home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- THE WEEK, Page 19NATIONAfter the Riots, Politics As Usual
-
-
- Bush and Clinton descend on L.A., Perot avoids tough questions
-
-
- After months of penny-ante posturing, the stakes in the
- presidential campaign moved sharply higher as Bush and Clinton
- blew some rhetorical smoke over the volatile issues of race,
- class and domestic neglect. So stark a reminder of the
- challenges facing the nation might have helped focus an
- erstwhile inchoate campaign. But neither candidate seized the
- opportunity to demonstrate much leadership; instead they
- bickered about the Great Society and settled for scoring some
- political points.
-
- Both men trounced their pesky primary opponents in North
- Carolina, Indiana and the District of Columbia to move one step
- closer to this fall's matchup. Arkansas Governor Clinton has 80%
- of the delegates he needs for the Democratic nomination, while
- Bush's coronation is already assured.
-
- For his part, Ross Perot, still the wild card among the
- Big Three, tried to scramble out of the political spotlight
- with a self-imposed hiatus in his un-campaign. The Texas
- billionaire, citing "saturation bombing" of his offices by the
- press, beat a strategic retreat to search for answers to the
- questions he should dread: his specific stands on the budget
- deficit, health care, urban policy, international aid and every
- other complex problem that elicits reams of position papers from
- presidential hopefuls. This clever move comes at the right time,
- just when the press is beginning to dig its unforgiving claws
- into him. Last week the Associated Press reported that according
- to papers from Richard Nixon's White House, Perot offered $50
- million in 1969 to burnish the President's image. Perot denies
- the allegation, saying, "I can't control what people scribble
- on pads."
-
- Nor can he control how the public feels about him, which
- is, in a word, great. A poll in the crucial state of California
- shows Perot in first place, followed by Bush and then the
- Arkansas Governor. A national poll by the Times Mirror reveals
- a close three-way race with the President, who, apparently stung
- by his initial fumbling reaction to the riots, garnered 33%,
- barely edging out his two challengers, who captured 30% each.
-
- Such polls, however, measure only popularity, not
- leadership, which so far remains in depressingly short supply.
-
-
-
-
-
-