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- <text id=92TT2575>
- <title>
- Nov. 16, 1992: The Final 48 Hours
- </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 44
- ELECTION `92
- The Final 48 Hours
- </hdr><body>
- <p>He didn't need it, but Clinton's end game was a bleary-eyed,
- sleepless blitz through 14 cities and 5,000 miles
- </p>
- <p>By WALTER SHAPIRO/LITTLE ROCK
- </p>
- <p> Never again would Bill Clinton's horizons be this
- constricted. For the final two days of the campaign, Clinton's
- life was reduced to the bare essentials -- takeoffs, landings,
- speeches and the near absolute certainty (though he would never
- publicly admit it) that he would be the next President of the
- United States.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential candidates had pushed themselves to the brink
- before, but almost always in quest of a narrow victory or
- fleeing from the ghosts of humiliation. Clinton was different;
- he did it, regardless of the buoyant polls, largely because he
- wanted to. Few political odysseys could rival Clinton's 48-hour,
- sleep-defying, time zone-girdling, voice-croaking campaign
- climax. From Cincinnati last Sunday morning to Little Rock at
- 10:30 a.m. on Election Day, the Clinton Exhaustion Tour covered
- 5,000 miles and 14 cities. An hour-by-hour chronicle:
- </p>
- <p> 11:50 a.m. Sunday, Cincinnati, Ohio: The final gauntlet
- began in the drizzle outside Riverfront Stadium a few hours
- before a Bengals game. The previous night, the Clinton camp had
- lost an almost irreplaceable resource: the candidate's voice.
- By early Sunday morning Clinton was, as issues director Bruce
- Reed put it, "the real candidate of the Silent Majority."
- Taking the stage, he sounded like Marlon Brando in The Godfather
- and spoke for 21 seconds, a personal record for brevity. "Bad.
- It's bad," he gasped. "I'm going to let Hillary say something."
- She delivered a brief speech filled with the pronoun "we."
- Afterward a reporter cracked to a Clinton aide, "I thought Mrs.
- Wilson's speech was fine," a snide reference to the last year
- of Woodrow Wilson's second term when the invalid President ceded
- much official power to his wife.
- </p>
- <p> 2:50 p.m., en route to Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania:
- Campaign director Bruce Lindsey explained what the near mute
- Clinton did when he was alone with aides. "He talks," Lindsey
- said with bemused resignation. "He can't, but that's what he
- does. He talks anyway."
- </p>
- <p> 9:15 p.m., East Rutherford, New Jersey: Before Clinton
- spoke at a star-studded rally at the Meadowlands, aides told the
- press Hillary would go by herself to the final rally of the
- evening at the Garden State Racetrack in Cherry Hill, New
- Jersey. Strategist Paul Begala had tried to lay down the law:
- "Governor," he told Clinton, "your voice is gone. Hillary can
- do it." But no one could dissuade Clinton. Pumped up after
- giving an eight-minute speech, with his voice hoarse but not
- cracking, Clinton told Begala, "I want to go to the racetrack
- thing. I won't talk. I'll only shake hands."
- </p>
- <p> 12:15 a.m. Monday, Cherry Hill, New Jersey: Clinton's bus
- brigade crossed the finish line at the Garden State Racetrack
- as they drove into an exuberant fireworks-and-fanfare rally. As
- promised, the candidate shook hands -- hundreds of them -- and
- played a four-bar break on the saxophone with the Dovells, a
- local 1960s group. But Clinton could not resist speaking for
- five minutes. Before leaving the raceway, Clinton posed in the
- cold rain with a two-year-old trotter named Bubba Clinton, who
- had won a race earlier that week at the long-shot odds of 37 to
- 1. Asked what the horse had told him, Clinton said, "Just run
- hard."
- </p>
- <p> 2 a.m., Philadelphia: Bliss, rapture. Four (count them)
- hours in the Warwick Hotel to indulge in exotic luxuries like
- taking a shower or sleeping on a bed.
- </p>
- <p> 7:50 a.m., northeastern Philadelphia: As Clinton shook
- hands outside the Mayfair Diner, Begala marveled, "He's clearly
- the hardest-working man in show business. That's my rule:
- politics is show business for ugly people."
- </p>
- <p> 2:30 p.m., en route to Cleveland, Ohio: Seated in her
- front-row seat on the campaign plane, Hillary Clinton allowed
- herself to talk about victory. "I've always been certain Bill
- was going to win." Harking back to her first campaign as a
- teenager (she was a 1964 supporter of Barry Goldwater), Hillary
- explained, "I know enough about failed campaigns to recognize
- the averted eyes and the missed handshakes." For both Clintons,
- there is a symbolic importance in the relentless campaigning.
- "The image of his resilience," she said, "his fighting for
- change, working until the last minute, is the image he wants to
- leave the country with."
- </p>
- <p> The Clintons had turned their reclining front seats (Bill
- took the window) into a lilliputian hideaway, with a blue
- sliding curtain for privacy and the kind of mementos a college
- student might use to personalize a dorm room. Clinton had
- decorated the crimson fabric that covers the plane's front wall
- with dozens of campaign buttons, almost as a way of reminding
- himself in private moments that the campaign was real. The small
- floor area was filled with stuffed animals, the kind of cuddly
- objects that provide comfort at moments of stress. On the
- candidate's seat was his current paperback mystery, Private
- Eyes, in which the detective is a child psychologist and
- children's advocate.
- </p>
- <p> When Clinton returned to the plane from his latest round
- of handshaking, he talked with aides about his chances of
- equaling George Bush's 1988 rout of Michael Dukakis. "Bush took
- 40 states with 54%," Clinton rattled off like a small boy
- recalling baseball averages. "I don't think we'll do quite that
- well." Asked how he was feeling, he replied, "I feel fine.
- Tomorrow I'll probably feel terrible."
- </p>
- <p> 11:30 p.m., McAllen, Texas: Bush stopped campaigning two
- hours ago, but Clinton still had five speeches to go. Toward the
- end of this one, Clinton's voice started growing so
- enthusiastic that he said, "I'm having a good time -- I might
- give another speech."
- </p>
- <p> Instead Clinton wandered past the airplane's kitchen (the
- dividing line between the Clinton area and the press) to chat
- with reporters, periodically letting loose a yawn. He took the
- Texas results personally (he lost) as a measure of his judgment
- as a de facto campaign manager. His passion for Texas dates back
- to 1972, when he managed George McGovern's campaign in the
- state. "I always thought we had a chance here," Clinton said,
- "but the weight of opinion in my campaign was that we had a
- better chance in densely packed states like New Jersey."
- </p>
- <p> 1:15 a.m. Tuesday, Fort Worth, Texas: Clinton delighted in
- telling the crowd, "It will be nice for you not to have a
- President who has an accent. When you hear me talk and Mr. Bush
- talk, who's more like you?" Watching Clinton handshake his way
- down a rope line, an irreverent thought gathered momentum: Why
- does Clinton believe any voter who has come to the airport to
- hear a speech at 1 a.m. on Election Day requires further wooing
- with a handshake? If these are not sure Clinton voters, then
- who was? Perhaps this whole sleep-deprivation experiment said
- more about Clinton's need for adulation than it did for any
- electoral-vote strategy.
- </p>
- <p> 2 a.m., en route to Albuquerque, New Mexico: Clinton again
- wandered back to chat with a knot of reporters. This time the
- topic was primarily mango-chutney ice cream, a San Antonio
- specialty Clinton loves. Somehow this candidate on the cusp of
- victory conjured up the macabre memory that his first taste of
- mango-chutney had come the night before he drove former House
- majority leader Hale Boggs, campaigning in Texas for McGovern,
- to the airport for what was to be a fatal airline trip to
- Alaska.
- </p>
- <p> 2:10 a.m.: The flight attendant announced, "The flying
- time to Little Rock is . . ." Cheers filled the plane. Then she
- corrected, "I'm sorry, it's Albuquerque." In the front of the
- plane, Clinton, the late-night policy wonk, was actually talking
- to aides about converting cars to natural gas.
- </p>
- <p> 3 a.m.: The plane landed in 40 degreesF weather to the
- sight of about 5,000 Clinton true believers at an airport rally.
- Many had been waiting since midnight, but they would have to
- endure another 28 minutes. Clinton had gone into the bathroom
- to change his shirt, said an aide, "and I think he fell asleep
- in there."
- </p>
- <p> "Thank you, New Mexico," Clinton began, as he sailed into
- a greatest-hits reprise of his stump speech. But he also
- sounded a new note that aides said was designed to lower voter
- expectations of a Clinton Camelot after the election: "I'm here
- to tell you we didn't get into this mess overnight, and we won't
- get out of it overnight." By the time Clinton left Albuquerque
- around 4 a.m., the first polls were open on the East Coast.
- </p>
- <p> 6:30 a.m., Denver: This was unexpectedly an anticlimax;
- the predicted five inches of snow turned out to be only a light
- dusting, and the crowd, though intense, was small. In a poetic
- sense, the 13-month Clinton odyssey should have ended in
- Albuquerque before finally heading home.
- </p>
- <p> 7:45 a.m.: The flight attendant announced, "I want to
- welcome you aboard the final flight of the day aboard Air
- Elvis." Begala exuded confidence that even if Clinton were to
- lose all six toss-up states, he would still prevail in the
- Electoral College. Then Begala mentioned Return to Earth, the
- autobiography in which astronaut Buzz Aldrin discussed his
- emotional problems after he left NASA. Referring to Aldrin,
- Begala said, "What do you do when you achieve your life's
- ambition at age 35?" Begala, 31, had just helped elect the
- President of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> 10:30 a.m., Little Rock, Arkansas: Someone with a voice
- uncannily similar to that of a certain large Governor of a small
- state commandeered the internal p.a. system just seconds after
- the Clinton plane landed. "We will be taking off again for
- three more stops," the voice announced with an assumption of
- authority. "It'll be a little awkward, since we are going to the
- A's we missed. We are going to Alabama, then we're going to go
- to Arizona, and then we're going to make one quick stop in Nome
- before coming home to finally give you a rest."
- </p>
- <p> 10:43 a.m.: Clinton, flanked by his daughter Chelsea (who
- had just boarded the plane) and Hillary, came down the ramp
- onto the tarmac in Little Rock. A practiced observer would
- recognize that there was something altered in Clinton's stride,
- perhaps more than just an effect of fatigue. He put his full
- weight into every step, as if to underline the gravity of the
- moment and the heavy burdens he expected soon to bear.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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