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- THE WEEKNATION, Page 18Stepping into the Washington Whirl
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- The President-elect makes the rounds of a city he's about to
- call home
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- The symbolism, at least, is unmistakable: after defeating a
- President regarded by most voters as out of touch with the
- nation's problems, Bill Clinton is cutting a different figure.
- He went jogging one morning last week in Washington, stopped on
- the way back at a McDonald's two blocks from the White House,
- ordered a cup of coffee and started to chat up the locals. One
- homeless man explained that he had been out of work for three
- years. A woman said she prayed for him every night. "That's why
- I go [to McDonald's] at home," Clinton said later. "You see
- a reasonable range of people in there."
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- The theme of Clinton's Washington tour was "I'll keep in
- touch" -- with the plain folk who helped carry him into office,
- with the Democrats on Capitol Hill who have been out of favor
- for years, and even with the Republicans who now find
- themselves in a distinct minority. It won't be easy: upon
- Inauguration, Presidents-elect slip helplessly into the
- protective cocoon of White House and Secret Service agents
- whether they like it or not. But certainly the speed with which
- Clinton moved about the city indicates that he will be, if
- anything, an even more energetic President than the ever
- bustling Bush.
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- Perhaps the most surprising development came when Clinton
- and erstwhile rival George Bush met for 45 minutes more than
- their allotted one-hour meeting on Wednesday. Details of the
- Oval Office session, which was devoted largely to foreign
- policy, are sketchy. But within 24 hours, Clinton suggested that
- Bush's conciliatory posture toward China might not have been as
- counterproductive as he had once believed. A Clinton official
- denied that any reversal had occurred a day later. But the
- President-elect's back-and-forth maneuver, also a common tactic
- of Bush's, led an outgoing White House official to remark, "It
- all sounds eerily familiar."
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- The President-elect journeyed uptown to an all-black
- neighborhood that is combatting crime as well as recession. That
- pilgrimage perhaps took the sting off the two nights he spent
- at glittery parties in posher Georgetown. Clinton's trip to
- Capitol Hill on Thursday was what an aide to the Governor
- described as a "love shack." Latent intraparty disagreements
- over taxes, deficits, auto-fuel standards and a line-item veto
- were quietly shelved; starved for a leader after 12 years, the
- Democrats are all singing the same music. For now, anyway, happy
- days are here again.
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