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- <text id=94TT1531>
- <link 94TO0214>
- <title>
- Nov. 07, 1994: Cover:Politics:Silliest Race
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/POLITICS, Page 36
- The Silliest Race of the Season
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By James Carney--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington
- and Bonnie I. Rochman/Richmond
- </p>
- <p> Oliver North was set to appear in a Halloween parade with some
- local police in Vienna, Virginia, last week when he got word
- that followers of Lyndon LaRouche, dean of the American political
- fringe and Virginia resident, might ambush him along the way
- with a salvo of rotten fruit. "What do we do?" North asked an
- adviser, Mark Goodin. "Be sure and duck," Goodin replied.
- </p>
- <p> The fruit attack never came, but in his bid to unseat Charles
- Robb as the state's junior U.S. Senator, the retired Marine
- colonel and damp-eyed star of the Iran-contra hearings has been
- doing a lot of ducking and counterattacking in a campaign that
- has turned Virginia's political season into a freak show. The
- race reached new levels of notoriety last week when Nancy Reagan,
- during a public appearance in New York City, blasted North's
- veracity. "Ollie North has a great deal of trouble separating
- fact from fantasy. He lied to my husband."
- </p>
- <p> The former First Lady was the latest in a line of prominent
- Republicans who have publicly questioned North's honesty, but
- he refused to fight back this time. Declaring that Reagan was
- "the greatest President of my lifetime," North said his "mother
- told me never to get into a fight with a lady." Vice President
- Al Gore added his own voice to the squabble, referring to North
- as "a pathological liar."
- </p>
- <p> North's travails were met with glee at Robb headquarters, where
- aides were considering whether to use footage of Nancy Reagan
- in an ad for their candidate. Robb, after all, has been bathed
- in shame as well. The Democratic Party's onetime star-in-waiting
- has been dogged by stories about his attendance at swank parties
- with alleged drug users while he was Virginia's Governor and
- his alleged marital infidelities. While refusing to admit specific
- transgressions, Robb has conceded to having "let my guard down"
- in the past. That line, joked The Tonight Show host Jay Leno,
- "is just Washington talk for `I let my pants down.'"
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, the North-Robb race has proved to be a rich source of
- comic material. David Letterman drew up a Top 10 List of mock
- campaign slogans for North. No. 7 was, "A man of convictions.
- None of them pending." (North's three convictions in the Iran-contra
- case were overturned on a technicality.) And Garry Trudeau featured
- North as arrogant and a chronic prevaricator in his syndicated
- Doonesbury comic strip last week.
- </p>
- <p> Despite North's embarrassments, he is in a dead heat in public
- polls with Robb going into the final week of the campaign. North
- has been effective in linking his Democratic opponent to President
- Clinton, whose ratings are low in Virginia. North can also thank
- the independent candidacy of Marshall Coleman, a Republican
- opposed to him who received 17% in the latest poll. Coleman
- has been siphoning support that would have gone to Robb.
- </p>
- <p> More than anything, North's success is due to his prodigious
- fund raising as well as his skill in articulating the anger
- that Virginians feel toward the political establishment. To
- his backers, the attacks on North by members of the elite only
- provide more reason to back him. "His supporters are impervious
- to negative news about him," says Larry Sabato, a University
- of Virginia political scientist. If that holds true for one
- more week, North could soon be sitting in congressional hearings
- once again--this time as a U.S. Senator.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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