home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1810>
- <title>
- Dec. 26, 1994: The Presidency:The 12-Minute Makeover
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 108
- The 12-Minute Makeover
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Bill Clinton tries gamely to recast himself as a tax cutter
- and department chopper. But is it too late?
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett and Adam Zagorin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> With a re-election campaign looming, an embattled President
- decided to chuck his old program and go for broke. On national
- TV he proposed a multibillion-dollar package of tax cuts, including
- expanded IRAs for medical bills, education and the purchase
- of a first home. That evening, an upstart in the opposition
- party dismissed the proposals as "too little, too late." Later
- the critic added, "I don't think using the IRAs to finance college
- loans and health care, as the President proposed, is a good
- idea."
- </p>
- <p> The year was 1992. The President was George Bush. The upstart
- was Bill Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> Just about everybody in Washington jumped on the tax-cut bandwagon
- last week. But Bill Clinton was the only one who had to do a
- backflip while eating his words. Such are the contortions of
- political reincarnation. Since his party's dismal showing in
- the November elections, Clinton has moved deliberately toward
- the center, and last Thursday night's speech was his most dramatic
- course correction yet. Clinton made several proposals last week
- similar to ones he criticized Bush for making when the patrician
- Texan was trying to save his presidency. The G.O.P. enjoyed
- the show. Said Haley Barbour, the chairman of the Republican
- Party: "President Clinton shares with the hummingbird the amazing
- ability to turn 180 degrees in a wink."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's tax cuts resemble the dealer incentives that Detroit
- once offered to win back buyers who had switched to Japanese
- cars. Clinton's "Middle-Class Bill of Rights" is designed to
- appeal to voters who supported him in 1992, but this year bolted
- to the G.O.P.--or stayed home. As with rebates, however, there
- is some fine print: Clinton's $500-a-child tax credit would
- be available only to parents with adjusted incomes between $20,000
- and $60,000 who have children under 13. Parents who earned up
- to $75,000 would get a smaller break, and the full $500 credit
- would not be available until 1998. His proposal to let parents
- withdraw money, tax free, from new IRA-like instruments to pay
- for education, medical care, first homes or elderly care would
- apply to parents earning up to $80,000; couples earning up to
- $100,000 would get a smaller deduction. And he would allow couples
- earning $100,000 or less to deduct as much as $10,000 a year
- for college tuition; the deduction for couples earning up to
- $120,000 would be smaller.
- </p>
- <p> To avoid deepening the deficit, Clinton plans to offset the
- $60 billion in tax breaks with spending cuts worth $76 billion
- over the next five years. Most of the money--$52 billion--comes from simply extending the current law that freezes discretionary
- spending at current levels. Clinton was less specific about
- the rest of the cuts. This week Vice President Al Gore is expected
- to detail plans to save $24 billion by shrinking three Cabinet-level
- departments--Energy, Transportation, and Housing and Urban
- Development--and all but eliminating the General Services
- Administration. With the Republicans in control of Congress,
- Clinton's tax cuts are likely to go nowhere. Under the Contract
- with America, the G.O.P. wants to extend the $500-per-child
- tax credit to families with incomes up to $200,000 and make
- the new IRAs available to all taxpayers. To pay for the tax
- cuts, the Republicans would probably accept many of Clinton's
- reductions--and then slash more deeply at domestic spending
- as well as Medicare and Medicaid.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's speech suggests that he is spoiling for a fight over
- some entitlements. He made clear last week that he won't cut
- Social Security or Medicare and wants to emerge in the coming
- budget battle as the preferred defender of the middle class.
- "He is saying that he will pay for his plan with cuts in energy,
- housing and government waste," said a White House consultant.
- "The Republicans say they are going to cut Medicare. That's
- a very interesting debate for the middle class to watch."
- </p>
- <p> The 12-minute speech bore all the hallmarks of a do-or-die Clinton
- episode. Many aides had argued for a high-stakes Oval Office
- address not only to inject the President back into the debate
- but to force him to make the tough decisions on taxes and spending
- cuts. In preparation, he argued for days with his advisers about
- the best course, seeking ideas in memos and telephone calls.
- Speechwriters Bruce Reed and Don Baer produced countless drafts
- before Clinton finally dictated the speech on Wednesday afternoon
- into a tape recorder. "He was intent," said counselor Mack McLarty,
- "on this being his speech." Just to be sure, the outlines were
- discussed with a focus group on the eve of the speech.
- </p>
- <p> As statements of personal growth go, the proposals represent
- a significant shift for Clinton, who spent the first two years
- trying to solve problems in education, health and child care
- through federal intervention. Largely foiled on that front,
- he is now saying to the public, in effect, "O.K., you do it
- yourselves." The shift is the surest sign yet that Clinton has
- carefully digested the lessons of the midterm elections. But
- it may be too late. "The real question," said Stuart Rothenberg,
- editor of the Rothenberg Political Report, "is whether there
- is any advantage here that lasts more than three days. I'm skeptical."
- </p>
- <p> As they have often done at pivotal moments in the past, the
- Clintons invited most of the White House staff out to the South
- Lawn last Friday afternoon for a private holiday pep rally.
- Hillary Clinton thanked the troops for working so hard. And
- the President urged his aides to stop clapping so much lest
- they all catch colds. Then he laid out his challenge for the
- next two years. "The forces of history at work on the American
- people are powerful," he said. "Our job is to maximize the powerful
- forces, minimize the negative ones and give them every single
- chance we can to get ahead in this economy."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, an aide argued afterward, "feels as if he is back on
- track." Maybe so, but whether he'll stay there is anyone's guess.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-