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- <text id=93TT0518>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: No Experience Necessary
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ELECTIONS, Page 49
- No Experience Necessary
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Ornery voters give the boot to incumbent Democrats, but the
- pattern isn't as simple as it appears
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington, Janice C. Simpson/New
- York, Jack E. White/Trenton and Michael Riley/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> Politicians, beware: voters are still inclined to hold experience
- against you. George Bush learned that lesson last year, when
- his failure to make a difference during his four years in the
- White House cost him his job. This year voters are increasingly
- asking whether politicians have improved American lives or prospects
- in some visible, tangible way; if the pols can't prove they
- have done so--well, look out. And Bill Clinton, who profited
- at Bush's expense, had better be taking notes.
- </p>
- <p> The President was not on any ballot last Tuesday, of course.
- But two Democrats he campaigned hard for, New York City Mayor
- David Dinkins and New Jersey Governor James Florio, were turned
- out of office. Their defeats were the more galling because of
- the identity of their Republican conquerors. Former prosecutor
- Rudolph Giuliani had lost to Dinkins four years earlier; Christine
- Todd Whitman was a relative novice who had held only one minor
- elective office in New Jersey and proposed pie-in-the-sky tax
- cuts.
- </p>
- <p> Incumbency became a burden even for some candidates who were
- not in office but seemed like political insiders. In the third
- nationally spotlighted race, for Governor of Virginia, former
- state attorney general Mary Sue Terry at one point held a 29-point
- lead in some polls over Republican George Allen. But by Election
- Day, Allen had convinced many voters that Terry's Democrats
- were treating the Governor's mansion as a virtual hereditary
- monarchy; he won by a lopsided 17 points to complete one of
- the most amazing turnarounds ever. In a less noticed but important
- contest, Coleman Young, mayor of Detroit for 20 years, sought
- to anoint Sharon McPhail as his successor; she was buried under
- a 12-point landslide by Dennis Archer. Further underlining their
- anti-incumbent mood, voters in Maine, New York City and nearby
- Suffolk County enacted term limits for officeholders, including
- Mayor-elect Giuliani, while New Jerseyites passed a referendum
- that will give them the authority to remove any elected official,
- including Governor-elect Whitman, even before his or her term
- is up.
- </p>
- <p> Since most of the outs who beat the ins or their would-be heirs
- were Republicans, it was tempting for G.O.P. partisans to read
- the results as constituting a tide for their party. Republicans
- have in fact won all eight of the most important races decided
- since Clinton's election a year ago (the earlier ones were for
- Senate seats in Georgia and Texas and for mayor of Los Angeles).
- Moreover, there were signs--though ambiguous and inconclusive
- ones--of a conservative, anti-tax, tough-on-crime, no-to-gay-rights
- mood that, to the extent it takes on a partisan coloration,
- should benefit Republicans more than Democrats.
- </p>
- <p> Generally, though, political cognoscenti agreed the results
- were less pro than anti, not so much for Republicans as against
- almost anyone in office. And even that reading has to be qualified.
- The New York City and New Jersey elections were so close that
- shifts of a very few votes would have reelected both Dinkins
- and Florio and no doubt led pundits to interpret the results
- very differently (although most American elections are decided
- by relatively small margins). Moreover, it is still possible
- for incumbents to win big. In Houston Mayor Bob Lanier promised
- to put more cops on the streets and did; the crime rate dropped
- significantly. In the election last week no one of any stature
- dared challenge him, and he won a second term with 91% of the
- vote.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly skeptical voters, however, demand results just
- about that measurable and turn surly because they rarely get
- them. The message of the election returns last week "is a kind
- of distemper on the part of the public and a dislike of insiders
- of all stripes," says Scott Keeter, who runs the Commonwealth
- Poll at Virginia Commonwealth University. Comments Jay Severin,
- a New York-based political consultant who often advises Republican
- candidates: "I don't think it's a Republican message. It's more
- a Perot message. People are angry.''
- </p>
- <p> Clinton sought to put the best face he could on the election
- results. Far from being a repudiation of him, he said, they
- indicated a continuation of the very desire for change that
- had carried him into the White House. Perhaps, but as Dinkins,
- Florio and others have discovered, the desire for change that
- can sweep a candidate into office in one election can sweep
- him right out again four years later.
- </p>
- <p> At barest minimum, the results last week will fail to help Clinton
- win congressional support not only for NAFTA but for his health-care
- reform bill as well. Barbara Kennelly of Connecticut, a deputy
- Democratic whip in the House, fears that Clinton's health-care
- bill will become more vulnerable to attack--wrongly, in her
- view--as too expensive and too likely to promote a growth
- of government bureaucracy. On state and local levels at least,
- charges of excessive spending and too much bureaucracy have
- been proving lethal.
- </p>
- <p> Those legislative difficulties could pale in comparison to the
- ones Clinton may face after the 1994 elections. Losses of even
- two or three seats in the Senate and 20 or so in the House,
- regarded as normal for the President's party at midterm, would
- shave the Democrats' margins so thin as to perhaps bring back
- legislative gridlock. Greater losses could virtually end Clinton's
- chances for getting any important legislation passed, and the
- elections last week indicate that is a distinct possibility.
- Very far from a certainty, of course: a recent quickening in
- the economic recovery, if it continues and brings an upsurge
- in employment, could convince many alienated voters that the
- status quo is not so awful after all. But a continuation of
- the present anti-incumbent mood could hurt the Democrats badly,
- if only because they will have many more Senate and House seats
- and governorships to defend next year than the Republicans will.
- </p>
- <p> Apart from the anti-incumbent trend, the results last week showed
- the contrasts and contradictions usual for a clutch of local
- contests. One exception: gay rights lost heavily in all three
- places they were put to a vote--Cincinnati; Lewiston, Maine;
- and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. These are not exactly trend-setting
- cosmopolises, but the defeats extend an unbroken string of losses
- over several years that has gay activists worried. In most other
- areas, however, the results showed patterns were meant to be
- broken:
- </p>
- <p> RACE
- </p>
- <p> The New York City results were ominously polarized. Dinkins
- won 95% of blacks' ballots, while Giuliani took 76% of the white
- vote. When Dinkins steps down on New Year's Day, it will mark
- the first time in 20 years that none of the nation's four largest
- cities have a black mayor. But Minneapolis, which is 78% white,
- elected its first black (and first woman) mayor, Sharon Sayles
- Belton. In Seattle, 75% white, Norman Rice bore the double burden
- of incumbency and race but nonetheless swept to re-election
- by a 2-to-1 vote; he has convinced many residents that he is
- a problem-solving pragmatist whose race is irrelevant. Mayor
- Michael White, a self-described "pragmatic idealist," won a
- second term in Cleveland. Detroit's overwhelmingly black electorate
- chose Archer despite McPhail's charges that he is too friendly
- to white suburbanites.
- </p>
- <p> TAXES
- </p>
- <p> They are obviously, and intensely, unpopular. Yet voters in
- Washington State approved a $1 billion increase to pay for a
- new state health-care plan, and in California, the motherland
- of tax protest, voters made permanent a half-cent increase in
- the sales tax for hiring more fire fighters and police. Even
- in New Jersey, anger at the $2.8 billion increase Florio pushed
- through in 1990 would not by itself have been enough to beat
- him, in the view of Whitman's campaign manager, Ed Rollins.
- His attack against Florio focused on the idea that the state's
- economy is still sluggish and schools are still poor, "so you
- got taxed a lot more, and you didn't get anything for it." The
- upshot, in the view of many analysts: voters will grudgingly
- approve tax increases they can be persuaded are needed for specific
- purposes--but woe to the officeholder who raises taxes and
- has nothing to show for it.
- </p>
- <p> CRIME
- </p>
- <p> The crack-down-hard approach is usually a big vote getter. It
- helped mightily to elect Giuliani and Allen, and Washington
- State voters approved a "three strikes and you're out" law that
- mandates life imprisonment without parole for anyone convicted
- of a third violent felony. Yet would-be tough guys can lose
- too. John Derus based his campaign for mayor of Minneapolis
- entirely on a law-and-order appeal but was swamped by Sayles
- Belton, who pledged an increase in social services.
- </p>
- <p> Such mixed results may mean only that the U.S. now qualifies
- for an observation often made about Russia: it is so big and
- diverse that two flatly contradictory statements about it will
- both be true. On the votes could also signify a heartening sophistication
- among the electorate, an ability to appreciate that not all
- tax-increase proposals or tough-on-crime candidates--or even
- all incumbents--are the same and to make discriminating judgments.
- Which is not necessarily consoling to most officeholders or
- most Democrats, especially the more liberal variety. But it
- does indicate that a variety of ideas and politicians have a
- fighting chance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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