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- <text id=94TT1735>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: White House:Once and Future Hillary
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 40
- The Once and Future Hillary
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Belying rumors of self-doubt, the First Lady reappears, unapologetic
- and as feisty as ever
- </p>
- <p>By James Carney/Washington--With reporting by Ann Blackman/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Hillary Rodham Clinton has always enjoyed walk-in rights to
- almost any important meeting at the White House. So when her
- husband sat down with top aides in the Cabinet Room to discuss
- his embattled presidency, it was a given that the First Lady
- would have a seat at the table. But instead of offering the
- brand of crisp analysis and shrewd advice she is known and admired
- for, the First Lady was quiet, listening while others did most
- of the talking. Afterward, one participant couldn't remember
- whether Hillary had said anything at all. As a friend and colleague
- put it, she was still "coming to grips" with the Democratic
- washout at the polls.
- </p>
- <p> That was two weeks ago. Rumors swirled that she was in prolonged
- post-electoral shock, that she didn't understand November's
- results, that she was in denial, that she was rethinking her
- role as First Lady. But there was no self-doubt in the Hillary
- Clinton who charged back onto the political radar screen in
- a four-day media blitz last week. Though there were subtle signs
- of an effort to retool her image, she came across as cheerful,
- confident and as proudly unapologetic about her role as ever.
- The Republicans? Let her at 'em. She told a sympathetic crowd
- after accepting an award from the National Women's Law Center,
- "In many ways, our best days are ahead of us because there's
- nothing like a good fight for advocates to get energized."
- </p>
- <p> During a speech in New York City, she dismissed as "unbelievable
- and absurd" a Republican welfare-reform proposal that calls
- for sending poor children to orphanages if their mothers, after
- a limited stay on welfare, cannot support them. Whitewater questions
- did not faze her. The First Lady continued to portray her family
- as victims of an affair she described as a "sideshow." Later
- in the week, however, her friend Webster Hubbell, who quit last
- March as Associate Attorney General, tentatively agreed to plead
- guilty to charges brought by the Whitewater special prosecutor
- that he had committed mail fraud and tax evasion when he worked
- alongside Mrs. Clinton at the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock.
- </p>
- <p> She remains unrepentantly suspicious of the press. Asked why
- it was so difficult to get an interview with her, she impatiently
- told TIME editors at a private lunch that there were more pressing
- things to do, adding with some exasperation that "some days
- my role is just to explain my role." To students at George Washington
- University, she defended her decision to be active in policymaking.
- "I don't see how I could change who I am because of the position
- I'm in. I actually think that in the long run if people have
- some better idea about you, it may be controversial, but at
- least they know where you stand."
- </p>
- <p> In public and in private, she is fully convinced of the rightness
- of the Clinton agenda. She made mistakes, yes, but they were
- largely superficial. Much of the public simply didn't understand
- the truth about initiatives like health care and the President's
- original economic plan. "She is really angry," says a high-powered
- Democrat who has known the Clintons for 25 years. "She's angry
- at the election results ((and)) angry at how she's treated in
- the press. That's the way it is with Hillary. It's everyone
- else's fault." Putting it more circumspectly, one senior adviser
- to the President said the First Lady "is not as realistic as
- some of the rest of us" about voters' unhappiness with Clinton's
- first two years.
- </p>
- <p> In their postmortems on the elections, many pollsters and analysts
- tagged the First Lady's health-care plan as a major factor in
- turning voters against the President and his party. Stanley
- Greenberg, the White House pollster, found that health care,
- more than anything else, drove independent voters away. Just
- last Thursday a federal judge ruled that the health-care-reform
- task force, a sprawling, arcane and often secretive group led
- by the First Lady, was guilty of "misconduct" for withholding
- documents from the public. Last week Hillary conceded that "the
- perception" of the Clinton health plan "was one of Big Government."
- </p>
- <p> But Hillary Clinton and the White House are drawing another
- lesson from the health-care debacle: it is not wise to link
- the First Lady's prestige so directly to controversial policy
- issues. It shouldn't happen again. As a senior White House official
- explains it, the First Lady "will stay engaged and remain an
- influence, but ((her role)) will be more informal. She won't
- be a point person on a given policy." The difference in her
- role, stresses the official, is one of "approach" and not intensity.
- "She's not going to start talking through a veil," says Planned
- Parenthood's Ann Lewis, a friend of Mrs. Clinton's.
- </p>
- <p> Far from being an imposition, the change suits the First Lady.
- It will free her from being tied to one project, a fact that
- has led to "a lot of thought and discussion," says one of her
- aides, about how the new role will take shape. She is certain
- to spend more time on children's issues. One likely task: promotion
- of a children's health bill. Unlike broader health reform, advocating
- a children's bill "is a no-loser," says a White House official.
- "It would be pretty hard to attack her for that." Similarly,
- Mrs. Clinton has said privately that she wants to get involved
- in juvenile-crime issues.
- </p>
- <p> She will now be the cheerleader--not leader--of the main
- health-care initiative. In October, Leon Panetta, the White
- House chief of staff, ordered that control of the reforms be
- turned over to Robert Rubin and Carol Rasco, the President's
- top in-house economic and domestic-policy advisers. White House
- officials, however, insist that the downgrading and reshuffling
- of the agenda does not reflect badly on Mrs. Clinton. As a senior
- official explained last week, Panetta's decision "was less about
- Hillary than Ira," as in Ira Magaziner, the aide who masterminded
- the Clinton plan and whose manner alienated potential allies
- on Capitol Hill. Today the First Lady acknowledges that any
- reform that might emerge from the new Congress must take an
- "incremental approach"--the kind of change proposed by Republicans
- as a counter to the Clinton overhaul.
- </p>
- <p> "She's far too pragmatic to be in denial" about the message
- voters sent Democrats, a supportive White House aide says of
- the First Lady. "She can be self-righteous, yes, but she is
- not a person to deny reality." Even Panetta, says a senior official,
- believes Mrs. Clinton "gets it. She knows what the basic problems
- were." The chief of staff makes a point of inviting her to strategy
- sessions because, as this official puts it, her presence "does
- help."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, say staff members, the First Lady can understand these
- times. Far from being the standard-bearer of liberalism in the
- White House, says an aide, "she's a lot more conservative than
- she's made out to be in the media." To stress the point, the
- First Lady reminded an audience last week that she was brought
- up in a staunch Republican family and was a "Goldwater girl"
- in 1964.
- </p>
- <p> From the changing hairstyles that have become a source of self-deprecating
- humor to what little information about her that can be divulged,
- Hillary Rodham Clinton remains supremely in charge of her self-image.
- And officials in the White House know to be careful about what
- they say, even privately. "That's a touchy subject," sighed
- a top adviser to the President when asked about Mrs. Clinton.
- Another official joked that it was too risky discussing the
- First Lady over a White House phone. "You want me to talk about
- Hillary?" the official asked with mock incredulity. "This is
- not a secure line." And then he earnestly claimed he had nothing
- to say.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
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