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- <text id=94TT1648>
- <title>
- Nov. 28, 1994: Government:After the Revolution
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GOVERNMENT, Page 28
- After the Revolution
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In the turmoil of the GOP takeover, everything is in play, including
- Bill Clinton's stand on the school-prayer issue
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James Carney with Clinton, Mark Thompson and Douglas
- Waller/Washington
- </p>
- <p> A mark of the biggest traumas is that they reach down to the
- smallest levels. On the morning after Election Day, the 8-year-old
- son of a defeated Democratic Congressman walked slowly into
- his third-grade classroom at Horace Mann School in Washington
- and announced sadly, "My dad lost." The boy was worried that
- he might have to move, and his teacher tried to console him.
- "He's too little to understand the full implications," says
- principal Sheila Ford. "But he knows enough that it's been real
- hard on him."
- </p>
- <p> Well, that's how it is for more senior Democrats these days
- too. As the aftershocks of the G.O.P. triumph go rolling through
- the city, every day is moving day now in Washington. What's
- moving is everything. Amid the teeming arrival of the ins, mostly
- Republicans, and the gloomy expulsion of the outs, mostly Democrats,
- any number of things are in motion. The battle lines in Congress,
- the power flow in both houses, the political center--all is
- in play. So is Bill Clinton, who's being tugged by both sides
- of his party while he also manages, in that way of his, to pull
- himself back and forth.
- </p>
- <p> The great challenge for the Democrats, still reeling from their
- drubbing at the polls, is to keep their footing as the G.O.P.
- pulls the rug out from under them. Clinton's handling of the
- first major surprise to be sprung by soon-to-be House Speaker
- Newt Gingrich was anything but surefooted. Right after the election,
- Gingrich declared that in the next session of Congress, House
- Republicans plan to introduce a constitutional amendment to
- permit school prayer, an item that didn't appear in the G.O.P.'s
- "Contract with America." When reporters asked Clinton about
- it in Jakarta, where he was attending the summit of Asian Pacific
- leaders, he replied with a small surprise of his own. "I certainly
- wouldn't rule it out," he offered. "It depends on what it says."
- </p>
- <p> His placating instincts got him in trouble. By first appearing
- to endorse Gingrich's proposal, Clinton opened himself to attack
- from liberals who oppose school prayer. White House aides spent
- the next day backtracking, explaining that what the President
- had in mind was not a constitutional amendment but a legislative
- act to permit a moment of silence in classrooms like the one
- he had signed as Governor of Arkansas in 1985. While that could
- be acceptable to many Democrats as well as Republicans, the
- way the White House handled it reinforced Clinton's image as
- the Great Vacillator.
- </p>
- <p> Although Clinton seemed completely unprepared for the first
- rhetorical challenge from the emboldened G.O.P., for Gingrich
- to start off with the school-prayer amendment made political
- sense. It probably seemed like the perfect thank-you gift to
- the Christian right for its substantial role in the Republican
- triumph. Even though leaders of the Christian right say it's
- not high on their legislative wish list, polls show strong support
- for some kind of classroom prayer, making it less contentious
- than an antiabortion measure they might prefer. Best of all,
- Gingrich could offer the amendment without fully expecting it
- to come to pass, with whatever messy, real-world consequences
- it might entail. Even if approved by both houses of Congress--affording Gingrich the delicious spectacle of watching Clinton
- agonize over a veto--constitutional amendments must be further
- approved by three-quarters of the states, a long and bumpy road
- where most of them stall.
- </p>
- <p> Over time, the move could backfire. Liberal groups have seized
- on it as a way to energize their despondent troops, and even
- conservative Christians are wondering what kind of government-approved
- prayer they are going to have to agree to. But so far on this
- one it's Gingrich 1, Clinton 0.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton will soon face a barrage of issues far tougher than
- school prayer. When the new Congress convenes in January, Gingrich
- plans a fast and furious start in the House, with quick thrusts
- on taxes, term limits, welfare and crime. Even in the generally
- more collegial Senate, a new lineup of Republican chairmen is
- setting traps on such things as defense spending and the global
- free-trade agreement. And everywhere the rhetoric is getting
- nastier. North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms felt free to say
- on CNN that Clinton is not up to the job of Commander in Chief--a remark that was widely regarded, even by some of Helms'
- ideological brethren, as very nearly unpatriotic. Earlier in
- the week the crusty Senator, who will chair the Foreign Relations
- Committee, dispatched what read like a ransom note to the Administration,
- threatening tough handling of Clinton foreign policy if next
- week's vote on the huge free-trade treaty was not delayed until
- next year. That sort of hubris could impede the great Republican
- revolution, turning it into little more than an opportunity
- for new bottoms to press themselves firmly into old seats of
- power. But for now the G.O.P. takeover is shaking up Washington
- much more fundamentally. If the Democrats have any idea what
- to do about it, there isn't yet much sign of it.
- </p>
- <p> On his way to Manila three days after the election, Clinton
- was already deep into the very Clintonesque process of mulling
- things over. Sitting with his aides on the floor of Air Force
- One's conference room, he reviewed the political dilemmas of
- earlier Presidents, from Lincoln onward, pondering, as a senior
- official put it, "how they were perceived, and how they conceived
- their presidencies."
- </p>
- <p> Back in Washington, a lot of party centrists are prepared to
- tell Clinton all about how he's perceived. The Democratic Leadership
- Council, the group of moderate Democrats that Clinton once headed,
- issued a poll conducted right after the voting by Stan Greenberg,
- the President's own pollster. It showed that Clinton's support
- had vanished among the independent voters who helped put Democrats
- over the top in 1992. Said D.L.C. president Al From: "For President
- Clinton there is a pretty blunt message in this poll: Get with
- the program, or you'll have to pay consequences."
- </p>
- <p> The view that Clinton must hunker down in the center is shared
- by some members of the White House inner circle, notably domestic-policy
- adviser Bruce Reed and Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen. Another
- camp, which includes deputy chief of staff Harold Ickes and
- possibly adviser-in-chief Hillary Rodham Clinton, wants the
- President to consolidate his party base. If that means dwelling
- on civil rights, abortion rights and labor issues, it's probably
- an agenda that would appeal to a too narrow slice of the ever
- more conservative electorate. As a rough blueprint for post-apocalypse
- strategy, White House chief of staff Leon Panetta, with the
- help of several other top aides, produced a memo one described
- as a "thought piece." The memo proposed that the President should
- attempt to govern from a "forceful center," working with Republicans
- who want to share the middle on matters like welfare reform,
- health care and the line-item veto, but challenging as radicals
- any who propose ideas too far to Clinton's right.
- </p>
- <p> House Republicans these days are only too happy to find out
- what's too far right. Not long after Gingrich unveiled his intentions
- on the prayer amendment, Texas Representative Richard Armey,
- the next House majority leader, said that within three years
- his party will replace the current graduated income tax, which
- takes a larger bite from the upper brackets, with either a national
- sales tax or a flat tax of 17% on everybody. But it took congressional
- Democrats until week's end to utter their first opposition rhetoric.
- "We're not about to roll over and play dead while the Republicans
- rubber stamp their extremist, supply-side agenda," warned House
- Democratic leader Richard Gephardt.
- </p>
- <p> The smell of blood in the air has encouraged some Republicans
- to challenge the President even on an issue that their party
- has long supported. Clinton faces real trouble next week in
- the Senate, when the lame-duck Democratic Congress convenes
- to take up GATT. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
- is the laboriously crafted 123-nation agreement designed to
- lower tariff barriers. In his threatening letter demanding a
- delay of the vote, Senator Helms, who can make "free trade"
- sound like some weird practice he once saw in a Mapplethorpe
- photo, was trying to exploit the fact that Congress has agreed
- to consider GATT under "fast track" rules that allow only a
- yes or no vote, with no amendments. Because that rule expires
- in January, the next Congress, under G.O.P. control, would be
- free to decorate GATT with subclauses sure to kill it because
- each one would have to be renegotiated with all 123 signatory
- nations. With its 26,000 pages of agreements and rules, GATT
- is a behemoth that just a few additions could tip over.
- </p>
- <p> Sentiment on GATT doesn't divide along partisan lines. Before
- the task fell to Clinton, the agreement was championed by Ronald
- Reagan and George Bush. Ranged against it now is a loose front
- that runs from labor unions, environmental groups and Ralph
- Nader to protectionist Senate Democrats like Ernest Hollings
- of South Carolina and Republicans like Phil Gramm of Texas.
- But Gingrich is a longtime GATT supporter who says he will make
- sure the agreement passes the House vote scheduled for Nov.
- 29. So the man who holds the cards is incoming Senate majority
- leader Bob Dole. The Dec. 1 Senate vote on GATT is a cliff-hanger.
- The White House may be as many as 10 votes short of the 60 it
- needs for passage. Though Dole has leaned toward support, his
- presidential ambitions keep him mindful that trade agreements
- aren't always popular with those voters who fear they could
- be swept away in a free-flowing world economy. As the price
- for getting Republican Senators in line, Dole wants assurances
- that the U.S. can withdraw from the World Trade Organization
- if it "gets shafted" several times by the group, which will
- supervise the trade regulations of member states.
- </p>
- <p> January will bring an even chillier climate for Clinton. Not
- only will the Republicans have the majority, but Gingrich is
- busy refashioning the House as a fighting unit. Already he has
- laid the first strokes of revolutionary discipline on the backs
- of his fellow Republicans by skipping over some more senior
- members when selecting committee chairmen. So Representative
- Henry Hyde of Illinois will be chairman of the House Judiciary
- Committee instead of the ranking G.O.P. member, Carlos Moorehead
- of California.
- </p>
- <p> In what looked like a bow to the tobacco industry, the Speaker-to-be
- passed over Moorehead a second time in choosing the chairman
- of the Energy and Commerce Committee. The outgoing Democratic
- chairman, John Dingell, was the impresario of this year's subcommittee
- hearings on whether cigarette companies were manipulating the
- nicotine level of their product. The new head will be Thomas
- Bliley Jr. of the tobacco state of Virginia, who thinks cigarette
- regulation has gone quite far enough already. "Carlos is too
- kind a man to get into the kind of vicious fights that will
- occur over issues before those committees," explains Gingrich
- spokesman Tony Blankley. More to the point: the only legislation
- Moorehead has successfully launched in recent years is a resolution
- declaring Snow White Week.
- </p>
- <p> With the Republicans back in power, the Pentagon seems to be
- wasting no time in playing to a willing audience. Last week
- it was announced that three of the Army's 12 divisions were
- far below their peak readiness levels. That prompted Representative
- Floyd Spence, the South Carolina Republican in line to be chairman
- of the Armed Services Committee, to charge that "U.S. military
- units are caught in the early stages of a downward readiness
- spiral that shows no prospect of easing in the foreseeable future."
- </p>
- <p> Though part of the problem is traceable to the fact that additional
- money approved by Congress to help cover the cost of missions
- in Haiti, Rwanda and Kuwait did not flow to Pentagon budgets
- until some units were already limping, White House officials
- are wondering if they were ambushed. "We gave all of the services
- written guidance that readiness was to be their No. 1 concern
- and that they were to cut other programs to ensure it be kept
- up," an Administration official fumes. "Do you think it's a
- coincidence that only days after the Republicans take over,
- the Army finds out how much they're hurting?" Army brass emphatically
- denies that's the case. "We simply ran out of money because
- of Haiti, Kuwait and Rwanda," insists a Pentagon official.
- </p>
- <p> What can the depleted Democrats do? For now they are falling
- back on the hope that Republicans, in the manner of Jesse Helms,
- will overplay their hand and that strains within the new G.O.P.
- leadership will open up soon. A few are already visible in the
- differences between the House and Senate about how fast to move.
- Cut middle-class taxes? "It won't happen overnight," Dole said
- last week on Face the Nation. Increase defense spending? He
- figures, "It may be--very, very slowly." And with cuts in
- Social Security out of reach, as all sides agree, balancing
- the budget while enacting the tax cuts in the "Contract with
- America" will be "very, very difficult," Dole says.
- </p>
- <p> Once the Republican promises on tax cuts run into the realities
- of budget balancing, the Democrats could find an opening to
- remake the case that they are the party of fiscal responsibility.
- Until then, they will have to get used to being the outs in
- the city they ran from the inside for so long. Stunned Democratic
- committee staff members who used to feel like kings feel more
- now like ghosts at parties where the lobbyists flock to the
- Republican staff members. "The Redskins tickets, the lunch and
- dinner invitations," one of them laments. "All gone."
- </p>
- <p> Gone too, before long, may be a fair number of Clinton's inner
- circle. Rumors are everywhere in Washington that the Election
- Day debacle will give chief of staff Panetta the ammunition
- to complete his overhaul of the White House, something that
- Clinton has resisted. "If the same cast of characters is in
- place three months from now, ((Clinton's)) a goner," says one
- Administration official.
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats harbor the highly ambitious notion of prying out
- the Republicans two years from now. Failing that, they can hope
- that the Republicans mean it when they promise term limits that
- apply to themselves. In a town where everybody and everything
- seems to be moving, the upheaval adds up to even more business
- for real estate agent Cathie Gill. "Once people come
- to Washington, they tend to stay," she says. But for a while,
- it will be tough for a large bunch of Democrats to keep paying
- their mortgages.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-