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- <text id=94TT1649>
- <title>
- Nov. 28, 1994: Government:Newt's Battle-Ready Armey
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GOVERNMENT, Page 30
- Newt's Battle-Ready Armey
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Hilary Hylton/Austin and Suneel Ratan/Washington
- </p>
- <p> If Dick Armey was little known outside the Capitol until now,
- it wasn't because he sugarcoats his message. Invited to the
- White House in March 1993 to offer his views on the Administration's
- new economic plan, he told Clinton that the plan was dumb and
- would sink his presidency. Three months later, the Texas Congressman
- called Hillary Clinton a Marxist. He apologized--and then
- promised to restrict his Marxist comparisons of the Clintons
- to Groucho, not Karl.
- </p>
- <p> Armey's flair for pit-bull partisanship has catapulted him from
- obscurity to the upper ranks of the new Republican regime on
- Capitol Hill. Nine years ago, as a freshman Congressman, he
- was dismissed by the Almanac of American Politics as "hardly
- likely to be a power in the House." Now he stands ready to assume
- his job in the next Congress as majority leader and right-hand
- man to Newt Gingrich, the future Speaker of the House. That
- might not be the sort of influence one would expect from a man
- whose pickup truck sports a bumper sticker that reads EAT, SLEEP
- AND GO FISHING. But Armey has an appetite for power and a talent
- for finding the straightest route to it. In June, before almost
- anyone in his right mind would have thought Republican control
- of the House was possible, he was writing a memo detailing the
- transition plan for his party.
- </p>
- <p> As the story goes, the 54-year-old former economics professor
- entered politics after watching C-Span one night and remarking
- to his wife, "Honey, these people sound like a bunch of darn
- fools." "Yeah," she replied. "You could do that." After winning
- his suburban Dallas district in an upset, he proved her right
- by spending his debut months in Washington dramatizing his frugality
- by camping on a cot in the House gymnasium. Evicted by then
- Speaker Tip O'Neill, he reluctantly retreated to a sofa in his
- office and later to a house in Maryland.
- </p>
- <p> Known for his acid sense of humor, Armey has used his seat in
- the House as a duck blind from which to take potshots at the
- Administration. His weapon of choice is the rhetorical blunderbuss.
- The Clinton presidency is not merely flawed; it is a "train
- wreck." The health plan was not simply misguided; it amounted
- to a "Dr. Kevorkian prescription." And the Congressional Budget
- Office is not just a poor source of economic data; basing conclusions
- on its figures is "like relying on the Flintstones for an understanding
- of the Stone Age."
- </p>
- <p> When he is not in attack mode, Armey can be highly productive.
- In 1987 he launched a crusade to close obsolete military bases,
- an almost hopeless cause in a Congress where everyone defends
- home-state pork with a passion. But Armey advocated giving a
- bipartisan commission the full authority to do the job. Passage
- of this measure altered his reputation as a legislator, proving
- that he could listen and persuade. Yet his highest skill lies
- in attack by ridicule, usually through the deft use of symbolism.
- It was Armey who first unveiled a Byzantine chart of the Clinton
- health plan that reduced it to a visual cacaphony of arrows,
- boxes and fine print. The image was devastating.
- </p>
- <p> His future agenda is focused on "building down," as he puts
- it. Pet projects include proposals to get rid of farm subsidies
- and scrap the Social Security system. Still, there are signs
- that he may have softened his edge. "We want to have a happy,
- democratic work environment that is welcome for Democrats as
- well as Republicans," he said last week. "We'll show ((the Democrats))
- our good grace, and their worst fears will not be realized."
- But Democrats may wonder: Is that a genuine offering or an appetizing
- lure trolled by a crafty angler?
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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