home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2892>
- <title>
- Dec. 30, 1991: Bill Clinton:Front Runner By Default
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 19
- Bill Clinton: Front Runner By Default
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson/Little Rock
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton has the unlined, open face of a man who has
- had it too easy. True, his father died before he was born, and
- he grew up poor in the southwest Arkansas town of Hope (pop.
- 10,000). But Clinton was Hope's Doogie Howser, succeeding at
- everything he tried, the darling of his teachers and one of the
- first from the area to go to college. He got his bachelor's
- degree at Georgetown University, won a Rhodes scholarship to
- Oxford, then went on to Yale Law School, where he met his wife
- Hillary. By 1979, 32 years old and back in Arkansas, he was the
- youngest Governor in the country.
- </p>
- <p> Two years later, Clinton was the youngest ex-Governor in
- the country. In Pea Ridge and the Ozarks, the voters resented
- the notion that this whiz kid had returned home to put shoes on
- everybody and introduce them to book learning. Says Carrick
- Patterson, former editor of the Arkansas Gazette: "They thought
- he had gotten too big for his britches." Clinton admits that he
- took too much for granted. He hiked license-tag fees. The fact
- that his wife used her maiden name and that the family was not
- a member of any organized religion did not help either.
- </p>
- <p> By 1982 Hillary Rodham was answering to Hillary Clinton
- and the family was worshiping regularly at Little Rock's
- Immanuel Baptist Church. But mostly Clinton was two years older
- and chastened. He was re-elected, with 55% of the vote.
- </p>
- <p> Are things once again going too smoothly for Clinton? At
- 45, he has a decade in the statehouse behind him. After Mario
- Cuomo took himself out of the race for the White House, Clinton
- became his party's media-anointed front runner. He may soon
- discover that the worst thing that can happen to a candidate is
- to be too far ahead too soon. The political press corps, which
- prides itself on how quickly it can knock the stuffing out of
- those who would run for President, has gone into a deep swoon
- over his candidacy, from which it will sooner or later recover.
- For the moment, reporters seem entranced by Clinton's persona:
- a good-government geek saved by a self-deprecating sense of
- humor. As chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, a group
- that wants to yank the party back to the center, Clinton's idea
- of a well-spent weekend is one given to working on welfare and
- education reform. Yet when he was introduced at a forum in New
- Hampshire as the smartest of the candidates, he quipped, "Isn't
- that a little like calling Moe the most intelligent of the
- Three Stooges?"
- </p>
- <p> Last summer, when rumors swirled about Clinton's alleged
- extramarital affairs, some reporters thought they might have
- another Gary Hart in their sights. But Clinton smoothly
- deflected the inevitable "have you ever" question at a
- Washington breakfast meeting with journalists. With Hillary
- sitting next to him pushing scrambled eggs around her plate, he
- said their 16-year marriage, like others, had had its ups and
- downs, but "we believe in our obligation to each other." So far,
- an army of reporters has failed to uncover a smoking bimbo.
- </p>
- <p> In the first televised debate among the candidates,
- Clinton acted as though he were the returning champion on
- Jeopardy while the others, especially Jerry Brown, behaved as
- if they were on Let's Make a Deal. Clinton, seated on the end,
- maintained an air of detachment, speaking only when called upon
- by quizmaster Tom Brokaw. He managed to squeeze in concern for
- the middle class about as often as Bob Kerrey referred to his
- war record.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike many Southern pols, Clinton does not have a Velcro
- personality, attaching country ways at home, then peeling them
- away in the fund-raising parlors of Norman Lear and Pamela
- Harriman. He makes $35,000 a year (supplemented by his wife's
- salary as a lawyer). He helps his daughter Chelsea, 11, with
- algebra by fax from the road. He is passionate about crossword
- puzzles, and golfs and vacations every year with a group of
- close friends in South Carolina. He has been wearing
- off-the-rack clothes since the word got out that one of his
- suits cost $800.
- </p>
- <p> When Clinton is not playing it safe, his personality is a
- pole away from Michael Dukakis': he looks happy at the risk of
- seeming insufficiently serious. His version of a campaign
- handshake ranges from a bear hug to a full body slam. As he
- plays host at yet another fund raiser and poses for one more
- picture at a campaign breakfast with a woman dressed as if it's
- cocktail hour, he can be as ingratiating as a frat-house
- president during rush week. He told a voter during his last
- Governor's race, "I was afraid you might be tired of me by now."
- The farmer replied, "I'm not, but everybody else I know is."
- </p>
- <p> The whole country got a chance to get tired of Clinton in
- 1988, when he glazed the eyes of the delegates at the Democratic
- convention by droning on for 33 minutes. The audience broke into
- cheers when he finally got to "In conclusion..." After
- Johnny Carson joked about what came to be known as "The Speech,"
- Clinton wangled an invitation to appear on the show and play his
- saxophone (badly).
- </p>
- <p> Now his campaign performances are polished and full of
- specifics. When Clinton delivered a speech at Georgetown in
- October, there were whoops as he lambasted the greedheads on
- Wall Street and the drug dealers of Mean Street, and again when
- he laced into George Bush for dividing the country by using the
- oldest tactic in the book: "You find the most economically
- insecure white people, and you scare the living daylights out
- of them." At a fund raiser for Illinois Democrats, he showed he
- can make the case that America is wasting much of its young
- generation. "It's a long, long way in this country from me at
- the age of six holding my great-granddaddy's hand to a condition
- where children on the streets of this city don't know who their
- grandparents are," he said. "If we cannot make common cause with
- those kids, we cannot keep the American Dream alive for any of
- us."
- </p>
- <p> As Governor, Clinton has thrown most of his effort into
- early-childhood intervention and education. Social Security
- numbers are recorded on birth certificates to help trace
- deadbeat fathers. He increased teachers' salaries but insisted
- on a controversial competency exam. Parents who don't show up
- at teacher meetings are fined $50. Starting in 1993, failing
- students will not be allowed to get a driver's license. Clinton
- has expanded Head Start and launched school-based health clinics
- (where condoms are distributed, much to the outrage of the
- religious right). While other governors have taken rich states
- and made them poor, Clinton has taken a poor state and made it
- a bit richer, without crowing about an "Arkansas Miracle." Over
- the past decade, per capita income grew 61%. Even so, terrible
- poverty remains entrenched in Arkansas: the state's incomes are
- still about 25% below the national average.
- </p>
- <p> As President, Clinton says, he would take much of what he
- has tried in Arkansas, add money and stir. He would reform
- welfare, education and health care, funding his programs with
- reduced defense spending and a 3% savings in administrative
- costs. He would increase taxes on those earning more than
- $200,000. He would apply to all corporate executives a variation
- of the rule devised by Ben & Jerry's Homemade Ice Cream: any
- income above 25 times what the lowest-paid worker in a company
- earns would be taxed at a higher rate.
- </p>
- <p> On foreign policy, the less said the better--as is true
- for all his Democratic rivals. Clinton has shown a little
- foreign policy leg on trade missions abroad, and he was the only
- Democratic candidate to support the Persian Gulf war
- unequivocally. He thinks the isolationism and protectionism
- being thumped by several Democrats as well as Republican Pat
- Buchanan are shortsighted. He prefers to move the discussion
- back to domestic policy as quickly as Bush gets onto a plane to
- avoid it. Economic growth, Clinton argues, is the solution. "The
- Soviet Union didn't disintegrate from attack by outside forces
- but from stagnation within."
- </p>
- <p> On the subject of welfare, Clinton, the moderate
- Southerner, is yin to Cuomo's Northeastern liberal yang. In
- Clinton's world, there is not a program for every problem. He
- cut Arkansas' relief rolls 7%, and part of his platform is to
- restrict payments to chronic recipients. He favors cuts not only
- to save money but because living on the dole can instill
- self-destructive values. Welfare, says Clinton, "should be a
- second chance, not a way of life." He tells dependent mothers
- to stop having children if they're not prepared to support them,
- because "governments don't raise children, people do." A
- Democrat uttering such sentiments would have been drummed out
- of the party a few years ago, but the deepening culture of
- dependency has made an emphasis on personal responsibility
- palatable even to liberals.
- </p>
- <p> Though he has taken on the gun lobby by supporting
- legislation to restrict firearms and annoyed abortion activists
- by backing parental notification, Clinton has a reputation in
- Arkansas for trying to please everyone. John Brummett, a
- columnist in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, says Clinton's
- "desire to be loved is unhealthy, even for a politician." Back
- in office in 1983, Clinton rewarded his opponents on the right
- by approving home schooling and signing more than 100 corporate
- tax breaks.
- </p>
- <p> But a mean streak, unlike happiness, is something money
- can buy, as Bush demonstrated when he hired Roger Ailes to
- de-wimp him in 1988. Clinton's hired gun is James Carville, the
- Democratic version of G.O.P spin doctor Lee Atwater. Carville
- just helped the darkest of horses, Harris Wofford, destroy
- former Attorney General Dick Thornburgh's 44-point lead and win
- a U.S. Senate seat from Pennsylvania.
- </p>
- <p> Carville's first job may be to ward off overconfidence by
- spinning the candidate's own expectations lower. That will not
- be easy in the face of all the head-swelling raves coming in--even from Republicans. In December, Clinton was invited to
- breakfast by 60 California executives, several of whom had
- contributed as much as $100,000 to the 1988 Bush campaign. A few
- are hedging their bets this time around by pledging money to
- Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> Just before Lee Atwater died last year, he wrote in LIFE
- that he had finally discovered that "what was missing in
- society is what was missing in me: a little heart, a lot of
- brotherhood...I don't know who will lead us through the
- '90s, but they must be made to speak to this spiritual vacuum
- at the heart of American society, this tumor of the soul." Front
- runners are not generally given to such musings, which tend to
- come with a few lines in the face, a few more bumps in the
- road. The next months will tell whether Clinton is just another
- whiz kid turned fortysomething, bored with being
- Governor-for-life and looking for a bigger stage, or if he has
- the depth to fill the hollows in America's soul.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-