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- COVER STORIES, Page 32BILL CLINTON and AL GOREBeginning Of the Road
-
-
- To discover the real Bill Clinton, look not at Yale or Oxford,
- but at the thick forests and fertile plains of his native Arkansas
-
- By GARRY WILLS
-
-
- "He's beyond Arkansas now. He's more Yale and Oxford than
- Arkansas." That was the snap judgment, later modified, of
- columnist John Brummett, the best of the journalistic Clinton
- watchers in Little Rock. When several people told me that Bill
- Clinton brought them into the state and took them on tours of
- its beauties, Brummett said, "I wonder what they could be. Maybe
- he should take me on one of those tours." When Hillary Rodham
- first came to Arkansas, it took Clinton nine hours to drive the
- one-hour's distance from Little Rock's airport to his mother's
- home in Hot Springs. He showed off everything from mountain
- lookouts (Dardanelle and Mount Nebo) to obscure purveyors of
- fried pies -- a local delicacy Clinton has loved not wisely but
- too well, as he has continued to love his often unlovable state.
-
- In 1931, when H.L. Mencken collaborated with a
- statistician on three articles trying to establish the worst
- state in America, Mississippi won that upside-down contest, but
- with Arkansas and Alahotly contesting the bad eminence.
- Arkansas, near the bottom in most categories, was at the bottom
- for insolvency. V.O. Key Jr., in his famous study Southern
- Politics in State and Nation, gave the prize for fraudulent
- elections to Tennessee -- but Arkansas was a close second. Diane
- Blair, a political scientist who has written the best study of
- the state's constitutional structure, calls Arkansas nearly
- ungovernable. Yet Clinton has governed it -- fairly well -- for
- 12 years. He seems to find in it things that elude the rest of
- us. As Brummett talked, he moved from his first judgment.
- "Clinton in Arkansas is like Bush in the nation -- he has
- hometowns everywhere and a network of friends in each place."
- Clinton can best be understood in terms of his four hometowns:
- Hope, Hot Springs, Fayetteville and Little Rock.
-
-
-
- HOPE
-
- Clinton was born at the bottom of the state, in its black
- belt, which has a bleak history. Twenty-five miles to the west,
- the state's most famous demagogue (Jeff Davis, named for the
- Confederate leader) was born, in a county (Little River) where
- more than a hundred freed blacks were murdered after the Civil
- War. About 25 miles south, a cemetery from early in the century
- was dug up, revealing African-American bones ravaged by the
- worst malnutrition recorded in this country. Hope is placed on
- stingy soil that raises, paradoxically, only large things: thick
- piney woods and 200-lb. watermelons.
-
- Actually, Hope was in the midst of a minor boom when
- Clinton was born there in 1946. The Federal Government
- established an artillery proving ground outside the town, which
- brought in skilled workers during the war and created new jobs.
- Clinton's admired Uncle Buddy, Oren Grisham, worked in the fire
- department on the proving grounds, which are now an industrial
- park.
-
- The town itself was and is small and slow. Because
- Clinton's father drowned in a freak accident before his birth,
- Bill's mother left him with her parents while she went off to
- New Orleans to become certified as a nurse anesthetist.
- Clinton's grandparents, Hardey and Mattie Hawkins, ran a grocery
- store outside town near the Rose Hill Cemetery. Clinton, who was
- often in the store as a child, remembers its clientele as half
- black, but his cousin Falva Lively says, "Oh, it was more than
- that. It was in what used to be called Niggertown." Clinton
- praises his grandfather for extending credit to poor black
- customers, but that was the only way to do business with people
- seasonally employed. Clinton also says he learned tolerance from
- his grandfather -- but it is a lesson the man did not pass on
- to his own daughter, Clinton's mother, who admits her prejudice
- toward blacks was not dispelled until late in her life. Clinton
- never played with black children, and the one black friend he
- remembers from Hope was his grandparents' maid Odessa. "I
- visited with Odessa years later. I remember rocking with her on
- her porch." Asked, he cannot remember Odessa's last name.
-
- He lived among blacks, but not with them. He would have to
- grow, along with his region, in the stormy civil-rights days
- ahead. But he is at ease among blacks -- as Jimmy Carter was --
- and they make up his most solid base of support in the state.
- He carries the black belt easily, with more than 90% of the
- African-American vote, in every election. Considered a moderate
- outside the state, he is opposed at home as "too liberal," too
- supportive of minorities.
-
- Though he lost both parents -- his father permanently and
- his mother temporarily during the crucial years of his
- childhood -- Clinton's memories of Hope are fond. Uncles and
- aunts and cousins rallied round the bright little orphan left
- with his grandparents. He remembers being taken to various
- relatives' places of work, showered with compensatory
- kindnesses. His grandfather did a spell as a night watchman at
- one of the pine-tree sawmills. He would take Billy with him, let
- him play in the mill until the boy was tired, then put him in
- the backseat of his Buick to sleep. "I remember climbing the
- mountain of sawdust, how it smelled on those spring and summer
- nights -- such a vivid memory."
-
- The supportive network of relatives and friends was
- typical of Arkansas clannishness. The state's white population
- is homogeneous and inbred. The base of its stable demographics
- was an influx of native-born Protestants from nearby states in
- the 19th century. It still has few foreign-born citizens -- or
- Jews (0.1% of the population) or Roman Catholics (3.1%, about
- a ninth of the national average). It is a Bible-reading and
- conservative state that passed one of the last creationism laws
- to teach an alternative to evolution.
-
- Like many homogeneous societies, Arkansas delights in its
- eccentrics (think of England). Two of these were Clinton's
- mother and his Uncle Buddy. Virginia Kelley (nee Cassidy) is a
- free spirit who has outlived three husbands and goes to the
- racetrack with her fourth. In her home, not far from the large
- open Bible, hangs a sampler that says RACE TRACKS ARE THE ONLY
- PLACE WHERE WINDOWS CLEAN PEOPLE. She has maintained a career
- in nursing throughout her adult life.
-
- Uncle Buddy, a lively (and off-color) raconteur, regaled
- the young Clinton with tales of hunting dogs, life's ironies
- and the maxims people should live by. Asked about his own
- family tragedies, he told his nephew, "Yes, life's tough, but
- I signed on for the whole trip." To this day Clinton calls his
- Uncle Buddy "the wisest man I ever met." (Clinton talks Southern
- hyperbole, which raises a language barrier for some
- Northerners.) He describes his uncle and his mother in the same
- terms: they have weathered many trials with unfailing
- equilibrium and good humor. There is a streak in the Arkansas
- character that militates against expecting too much from life
- (and militates, as well, against political reform). I am not as
- surprised as I was when Clinton first told me that one of his
- favorite books is the stoical Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.
-
- Clinton left Hope when he was seven, moving north to Hot
- Springs, but he and his mother were frequently back for
- relatives' graduations and funerals, for the Watermelon
- Festival, for long talks with Uncle Buddy. Clinton calls his
- grandfather and his uncle "the main male influences in my
- childhood." He kept up with all the interconnected family gossip
- and vicissitudes that make life in a small Arkansas town seem
- like an open-air soap opera. A thousand times over, Clinton
- heard and told the tale of how Uncle Buddy decided one day to
- "stop making a damn fool of myself" by heavy drinking -- and did
- it. Little moral sagas, losses taken with resignation,
- unexpected gains, made up the texture of Hope life. The marks
- of a small town are still on him, the intimate questions asked
- even of strangers, the touching and hugging at every entry to
- a house, the relaxed slouching walk Clinton shares with his
- mother. He may have done some bustling around the world of Yale
- and Oxford, but his preferred rhythms are the slow ones of his
- birthplace.
-
-
-
- HOT SPRINGS
-
- When Virginia Blythe (as she then was) retrieved her son
- from the relatives and married her second husband, Roger
- Clinton, this should have been a return to stability for the boy
- who had been handed around the small town. Instead, he
- experienced his first disorientation in this restored life with
- two parents. Roger Clinton's anger was explosive when he drank.
- In one of his rages, he fired a gun into the wall and was taken
- off to jail -- a searing memory for Clinton, and grist for the
- busy rumor mills of Hope.
-
- The couple tried for a new start in Hot Springs. Roger
- Clinton, who had been selling Buicks in a town with little
- demand for new or expensive cars, joined his brother in a more
- prosperous dealership in the state's most affluent resort town.
- Virginia, meanwhile, got steadier work, better remunerated, as
- a nurse anesthetist. At first the Clintons lived in the country,
- in a house without indoor plumbing. Much has been made of
- Clinton's encounters with snakes in the outhouse, but he says,
- "We were not poor. A lot of rural Arkansas had no sewers back
- then." Billy was taken into town to attend a Catholic school,
- rather than the inferior county school nearer home. It was his
- first experience of Arkansas' dreary educational establishment.
-
- It was a sign of Hot Springs' comparative cosmopolitanism
- that Catholics, rare elsewhere in the state, had a large parish
- and school in the city. The city's affluence came largely from
- the Federal Government, which had established a hospital and
- reservation around the mineral waters in the 1800s. The natives
- let a double jurisdiction grow up, and visitors to the spas were
- received with illegal (but openly practiced) gambling and
- prostitution. The local tales of Hope were traded for the
- legends of Al Capone carousing in the acrid steam of the
- bathhouses or at champagny circles around the roulette wheel.
-
- After the Clintons moved into town, Billy tried out the
- slot machines (confiscated in various political campaigns and
- held by a compliant police force until the zealots had moved
- on). A natural stinginess soon made him give up on machines
- that gobbled his money and gave so little back. Like the other
- boys, he called up Maxine, the best-known madam, to tie up the
- line she used for customers. "We did it mainly to hear her cuss
- -- we never heard a woman use language like that."
-
- Carolyn Staley, who lived next door to the Clintons when
- she and Bill were in high school, says that as a preacher's
- kid, she never even knew about the town's reputation as sin
- city. Did the Clintons know? I ask her. "Oh, yes, they were more
- sophisticated, more worldly-wise." Clinton's mother liked the
- gambling, and his stepfather, who was still drinking, flew into
- rages when he was not sure where she had been. In a deposition
- for divorce proceedings, the mother feared for her son's safety:
- "He has continually tried to do bodily harm to myself and my son
- Billy."
-
- Eventually Billy got too big to beat, and threatened his
- stepfather, telling him never to lay a hand on his mother again.
- When the rages continued, the family broke up.
-
- Hot Springs, unlike Hope, was a place where such problems
- could be kept secret. Billy's friends, teachers, counselors and
- pastors never knew what violence he faced when he went home.
- Staley lived next door when the Clintons' brief (three-month)
- divorce was still in effect, and did not realize that her friend
- was fatherless during that period. Eventually, Roger convinced
- Virginia that he could reform. Her son, 15 at the time, argued
- that he would never change and tried to persuade his mother not
- to remarry him. Why, I ask, did she? "She was old-fashioned and
- thought she must be to blame in some way; and she felt that
- Roger ((Clinton's half brother, born of this marriage)) needed
- a father." He does not mention what seems the obvious and (in
- this case) the real reason -- that Virginia still loved Roger.
-
- Clinton has always been very close to his mother, despite
- the fact that he and his brother were largely brought up by a
- maid who cared and cooked for them while the mother was at her
- nursing jobs. It was a tradition in Hope for families of even
- modest means to have a black maid -- Virginia had one when she
- was growing up, and Billy had Odessa while he was at his
- grandfather's house. In Hot Springs the maid was white, and very
- religious -- she hoped Billy would grow up to be a preacher.
-
- It was not an expectation that would have surprised anyone
- at the time. Facing chaos at home, Billy became
- super-responsible in school and church. "I was the most
- religious member of my family," he remembers now. "Mother got
- more religious later, as a result of the suffering she
- underwent." (She lost two more husbands to death.) Billy raised
- funds, organized for charities, became the band director's right
- hand for statewide planning. The band director acted as another
- surrogate father.
-
- While others fancied him as a preacher, Billy was
- determined to be a musician. He attended band camp every summer
- in the Ozarks, won first place in the state band's saxophone
- section, and played in jazz combos. Musicians were always coming
- and going at the Hot Springs clubs, and the first blacks
- Clinton respected were jazz artists he heard and tried to
- emulate. Despite the joshing he takes now over his sporadic
- bouts with the saxophone, his band director, Virgil Spurlin,
- says he was very talented and dogged in his practice: "He could
- sight-read with the best, and he kept me busy finding scores for
- him to read." Music seemed a way to test the wider horizons
- offered in Hot Springs; despite excellent grades, he would be
- offered more musical scholarships than academic ones when he
- graduated from high school.
-
- The Clintons acquired a television set just before the
- 1956 presidential campaign, and young Bill watched with
- fascination both parties' conventions. In 1958 Governor Orval
- Faubus closed the high school in Little Rock to prevent
- integration, and some families brought their children the 50
- miles to Hot Springs to enroll them in Clinton's school. When
- Clinton and Carolyn Staley, class leaders as well as good
- friends, were elected to Boys Nation and Girls Nation, they went
- to Washington and shook John Kennedy's hand in the White House.
-
- That glimpse of Washington, where the powerful Senator
- William Fulbright redeemed the clownish Arkansas Governor,
- helped banish ideas of playing jazz in smoky nightclubs. Clinton
- asked his high school counselor, Edith Irons, what college
- offered a good program in foreign service. The only one she
- knew, offhand, was Georgetown, but she would look up others.
-
- The fact that Georgetown was in Washington settled the
- matter for him. He paid no attention when Irons brought him
- other names, and she was upset when he did not even apply to
- other colleges. As the acceptance period went by, and summer was
- half gone, he still had not heard from his school of choice, and
- Irons says she had visions of her prize pupil not entering
- college that year. Clinton says he was not worried because the
- University of Arkansas took any student with decent grades; he
- had long assumed he would be going there, where Fulbright had
- been the college president before going to Washington. Clinton
- had become familiar with Fayetteville, the Ozark campus town,
- during his summers at band camps, and he wrote his junior paper
- on the university. He had acquired a circle of friends in that
- corner of the state -- and even another surrogate father, Eli
- Leflar, who had been on a Masonic panel that gave Clinton one
- of his many prizes. Clinton began visiting Leflar and dating his
- daughter. Only Georgetown -- or, more precisely, only Washington
- -- was more attractive to him than the school in Fayetteville,
- where he would later apply to teach law.
-
- When I repeat to Stephen Smith, a key aide in Clinton's
- first term as Governor, John Brummett's claim that Clinton is
- more Yale and Oxford than Arkansas, Smith says, "He is more
- Georgetown than Yale." I ask Clinton if he agrees with Smith.
- "Yes. At Yale I had to work at a number of jobs. At Georgetown
- I had only one outside job. It was my first time away from home,
- and I had a whole range of things to learn." Also, Arkansas
- kept intruding. His one job was in Fulbright's Senate office.
- Clinton took roommates from Georgetown to visit Arkansas, and
- friends from there came to see him. Staley was visiting him
- when, in the wake of Dr. King's assassination, Clinton drove
- food to churches in the riot area. Like Fulbright himself,
- Clinton won a Rhodes scholarship when he finished college.
-
- In this period, too, Clinton discovered a dangerous
- talent, part of his gregarious and ingratiating way with all his
- friends: a puppylike eagerness and drive to please. A man who
- was at Oxford with him tells me, "Bill was one of the two people
- I have known who were just amazingly successful with women. You
- would hear him and say to yourself, `No one is going to believe
- that line,' but they all did."
-
-
-
- FAYETTEVILLE
-
- Clinton, famously, applied to the University of Arkansas
- Law School ROTC as part of his casting about to avoid the
- Vietnam War. He had intended to go to Fayetteville because the
- local law school is a great place for forming political
- connections -- and everyone, by the time he was at Oxford, knew
- Clinton was permanently running for office. "We would kid him
- about it, but no one found it offensive," says Peter Hayes, now
- a historian at Northwestern University.
-
- At Yale, Clinton did no interviewing for the major law
- firms. "All I wanted to do was go home. I thought I would hang
- out my shingle in Hot Springs and see if I could run for
- office." But a teacher at Yale said the University of Arkansas
- needed new faculty, and Clinton called the dean from the
- interstate highway as he was driving to Hot Springs. The dean
- said Clinton was too young, and he answered, "Well, I'm that,
- but I'll teach anything you need for now, and I'm not interested
- in tenure, so I'll be no problem. It's a one-year deal." On such
- terms he finally reached Fayetteville, where he had expected to
- go to college and law school.
-
- Up in the northern corner of the state, mountainous
- Fayetteville is as far as it can be from Hope's flat piney
- woods. There were never many blacks in the clefts and dells
- where independent farmers tended little plots. This area had
- little sympathy for the owners of antebellum cotton plantations
- in the black belt, and many in this Republican stronghold fought
- for the Union. No wonder the Reconstruction government started
- the state college in this receptive, if isolated, place.
-
- Fayetteville is now turning up on lists of the most
- desirable communities in America, but only for those who want
- to get away from urban problems -- and amen ities. Richard
- Atkinson, a professor at the law school, says his faculty has
- trouble convincing potential members that a move to Fayetteville
- will not drop them off the edge of the world. What do you tell
- them? I ask. "Well, we boast that we get National Public Radio
- here."
-
- Clinton did fill in the areas no others taught (admiralty
- law, for example), and found the academic life rewarding enough
- to turn down other offers (for instance, to be on the House
- staff for impeaching Nixon). He meant to run for office, but not
- locally -- this was the Republican corner of Arkansas, after
- all. But as the 1974 race approached, the popular Congressman
- from that area, John Paul Hammerschmidt, strongly vouched for
- Nixon, who was under fire for the Watergate offenses. Clinton
- knew, from his close friend Hillary Rodham, how vulnerable Nixon
- was to impeachment -- she had accepted the offer to work on the
- staff that he refused. The two were visiting each other, back
- and forth between Washington and Fayetteville, and spending
- long hours on the telephone. He was kept informed of her work,
- of her virtual certitude that Nixon would be convicted in the
- Senate after the House impeached him.
-
- Clinton became convinced that Nixon would take
- Hammerschmidt down with him, and he began to canvass his new
- friends in and around the university for a candidate to run
- against Hammerschmidt -- he wanted a Democrat who planned to
- live permanently in the district. But when no one else would do
- it, he announced his own candidacy. As a young law professor
- with '60s-style hair, a Yale and Oxford background and liberal
- cohorts from the university on his team, he should have been an
- easy loser in this enclave of the state's few Republicans. But
- he ran surprisingly well, thanks to Watergate, giving
- Hammerschmidt the one scare in his long, safe tenure of the
- office.
-
- Hillary Rodham came to Arkansas to help with the campaign,
- and -- when the House staff disbanded after Nixon's resignation
- -- she took up an offer the dean had made her, to come teach and
- run a legal clinic at Fayetteville. From the time they met at
- Yale, the two had circled each other warily -- Clinton
- confessing that he thought, "Oh-oh, this woman is trouble -- the
- one I could love." She had joined him in Texas during the
- McGovern campaign of 1972, where he was a paid member of Gary
- Hart's staff, and she was a vote registrar for the Democratic
- National Committee.
-
- Atkinson says the two of them were living together at the
- time, but maintaining separate apartments, in deference to
- conservative local ideas of professorial ethics. When they
- decided to marry, Clinton bought a house, which his army of
- friends descended on to paint, inside and out, against the
- deadline of their marriage day. Atkinson, who was there, says
- it was a marriage all the friends saw as a merging of high
- talents. "I know brighter people singly, but I do not know any
- married couple with their combined strengths." It was
- fascinating to his friends that Bill, with his reputation as a
- ladies' man, chose for his wife the brainy and (at that time)
- frumpy-looking Hillary. Her indifference to matters of
- appearance was evident on the night before the marriage when,
- amid the bustle of painters, her mother asked to see her wedding
- dress -- and discovered that she had not bought one. Mother and
- daughter went up to the quaint town square of Fayetteville and
- found one store open, where Hillary bought the first dress she
- took from the rack.
-
- His unexpected showing against Hammerschmidt gave Clinton
- the statewide attention he turned into electoral victories for
- attorney general (1976) and then for Governor (1978), offices
- that took him to the very center of the state, where the
- Arkansas River divides uplands from lowlands, Ozarks from
- Mississippi rice. He had, in effect, been circling this place
- for years, aiming at the power center of the state.
-
-
-
- LITTLE ROCK
-
- Precisely because it is the center of power in Arkansas,
- the city has long been resented. Jeff Davis, an enormously
- successful demagogue of the early century, always ran against
- Little Rock and kept declaring his independence of the place
- even when he had to live there as Governor. He tethered a goat
- on the Governor's lawn to show that his heart was still with the
- hill folks. He won his first term in office crusading against
- the construction of a capitol building in the city -- a new home
- for the despised politicians. The antipolitics of our own time
- is just rediscovering the ploys of Davis, who treated Little
- Rock as the Beltway of his time: "The judges have lived too long
- at Little Rock, which is why they ruled against the people."
-
- Those scratching a living in the hills wanted to be left
- alone, and certain growers in the black belt did not want others
- to see how they ruled their plantations. This prickly isolation
- took on a rabid note after the Civil War, when federal
- interference created the "Carpetbagger Constitution" with strong
- powers. As soon as the "Redeemers" drove out the carpetbaggers,
- a deliberately weak government was created by the constitution
- of 1874, which is still in force.
-
- To this day, the legislature meets only biennially, for
- two months, to keep the representatives of the people out of
- evil Little Rock. The power to tax is severely restricted --
- the legislature must raise all state taxes by a three-quarters
- vote. The Governor, with only a two-year term, has a weak veto.
- Attempts to write a new constitution have been crushed twice in
- recent years by a populace afraid of giving any more power to
- the government. Even the New Deal, which brought blessings to
- all the South, met the most grudging reception in Arkansas,
- which refused to raise local funds to qualify for federal
- largesse, treating rural electrification as a plot against old
- local autonomy. When Winthrop Rockefeller gave $1.5 million to
- set up a model integrated school, on condition that local taxes
- take up the burden after five years, the school was allowed to
- close when its free run ended. Jeff Davis, after all, had tried
- to outlaw the education of Negroes, on the grounds that it
- ruined good field hands without creating intelligent citizens.
-
- Faubus, the son of a socialist, tried to open up Arkansas
- to outside investment, making Rockefeller the head of a newly
- created investment council. Opposition on this front helps
- explain his unexpected defiance of federal integration orders
- in 1957. It was surprising that Arkansas, of all places, should
- be the first Southern state to take this stand. It had fewer
- blacks than most of its neighbors; and those were concentrated
- in one segment of the state, and they had been rapidly draining
- away since the collapse of cotton growing. (Black population
- shrank from 27% in 1920 to 16% in 1980.) But Faubus wanted to
- be seen standing up against outsiders. What bothered his state
- was not simply having to integrate schools but being told that
- it had to by the distant Federal Government.
-
- People now adult in Arkansas were taught in school that
- theirs is the only state in America that, surrounded by a wall,
- could survive on nothing but its own products. The old boast was
- never true, but it was important to believe it, to find some
- blessing in the state's isolation. The most persistent vein of
- folklore in the state tells how a traveler so befuddled as to
- end up in Arkansas can be gulled with impunity by natives who
- are amused at this man from Mars.
-
- Faubus was converted to government baiting by the popular
- reaction to his 1957 demagoguery. It helped that he was being
- vilified elsewhere. Arkansans rally to their own under assault.
- John Brummett says Clinton was never more popular at home than
- when the nation mocked his endless speech at the 1988
- Democratic Convention or when he came under assault in New
- Hampshire and New York earlier this year. Even some inveterate
- foes of Clinton's came to his rescue during these moments of
- attacks by outsiders.
-
- Faubus finally went a bit too far in his government
- bashing. Partly to compensate, the citizens in 1966 elected the
- first Republican Governor since Reconstruction, Winthrop
- Rockefeller, in 1966. Rockefeller, who served four years,
- instituted a number of reforms, largely with the help of a
- Federal Government still solvent at the time and intent on
- building a Great Society.
-
- When Clinton became Governor in 1978, he tried to pick up
- where Rockefeller had left off. He lacked not only Rockefeller's
- private fortune but also the business ties Rockefeller had
- established in his long tenure as Faubus' investment counselor.
- Besides, the Federal Government was turning away from the Great
- Society. Clinton hoped for help from his fellow Southerner in
- the White House, Jimmy Carter, but that plan backfired when
- Carter used Arkansas to dump Cuban refugees at Fort Chaffee,
- where they rioted, broke loose and alienated the locals.
-
- Desperate for funds, unable to get income or corporate
- taxes through the labyrinth of the constitution, Clinton tried
- to build badly needed roads with new-car registration and
- license fees. The costs of this angered small farmers in the key
- swing counties, who have a heavy turnover in junky cars and
- trucks, each change now entailing a higher registration fee.
-
- Clinton launched ambitious plans for the environment and
- schools, relying on some experts brought down from the
- university or from out of state. Three of these visible aides
- wore beards -- an even greater offense than Hillary's retention
- of her original last name. Clinton was rejected after his first
- term for the second Republican of the century, Frank White, who
- was very far from Rockefeller Republicanism.
-
- Like Michael Dukakis, who was defeated by an ex-footballer
- after his first term as Governor of Massachusetts, Clinton set
- about recasting his political persona. But where Dukakis was
- given a light cosmetic coating, Clinton returned to his most
- authentic self -- the gregarious schmoozer and good ole boy.
- Arkansas had the least-developed single-party system of all
- those states studied by V.O. Key Jr. It lacked even factions
- within the one party. Personality alone formed shifting clots
- of political alliance.
-
- No one is better than Clinton at this kind of
- shoulder-patting, chat-about-the-family,
- how-is-so-and-so-back-in-such-and-such-a-town politics. In his
- second and subsequent terms as Governor, he sought out
- legislators in the halls of the capitol, acting as his own best
- lobbyist. Brummett wrote that it would be more dignified for the
- Governor to summon people to his office; but the informality of
- Clinton's new approach seemed to work. He realized that his
- long-range plans depended on building popular support, and he
- sent his wife out to talk about concern for education in every
- county of the state. The remade Hillary -- higher-class in her
- clothes, lower-class in her rhetoric, and now called by her
- married name -- was accepted as no longer an outsider, and
- Clinton's education reforms (testing of teachers, standard
- curriculums, aid to marginal students, vocational training) are
- the principal success of his 12 years in office.
-
- To accomplish this, Clinton had to rely on regressive
- sales taxes rather than expend further energy trying to work an
- income tax through the constitutional baffles. He had to cut
- corners and improvise in ways that less hamstrung governments
- avoid. "Clinton is criticized for using corporate jets to get
- around the state, but every politician does that here," says
- Diane Blair. "Otherwise you don't go anywhere. I have seen
- Hillary fly through black storms to get to a high school
- graduation where they are waiting for her. She would never make
- it if some firm in the town did not fly her."
-
- Clinton has instilled a new sense of pride in many
- citizens of his state. Ms. Rodham was shocked when she arrived
- at the University of Arkansas Law School and had a student
- complain of her demands: "What do you expect of me? I'm only
- from Arkansas." She did not realize that he might have been
- guying this traveler into Arkansas, in the defensive old form
- of mockery; but even this hangdog defiance of the outer world
- masked an uneasiness about the state's reputation. Journalists
- covering Clinton in Little Rock are constantly asked by a
- suspicious citizenry, "What have you heard about us up there?"
- The state took a long time to recover after it sent its prized
- leader Jeff Davis to the U.S. Senate in 1907, only to have him
- laughed into fecklessness by a more sophisticated audience. The
- state has tried to send more presentable leaders to Washington
- ever since -- men like Fulbright, Dale Bumpers and David Pryor.
-
- The constitution was finally amended to give Clinton a
- four-year term in 1986 (just when shorter term limits were
- gaining support elsewhere). At a time of pinched resources,
- Clinton has had experience of working within a financial
- straitjacket, setting priorities, concentrating on the essential
- tasks. The whole nation is in the grips of an antigovernment
- mood that he has dealt with in what was, until recently, the
- capital of opposition to government.
-
- On the other hand, Clinton is a quintessential politician
- when the very name has become a swear word. He is a man who
- builds compromises and is accused of being slick. He tries to
- please, omnidirectionally, and is accused of pandering. I ask
- if he ever considered being anything but a politician. Yes, he
- answers, a doctor, because he saw his mother and her fellow
- nurses deferring to them. Then a musician. At Oxford, when he
- thought his opposition to the Vietnam War would preclude a
- political career in the patriotic South, he seriously considered
- becoming a journalist. "I would at least comment on the great
- events of my time." Why had he rejected those careers? "I would
- not have been great at them. I would have been a very good
- musician, but not a great one." Does that mean he thinks he's
- a great politician? He answers, matter-of-factly, "Yes." Why?
- "I like people, and like to help them. I can get them together,
- organize them, help them reach their goals." It is, I suppose,
- one definition of politics.
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