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- <text id=92TT2555>
- <title>
- Nov. 16, 1992: Divided They Fall
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Nov. 16, 1992 Election Special: Mandate for Change
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 65
- ELECTION `92
- Divided They Fall
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Deeply splintered over ideology, policy and personalities, the
- Republicans face a bitter struggle over their party's future
- course
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> For Republicans, the battle for 1996 began officially
- last Tuesday, but it had started unofficially more than two
- years ago, when George Bush reneged on his no-new-taxes pledge.
- He sparked a full-scale revolt by the party's right wing, which
- neither much liked nor trusted him in the first place. Led by
- Patrick Buchanan, angry conservatives mounted a challenge to
- Bush in the early primaries. The President, in turn, wooed the
- right so relentlessly at the Republican Convention in August
- that he alienated the moderates. Bush never recovered from the
- error.
- </p>
- <p> Bush's defeat only deepens the fissures in the party.
- Lacking the anti communism and prosperity glue that united them
- for the past 25 years, conservatives and moderates are certain
- to fight more fiercely over such already contentious issues as
- taxes, spending, deficits, abortion rights -- and ultimately
- over the Grand Old Party's soul. "It's going to be a typical
- Republican war," says Wayne Berman, a senior adviser to the Bush
- campaign. "It will be no-holds-barred, hand-to-hand combat for
- at least a year."
- </p>
- <p> The finger pointing began even before the first vote was
- cast. On Friday, Oct. 30, a group of conservative activists met
- in Washington to autopsy the President's defeat. The wording of
- their invitation was vitriolic: "The Republican Party, poised
- for a massive victory just one year ago, is in tatters . . . The
- Bush forces . . . are already practicing damage control, blaming
- the conservative movement for the disaster they have caused."
- Nor is the bickering confined to the right against the center.
- The broad middle of the party is divided on economics, privacy
- and industrial policy. A look at the factions:
- </p>
- <p> The Religious Right. Championed by such figures as
- Buchanan and televangelist Pat Robertson, this group would
- return the party to a Reagan-era platform emphasizing tax cuts
- and aggressive deregulation of business to cure the economy and
- strict family values to salve the nation's social ills. The far
- right would go further, getting the government out of the
- workplace but into private homes, backing stricter laws against
- abortion, restricting the rights of homosexuals and widening
- censorship. Though these so-called cultural conservatives
- represent only a small fraction of the electorate, they are a
- powerful force in Republican politics and provide much of the
- seed money and ground troops essential to winning elections.
- </p>
- <p> Progressive Conservatives. This faction admires the hard
- right's faith in values but has little use for its protectionist
- leanings on economics and trade. The progressives also feel that
- where the free market fails, government should offer
- disadvantaged Americans a hand with jobs, education and health
- care -- as long as that aid takes the form of antibureaucratic
- incentives like tax breaks and vouchers. Their leading apostle
- is Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Jack Kemp, who has
- spent the past four years trying to reach out to African
- Americans and other minorities with sermons about enterprise
- zones, ownership and management of tenant housing, and school
- choice. This group also includes former Delaware Governor Pete
- Du Pont, former Secretary of Education William Bennett and a
- host of like-minded Republicans in the House of Representatives.
- Most G.O.P. veterans acknowledge that whoever takes control of
- the party in 1996 will have to adopt at least some of the
- progressives' ideas. "The country stands ready to reward
- whichever party can deliver real results at the lowest possible
- cost," says James Pinkerton, a Bush campaign aide who is one of
- the group's leading thinkers. "And in this day and age, that
- puts a premium on nonbureaucratic solutions."
- </p>
- <p> Center-Right Republicans. They believe the party can
- recapture a majority by emphasizing its two traditional
- strengths: fiscal restraint and foreign-policy stewardship. The
- centrists, who include Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Texas
- Senator Phil Gramm, consider the far right too offensive to
- independent-minded voters, especially women, and believe the
- Kempites are too cavalier about the federal budget deficit. An
- ex-Democrat, Gramm said he could balance the budget within five
- years, and has gone further than anyone except Ross Perot in
- calling for reduction in such entitlements as Medicaid and
- Medicare. Unlike Kemp and other supply-siders, Gramm and his
- colleagues do not believe tax cuts alone will automatically
- expand the economy or shrink the deficit and public debt. Gramm
- is not well liked, but he is respected and has made no secret
- of his White House ambitions. Though he lacks a political base,
- Cheney is a more affable conservative who is increasingly
- mentioned as a compromise candidate by those who despair of
- uncharismatic Gramm and his stiff medicine.
- </p>
- <p> Pragmatic Republicans. What's left of the moderate wing of
- the Republican Party inhabits the state capitals. Socially
- moderate but economically conservative, this group is generally
- tough on crime, tolerant of abortion rights and concerned about
- deficits. It is typified by such G.O.P. Governors as Pete Wilson
- of California and William Weld of Massachusetts who have had to
- wrestle with sluggish economies as well as the mood swings of
- an electorate whose jobs are shifting rapidly from the high-wage
- manufacturing sector to lower-wage service and information
- industries. This group is less reluctant than other G.O.P.
- factions to use government to ease that transition. "There are
- people in the party who have apoplexy when they hear the words
- industrial policy," says Weld, who backs government aid to
- business to stimulate bank lending and small-business
- investment. "I have fibrillations, but I don't have apoplexy."
- </p>
- <p> Whoever is chosen to replace Rich Bond as party chairman
- next January will face the task of reuniting the fractious
- G.O.P. Departing Minnesota Congressman Vin Weber seems the
- favorite for the job, partly because he is a straight-talking
- pol who kept his head above water while the President was
- drowning in his futile re-election bid. Du Pont also wants the
- party job, and has hinted he would forgo another run at the
- White House if he got it. Gramm and many moderate Bush
- operatives believe Labor Secretary Lynn Martin would do a better
- job of preventing the party from swerving too far to the right.
- </p>
- <p> The tug-of-war over the chairman's gavel is merely a
- prelude to the fight over the 1996 nomination. Most party
- watchers expect Kemp and his fellow progressives to advance
- their newfangled agenda while wooing the hard right with
- promises of fealty on family values. With Buchanan, Kemp and
- possibly Bennett or Robertson crowding the right side of the
- field, Vice President Dan Quayle can afford to shift more toward
- the center. Quayle, who keeps a Bush-like foot in nearly all
- camps, has already begun to moderate his position on abortion,
- suggesting that Republicans should concentrate on restricting
- the procedure if they cannot eliminate it altogether.
- </p>
- <p> The apparent front runner for 1996 is Kemp, who ran poorly
- in the 1988 primaries but won a straw poll of National
- Committee members at the G.O.P. Convention in Houston this year.
- Nonetheless, Quayle remains a contender for the nomination
- because he has spent the past four years crisscrossing the
- country, collecting political IOUs and raising money. If eight
- or nine Republicans enter the race in 1996, early primaries
- might go to the candidate who can attract as little as 18% of
- the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Despite their differences, nearly all the presidential
- aspirants are united on what it means to be a Republican. Du
- Pont notes that the party's factions and their presidential
- hopefuls are united by a common belief: "The single common
- denominator from Bill Weld to Pat Robertson is smaller
- government and economic growth." But selling that to the public
- may not be easy now that George Bush has presided over the
- largest deficits, highest taxes and biggest government in U.S.
- history.
- </p>
- <p> Burton Pines, a conservative activist, believes the
- Republican Party may be sunk if Clinton steers a moderate course
- and backs free-market solutions to education, welfare reform,
- health care and job training. "Clinton has the chance," says
- Pines, "of becoming the Democrats' Eisenhower, the man who ran
- against the New Deal but then confirmed it. If Clinton moves to
- the right, he has a chance to create a majority party."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe so. But with the Democrats in Congress divided into
- nearly as many factions as the Republicans, Clinton may have a
- difficult time moving boldly in any direction. If, by 1996,
- predicts political consultant Stuart Rothenberg, Clinton is
- plagued by a still sluggish economy, a party in rebellion and
- a disgruntled electorate, "the Republicans get to do what the
- Democrats did in 1992, which is run as outsiders who want to
- bring about change." That's what got Ronald Reagan elected in
- 1980, after a Southern Governor who promised new directions
- failed to deliver during his presidency.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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