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- <text id=94TT1614>
- <link 94TO0217>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Cover:Election:Pair of Giant Killers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/THE ELECTION, Page 54
- A Pair of Giant Killers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson/Washington--Reported by Hilary Hylton/Austin and Sophfronia Scott Gregory/Nashville
- </p>
- <p> When America woke up last Wednesday morning, it was to strangers
- they had briefly met, and hardly got to know, but who would
- now be running Congress. These strangers rode to victory on
- a shoeshine and a smile and a sample case full of miracle cures.
- They gave few specifics, but never mind. Voters were convinced
- that their generic bromides looked better than what the Democrats
- had been peddling. Of those who uprooted hardy Democratic perennials,
- few were more unlikely than Texas Congressman-elect Steve Stockman
- and Tennessee Senator-elect Bill Frist.
- </p>
- <p> Stockman was a pro-gun, pro-school prayer sometime house painter
- and occasional accountant. The most effective element of his
- platform was simply not being 21-term Congressman Jack Brooks,
- who, if he had been re-elected, would have been the most senior
- member of the House. Being a Congressman will be Stockman's
- first steady job. Bill Frist, a heart-and-lung surgeon from
- Nashville, Tennessee, knocked off 18-year Senate veteran Jim
- Sasser by campaigning against the things Sasser was for: gun
- control, abortion rights and Washington pols telling people
- not to smoke in Old Smoky country. The main requirements for
- success among the neophytes were work in a field unrelated to
- government, a life lived outside the Beltway except for the
- odd trip to see the monuments, and a Democratic incumbent as
- hoary as one of the marble buildings on the Gray Line tour.
- </p>
- <p> Stockman, 37, didn't earn a college degree until 1990 and worked
- sporadically while raising money in the conservative churches
- of east Texas for a campaign that would spend little more than
- $100,000. But his limitations were a virtue because his target
- was so big--and so maculate. Jack Brooks, an ex-Marine who
- chomped on a cigar in his seat as chairman of the House Judiciary
- Committee long after the ashtrays were removed, could be a poster
- child for term limits. More liberal than his east Texas constituents
- on issues like civil rights, he had hung tenaciously to office,
- power, perks and pork by fiercely protecting his constituents'
- love of guns, rice subsidies and the death penalty. He was also
- good at delivering federal building projects and disaster relief,
- as needed.
- </p>
- <p> But Brooks' last grab for a slab of bacon proved too much for
- his sated constituency. After he managed to get $10 million
- for the Jack Brooks Criminal Justice Center at Brooks' alma
- mater Lamar College slipped into the crime bill, voters saw
- pork for the bad financial bargain it is--two dollars in federal
- taxes for every one that might come back to the district in
- the form of pork. Stockman, who had been trounced by Brooks
- in 1992, saw his chance and tried again. Some Republicans in
- Texas ignored him as a wild man. (Stockman unfurled posters
- that said FIGHT CRIME. SHOOT BACK.) But he found ardent support
- among the pro-lifers, term-limit advocates, and gun owners,
- angry at Brooks' vote for the crime bill. And the giant fell:
- Brooks won only 46% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> The new Congressman says one of his heroes is Representative
- Dick Armey of Texas, who used to live in his office, sleeping
- on his couch and showering in the House gym--practices Stockman
- plans to emulate. He knows he will have to work hard for the
- folks back home. "This is a tough district," he told TIME. "I
- know I got a lot of votes, not because they love Steve, but
- because they are mad at Brooks."
- </p>
- <p> Bill Frist, 42, outspent his opponent Sasser nearly 3 to 2--$4.5 million to $2.8 million--including $3.7 million of his
- own money from his family's chain of hospitals, Columbia/HCA.
- He imported an out-of-state gunslinger--political consultant
- Tom Perdue who advised Senator Paul Coverdell of Georgia in
- his upset win two years ago over Wyche Fowler. Frist went strongly
- negative on the "liberal, taxing, two-faced" Jim Sasser, running
- an ad picturing Sasser's face on Mount Rushmore alongside Ted
- Kennedy's and Dan Rostenkowski's and saying, "Eighteen years
- is long enough." Last February only 12% of Tennesseans had an
- unfavorable view of Sasser; by November 46% did. Frist came
- from 40 points behind to three in the fall after flying from
- one town to another across the state shaking hands. Meanwhile,
- Sasser was in Washington collecting commitments from his colleagues
- in his bid to become Senate majority leader after his presumed
- re-election.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Sasser got serious, he couldn't adjust to the new
- landscape, where promising to bring a multimillion dollar federal
- wind-tunnel project was just what the voters had soured on.
- Sasser triumphed in their first debate, but Frist turned his
- lackluster performance into another sign that he wasn't a smoothie
- from the big city. Sasser then turned negative, pointing out
- that Dr. Frist had masqueraded as a pet lover to get cats from
- an animal shelter to use in lab experiments, that he had not
- even registered to vote until six years ago. The Senator pointed
- to the irony of a heart-and-lung surgeon saying it was up to
- parents--not government--to decide whether children should
- smoke. He also took Frist's proposal to cut $230 billion from
- the federal budget and showed that it couldn't be done.
- </p>
- <p> But all was in vain. Doctors, even wealthy ones, rank well above
- politicians in public esteem. No one gave a hoot about the kittens,
- or where Frist would find the spending cuts, as long as he wanted
- to cut. Sasser lost by 212,843 votes.
- </p>
- <p> Amid the euphoria of Republican victories, Stockman was asked,
- "What are you going to do now?" and he joked, "Go to Disneyworld."
- Well, Washington is a certain kind of theme park that newcomers
- enter at their own risk. Old immunities disappear as members
- are forced to take positions and cast votes, providing the very
- specifics to voters and potential opponents they so carefully
- avoided this campaign. Unless overnight sensations like Stockman
- and Frist perform sensationally, they may find the broom that
- swept the old coots out of office ready to be used again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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