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- <text id=91TT2775>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: The White House:Clearing the Decks
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 33
- THE WHITE HOUSE
- Clearing the Decks
- </hdr><body>
- <p>With an eye on next year's race, Bush jettisons his chief of
- staff. But it will take more than personnel changes to set a
- new course for the economy.
- </p>
- <p>By Jack E. White--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> For weeks, as George Bush's standing in the polls dropped
- and fears grew that the economy might stagger back into
- recession, he had been under pressure from both friend and foe
- to do something to get his presidency back on track.
- </p>
- <p> Bush finally did something last week--in fact, several
- things. He replaced unpopular White House chief of staff John
- Su nunu with Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner, a likable
- moderate who has emerged as one of the Administration's
- smoothest troubleshooters. He appointed a trio of pragmatic
- political strategists--Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher,
- pollster Robert Teeter and Republican businessman Fred Malek--to lead his re-election campaign. Yet before the week ended, two
- of Bush's advisers publicly disagreed about the wisdom of
- cutting taxes for the middle class, once again underscoring the
- divisions within the President's inner circle about how much
- should be done to resuscitate the economy.
- </p>
- <p> All this activity did nothing to dispel the impression
- that the President, relatively surefooted in foreign affairs,
- has no clear ideas for solving homegrown problems. Sununu did
- not help matters by his autocratic, high-profile style, and in
- recent weeks he found himself embroiled in several public spats
- that did not inspire confidence in his leadership. At one point
- Su nunu seemed to criticize the President for a remark about
- high interest rates on credit cards; at another point he
- accosted a Washington Post reporter at a bill-signing ceremony,
- shouting, "You're a liar! Everything you write is lies!" Skinner
- is certain to run a more collegial shop, but unless Bush can
- make up his mind about what course he should take, the personnel
- changes will mean little.
- </p>
- <p> By mid-November, after several of Bush's political
- strategists warned that they would find it difficult to work
- with Su nunu on the 1992 campaign, Bush concluded that his chief
- of staff had become a serious liability. Yet the President, who
- values loyalty above all else, could not bring himself to give
- the bad news personally to his old friend. Instead he delegated
- the assignment to his oldest son, George W. Bush, who met with
- Sununu on Nov. 27.
- </p>
- <p> But either because the younger Bush was too deferential in
- delivering the message or because the chief of staff refused to
- understand it, Sununu deluded himself into thinking that he
- could save his job by rallying conservatives behind him. Instead
- of resigning, he began phoning conservatives on Capitol Hill and
- elsewhere, imploring them to let the President know they
- supported him.
- </p>
- <p> Some lawmakers, including Congressmen Newt Gingrich, Henry
- Hyde and Vin Weber, responded positively to Sununu's appeal.
- But the chief of staff's many enemies in Washington saw an
- opportunity to take revenge. Republican leader Robert Dole, who
- has seethed since Su nunu helped Bush win the 1988 New Hampshire
- primary by suggesting that Dole was a closet advocate of higher
- taxes, coldly spurned him. Then Dole twisted the knife by
- describing Sununu's phone call to a television interviewer. Some
- White House officials and G.O.P. political strategists were
- miffed that Su nunu was trying to end run the President. Bush
- himself was reported to be "chapped" by what seemed to be an
- attempt to blackmail him into retaining Sununu.
- </p>
- <p> Last Tuesday Sununu gave in. On a presidential visit to
- Florida and Mississippi, he delivered his handwritten
- resignation, stating that as a private citizen he would continue
- to support Bush "in pit bull mode or pussey [sic] cat mode
- (your choice, as always)." He will remain at the White House as
- a counsellor to the President until March 1, presumably to help
- steer the Bush campaign through the New Hampshire primary.
- </p>
- <p> Sununu's downfall was pleasing to many White House
- staffers who had long chafed under his imperious management. One
- senior official answered a reporter's call by singing, "Ding
- dong, the witch is dead." Said a somewhat disgusted David
- Carney, a White House political aide who has worked for Sununu
- for 11 years: "Are people gleeful today that John Sununu is
- leaving? Absolutely. Is he surprised? Not at all. He played
- hardball, and he got hardball. He knows how politics works, and
- he wasn't in this to win any popularity contests."
- </p>
- <p> But the rejoicing could be premature. For one thing,
- right-wing rage at Sununu's ouster could fuel a challenge from
- conservative commentator Patrick Buchanan, who is expected to
- announce his candidacy this week. In theory at least, Buchanan
- and former Ku Klux Klansman David Duke, who proclaimed that he
- would enter several Southern G.O.P. primaries next spring, could
- present the same kind of difficulty for Bush and his party that
- George Wallace did for the Democrats during the late '60s and
- early '70s and that Jesse Jackson did during the '80s. Duke and
- Buchanan will seek to portray the President as squishy soft on
- such issues as taxes, abortion and civil rights. Says veteran
- Republican political consultant Eddie Mahe: "Having
- conservatives making endless charges against Bush cannot help.
- Over time, it leaves a residue of negative information out there
- that's not helpful." Even so, there is virtually no possibility
- that either rival could prevent Bush's renomination. In fact,
- by denying him conservative votes, they might even help Bush by
- forcing him to steer a course to the middle, where the bulk of
- the voters who will decide the November election is found.
- </p>
- <p> A more significant threat to Bush's reelection is the
- economy, which shows few signs of reviving quickly. On Friday
- the Labor Department reported that in November employers laid
- off 241,000 workers, the largest drop in jobs since last winter
- when the economy was mired in recession. Earlier Bush had made
- a symbolic attempt to show that he is willing to give the
- economy a jolt by speeding up $9.7 billion worth of federal
- spending. But most experts believe that is far too small a sum
- to have much impact on the $5.7 trillion economy.
- </p>
- <p> Several of the President's economic advisers have
- concluded that more dramatic action is needed. But Bush has
- deferred outlining his new economic-growth package until the
- State of the Union address in late January. This "do nothing
- now" stance is rooted in part in Bush's natural caution, a
- tendency that Sununu reinforced because of his unwillingness to
- reopen the budget accord that requires that any new tax cut be
- offset by equivalent tax hikes or reductions in domestic
- spending. Sununu feared that tinkering with the pact would lead
- to compromises on taxes, which would further anger
- conservatives.
- </p>
- <p> With Sununu out of the way, the balance may shift toward
- the Administration's "do something big" faction, which includes
- Vice President Dan Quayle, Council of Economic Advisers
- chairman Michael Boskin and Housing Secretary Jack Kemp. In an
- appearance before the House Ways and Means Committee last week,
- Boskin and Budget Director Richard Darman suggested that Bush
- would be willing to break the budget agreement to give the
- economy a shot in the arm by lowering taxes for the middle
- class. But when the hearings resumed after a luncheon break,
- Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, leader of the Adminstration's
- "do as little as possible" faction, differed with his
- colleagues, claiming that breaking the budget agreement would
- cause interest rates to soar.
- </p>
- <p> Boskin, backed by Quayle and Kemp, has argued inside the
- White House that the economy would benefit from a middle-income
- tax cut in the range of 1% of GNP, or about $57 billion--a
- much bigger reduction than the Democrats have proposed. Such a
- stimulus would not significantly drive up interest rates or
- inflation, Boskin has argued, so long as caps are kept on future
- federal spending, as in the 1990 budget accord. Clearly the
- Administration's internal struggle over economic policy is far
- from over. The outcome will probably be determined by the
- positions taken by Bush's new chief of staff and campaign team.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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