politicians as the same
- would abate. For whatever Mario Cuomo is, he is not like any
- other politician.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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