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- <text id=94TT1750>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: Political Interest:Reinvent Clinton
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 42
- Reinventing Bill Clinton
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Until now, it's been all Newt. He lectures; he threatens; he
- denies; he clarifies. Every word, every musing, every hyperbolic
- expression is recorded and decoded. Newt Gingrich, the incoming
- House speaker, has dominated the debate as few politicians ever
- do. Even Bill Clinton, still conflicted about What It All Means
- a month after the Republicans' midterm rout, seems almost mute
- before Newt.
- </p>
- <p> It's not just that Newt is new; it's that he has ideas, 10 simple
- and simplistic solutions embodied in his "Contract with America."
- Not all of Newt's poll-driven notions are nonsense, of course,
- but transparency is their common denominator. They seek to gratify
- the public's desires and quiet its fears. Conveniently forgotten
- is the real world's complexity and an appreciation for the long-term
- consequences of their feel-good prescriptions. Consider, for
- example, the contract's implicit welfare paradigm: We're against
- children having children, so unwed teen mothers will be denied
- welfare and their kids can live in orphanages--a costlier
- remedy than the current (and admittedly flawed) system.
- </p>
- <p> Newt's free ride in the world of big think ends this week. The
- Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) is issuing its "Progressive
- Alternative," a more honest and rigorous attempt to address
- the nation's problems than Gingrich's vacuous bromides.
- </p>
- <p> At the alternative's core are three schemes related to the economy:
- </p>
- <p> Health Care. The alternative joins the call for insurance reform,
- which means eliminating the onerous "pre-existing condition"
- clauses insurance companies use to deny coverage. It also targets
- Medicare and Medicaid as the last great preserves of fee-for-service
- medicine. Price controls are rejected because they spawn cost
- shifting. The alternative would use a voucher system to move
- future beneficiaries into HMOs. Those seeking greater care would
- have to pay for it out of their own pockets.
- </p>
- <p> Jobs. Building on the catchy Clintonism "What you earn depends
- on what you learn," the alternative proposes individual development
- accounts, tax-sheltered savings workers could draw upon to pay
- for skill-enhancing education and training. It would also create
- a market-based "G.I. Bill for working Americans." The $1.5 billion
- already allocated to train dislocated workers would fund "job-opportunity
- vouchers." Customers would shop for the programs best suited
- to their needs, a vast improvement over the existing, government-controlled
- system. A 1993 Labor Department study found that those seeking
- the government's help are "given inaccurate information about
- prospects for employment and provided with little guidance that
- can help them find a job."
- </p>
- <p> Cutting the Deficit. Gingrich's contract, irresponsibly silent
- on health reform and silent as well on worker retraining, is
- especially disingenuous in its call for a balanced-budget amendment
- to the Constitution, a gimmick that would allow politicians
- to further postpone the hard choices everyone knows are required.
- By contrast, the alternative boldly slams both parties for recklessly
- putting the major entitlements--such as Social Security--off limits to fiscal reform, thus ignoring the long-term deficit.
- Rob Shapiro, the former Clinton adviser responsible for the
- alternative's toughest ideas, would raise the retirement age
- and means-test federal benefit programs by denying full cost-of-living
- increases to affluent seniors. Retirees would also have to pay
- taxes on the insurance value of their Medicare coverage.
- </p>
- <p> In the short term, the alternative promotes a "cut-and-invest"
- strategy. Clinton, says Shapiro, "should ruthlessly cut those
- tax and spending programs that merely subsidize powerful interests
- and shift those resources to new forms of public investment,
- deficit reduction and family tax relief." Shapiro has identified
- 68 such preferences that could save $225 billion over five years,
- programs like the $11.2 billion in yearly payments to farmers
- whose commodities sell below set prices.
- </p>
- <p> In Gingrich the contract has a powerful sponsor. The DLC, which
- Clinton once chaired, hopes he'll adopt the alternative, but
- few would bet the rent. Clinton embraced the DLC's "New Democrat"
- nostrums to win middle-class votes in 1992. Since then he has
- largely abandoned the council's centrist ideas. Few expect him
- to summon the courage to tackle entitlements seriously. Nevertheless,
- Budget Director Alice Rivlin and Labor Secretary Robert Reich
- have endorsed the cut-and-invest program. Other Administration
- heavyweights, however, including Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen
- (who as a Senator championed energy-industry windfalls), have
- backpedaled from cut and invest with the dexterity of N.F.L.
- cornerbacks. The President has himself called it an "attractive
- idea," but if the past two years are any guide, he'll probably
- punt.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton will probably favor a minimalist approach instead. Peripheral
- issues like campaign reform will top his agenda, and he'll move
- to co-opt conservatives, as he tried last week when he proposed
- an extra $25 billion in military spending. None of that will
- do, says DLC executive director Al From. Clinton, he says, must
- "govern more grandly and dance again with those who brung him.
- Compromising between the centrist views he won on and the liberalism
- of special interests won't cut it." Maybe not, but at least
- the war of ideas has begun.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
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