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- <text id=90TT3005>
- <title>
- Nov. 12, 1990: Plain Squeaking
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 38
- Plain Squeaking
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Bush tries hard to "give 'em hell," but his harsh campaign
- attacks on Democrats fail to boost his sagging credibility
- </p>
- <p>By DAN GOODGAME/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Michael
- Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> During the final throes of an otherwise forgettable midterm
- campaign, Americans last week witnessed a strange spectacle:
- George Bush, the celebrated conciliator and undistinguished
- orator, tried--at least for a couple of days--to emulate
- Harry ("Give 'Em Hell") Truman.
- </p>
- <p> Rallying Republicans in Oklahoma City, Bush blamed the
- Democrat-controlled Congress for dragging the economy to the
- edge of recession. He snarled that Congress had "turned its back
- on our police officers." Later he boasted that Republicans had
- "held the line against reckless cuts of our armed forces" sought
- by Democrats, adding that "we owe that much to our men and women
- in the Persian Gulf."
- </p>
- <p> It was a risky gambit for the normally cautious Bush, but,
- as one White House official put it, "When you're this far
- behind, you have to take some chances." Bush desperately needed
- to regain the initiative following his flounder flops on taxes
- during the budget talks, which drove his poll ratings down more
- than 20 points and moved many G.O.P. candidates to split with
- him publicly. Worst of all, Bush's credibility was slipping. In
- an unpublished portion of a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal
- poll, voters were asked "Is George Bush honest, a person you can
- trust?" Only 52% said yes, down from 63% a year ago.
- </p>
- <p> Spurred by John Sununu, his combative chief of staff, Bush
- sought to recover by appealing to voters over the heads of a
- "do-nothing Congress," just as the Democrat Truman had done more
- than four decades earlier. Jim Pinkerton, 32, the White House
- policy-planning chief, had urged this strategy for months after
- poring over accounts of Truman's 1948 campaign, in which he
- pressed his social program, bashed Republican lawmakers for
- obstructing it and convinced voters to replace them with
- Democrats. This time, however, neither the actor nor the stage
- seemed to fit the script. Voters, while disgusted by federal
- fecklessness, blame Republicans at least as much as Democrats.
- Also, as a senior Republican strategist conceded, "this
- give-'em-hell stuff really isn't George Bush, and it's not
- credible coming from him. It's too strident."
- </p>
- <p> By midweek Bush himself was chafing at the Truman approach.
- So he sought help from outside advisers, including two key
- figures from his 1988 campaign: political adman Roger Ailes and
- pollster Robert Teeter. Both men told Bush that his attempts to
- hang the budget mess on the Democrats looked defensive and that
- he would do better to change the subject. "Let's remind people
- that we've got some good things accomplished," a third adviser
- recommended. "Talk about the Clean Air Act. Talk about the gulf,
- which is more presidential. Above all, be yourself."
- </p>
- <p> Thus, after vowing to "crisscross the country" savaging
- Democrats, Bush ended the week saying he wanted to "finish on
- a positive note." He began to talk extensively--and
- belligerently--about the Persian Gulf. But that shift hardly
- mollified the Democrats; citing the campaign-trail venues for
- the President's tough talk on the gulf, they accused him of
- using the crisis for Republican advantage. Bush indignantly
- denied the charge. Yet two polls released late last week
- suggested the new approach might be paying off: Bush's approval
- ratings appear to be leveling off in the mid-50s.
- </p>
- <p> Bush belatedly concluded that after more than five months
- of bipartisan budget talks with Congress, he could not credibly
- lurch into reverse gear and blame everything on his negotiating
- partners. "The Truman approach could be a good one," said one
- Republican strategist, "but you have to be consistent about it."
- </p>
- <p> Consistency has been scarce around the White House lately,
- in part because of Bush's tendency to separate "governing" and
- "politics." When he works on the gulf crisis or the budget, he
- is "governing": he concentrates on cutting private deals and
- sees little need to persuade the public to back him. Once the
- deals are made, however, Bush can switch to his "politics" mode,
- in which he feels free to play fast and loose with the facts.
- Bush tells his political audiences, for example, that he needs
- more Republicans in Congress so that taxes and spending can be
- reduced. Yet in the recent budget battle, House Republicans were
- unable to come within $90 billion of Bush's deficit-cutting
- targets.
- </p>
- <p> President Truman understood that governing requires the
- constant and effective practice of politics, which he reduced
- to one word: persuasion. Truman always worked to persuade the
- public, in frank and often funny language. Yet he never feared
- to offend voters who might disagree, and he seldom shrank from
- admitting the costs and implications of his policies.
- </p>
- <p> George Bush, in contrast, tries to please everyone all the
- time. He takes the popular position that taxes need not rise,
- even on the wealthy, if only federal spending is cut--yet he
- insists that Congress make the tough choices on whose spending
- is cut. His attitude is that the buck stops there. Bush sought
- closed-door budget talks with the leaders of Congress precisely
- because all sides wished to avoid public debate over such
- unpopular measures as the $70 billion cut in Medicare that Bush
- secretly proposed. As Senate majority leader George Mitchell
- observed, "President Bush is unwilling to advocate publicly the
- policies he was pursuing privately."
- </p>
- <p> When Americans think of Harry Truman, many recall the crowds
- in 1948 who urged him to "Give 'em hell." Fewer remember
- Truman's response: "I just tell the truth on the opposition--and they think it's hell." Until George Bush does the same, he
- will be no Harry Truman.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-