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- THE WEEK, Page 20NATIONAnother Revolt Against Politics as Usual
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- Women break through in California, while Clinton goes over the
- top
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- By all rights Bill Clinton should have felt on top of the
- world last week after sweeping the last coast-to-coast crazy
- quilt of six state primaries. The Arkansas Governor eliminated
- Jerry Brown by winning 48% to 40% in his home state of
- California, and consequently clinched the Democratic nomination
- with 366 delegates to spare. Then why was this ordinarily almost
- cockeyed optimist forcing his victory smile as lamely as a
- first-time sushi eater? In crucial California, at least, the
- reason was a climactic revolt against politics as usual that
- rewarded not Clinton so much as outsider Ross Perot and, to a
- historic extent, a surging team of women candidates led by
- Democratic U.S. Senate nominees Dianne Feinstein and Barbara
- Boxer.
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- Perot, the world's most announced "unannounced" candidate,
- won the exit polling hands down. Democratic voters indicated
- that if he had been on the ballot, Perot would have won 43% to
- Clinton's 29% and Brown's 23%. With even more anti-Establishment
- enthusiasm, Republicans gave Perot 52% to President Bush's 38%
- and Pat Buchanan's 9%. Reaching out to Perot supporters, Clinton
- in Los Angeles almost plaintively declared, "Listen, if you want
- an outsider, if you want someone who's passed a program, taken
- on interest groups, got a plan for the future, that's my
- campaign. Give us a listen." Brown, for his part, vowed to turn
- his own Savonarolan campaign into a permanent 800-number
- "movement" after raising the rafters at what he promised was
- going to be a "very yeasty" Democratic Convention.
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- The gender victories raised the unprecedented prospect of
- two women Senators elected from California next fall. Moderate
- Democrat Feinstein, a former mayor of San Francisco, roundly
- defeated state controller Gray Davis 58% to 33% and will face
- appointed incumbent John Seymour, a moderate Republican, in
- November. Liberal Democratic Congresswoman Boxer, with 44%,
- overcame both Lieutenant Governor Leo McCarthy and Congressman
- Mel Levine and will take on conser vative Republican Bruce
- Herschensohn for the Senate seat being vacated by Democrat Alan
- Cranston.
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- In addition, 16 new women candidates, 14 Democrats and two
- Republicans, won nomination for California's 52 congressional
- races. All of them clearly benefited from the anti-incumbent
- mood in general -- and Anita Hill's coattails in particular.
- "We're seeing the shattering of the political glass ceiling for
- women in California," said University of Southern California
- election expert Eric Schockman. Moaned defeated Congressman
- Levine: "I got hit by a tidal wave known as the year of the
- woman."
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- The sobering effect of the Los Angeles riots also made
- itself felt in the primary with the overwhelming 67%-to-33%
- passage of a local ballot initiative, Charter Amendment F, which
- will impose greater civilian authority over the Los Angeles
- police chief. Lame-duck chief Daryl Gates, clearly the target
- of many of the yes voters, complained that they had been "sold
- a bill of goods." But Los Angeles' Urban League president John
- Mack called it "a home run for justice."
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