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- <text id=93TT1017>
- <link 93TO0135>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Day Of Reckoning
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 24
- Day Of Reckoning
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After weeks of confusion, Bill Clinton comes to impressive and
- even dangerous clarity on what he hopes to accomplish--and
- the sacrifices it will require
- </p>
- <p>By LANCE MORROW--With reporting by Tom Curry/New York and Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Chaos theory likes to think that the beating of a butterfly's
- wings, say, in central Mexico may, in the complex interactions
- of nature, eventually stir up a typhoon in the western Pacific.
- The Clinton presidency seemed determined in its first three
- weeks to validate chaos theory.
- </p>
- <p> A wingbeat as gossamer and normally inconsequential as a Peruvian
- servant's lack of immigration papers stirred up storms over
- an Administration at the moment it was moving into the most
- powerful office in the world. Wild disproportions raged in from
- unexpected quarters. The famous double nanny disturbances and
- the fierce electrical displays over the issue of gays serving
- in the military had the effect of making Republicans, at least,
- cheerful for the first time since November.
- </p>
- <p> But last week the distractions cleared away. Clinton locked
- his focus upon the real work of his Administration--what he
- hopes to achieve and what it will cost to achieve it. Confusion
- seemed to give way to an impressive and possibly even dangerous
- clarity. In his address to Congress this week, the President
- would put on the line his entire agenda and all his hopes for
- the next four years. "This," a senior Democrat said of the speech,
- "is Clinton's blueprint for governing." Clinton is consciously
- calling down a day of reckoning--for both the Administration
- and the American people.
- </p>
- <p> That, at least, is the dramatic intent. Clinton's design will
- be elaborate, the policies intricately machined. The President
- aimed to ask Congress to adopt a package that would raise a
- variety of taxes (on energy, high salaries and corporations),
- cut a handful of others (on investments in new businesses and
- on the working poor), slash spending on some fronts while adding
- new money for job training and road building, for example.
- </p>
- <p> Governor Bill Clinton campaigned on the promise of change--in the politician's sunny sense of the word. Change has now
- taken on some of the harder, unpleasant urgency that drove Ross
- Perot, a feeling of emergency work to be done, or else...
- </p>
- <p> Or else what? Clinton, speaking to a group of business leaders
- and lobbyists, peered into the abyss. He described open-ended
- decline, a most un-American falling off. Salesmanship: for an
- instant, Clinton touched the American fear that the nation might
- find itself transformed, for the worse, beyond recognition.
- But then he proffered the brighter scenario, if things are done
- the Administration's way: a growing economy, jobs, the "great
- American middle class" rewarded for its labors and sturdy virtues.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton the campaigner backed away from the word sacrifice.
- Announcing his candidacy, he said, "For 12 years, the Republicans
- have raised taxes on the middle class. It's time to give the
- middle class tax relief." He rejected the idea of higher taxes
- for gasoline. At the Democratic Convention, he told delegates
- that his vision of the New Covenant meant "an America in which
- middle-class incomes--not middle-class taxes--are going
- up." Toward the end of the campaign he did introduce a new note
- of realism, if not austerity. At 3 a.m. on Election Day, he
- told a crowd in Albuquerque: "I'm here to tell you we didn't
- get into this mess overnight, and we won't get out of it overnight."
- </p>
- <p> That was then. The hobgoblin of little minds vanished after
- an election. Now sacrifice is at the core of Clinton's blueprint.
- He said last week, "Everyone will have to pay their fair share."
- </p>
- <p> Except in wartime or Great Depression, sacrifice is an idea
- almost as un-American as decline. The national theology runs
- in the other direction--toward the streets that are paved
- with gold, toward the freedom to prosper and make a good life.
- If a President asks the American people to sacrifice, he must
- show them a sharply focused danger, a monster at the gates of
- their self-interest. Otherwise, a call to sacrifice is liable
- to smack either of shivering self-abnegation (a perceived weakness,
- Jimmy Carter in a cardigan at dusk, turning down the thermostat)
- or of some redistributive shell game, with the real winnings
- going to government.
- </p>
- <p> The historical landscape is littered with the bugles that American
- Presidents have used to call the people to sacrifice. The calls
- have often failed. A Jeffersonian gazette proclaimed, "We will
- flinch from no sacrifices" as the President imposed the embargo
- of 1807 and in answer to the predatory British and French navies,
- withdrew the U.S. from world commerce. American farmers, shippers
- and merchants were devastated by the cutoff. Jefferson's strategy
- did not work. Jefferson left the presidency disillusioned by
- the experience. Herbert Hoover tried to get Americans to sacrifice,
- regarding their economic struggles as the moral equivalent of
- war. He, too, failed. The call to sacrifice, by itself, is not
- enough.
- </p>
- <p> Americans may enjoy a call to sacrifice as rhetoric ("Ask not
- what your country can do for you," John Kennedy said in his
- flashy reversible prose, "ask what you can do for your country").
- But the key to Clinton's program will not be some mass popular
- talent for sacrifice. It will be an American trait more characteristic
- and useful and durable: a sense of fairness.
- </p>
- <p> If the country is to accept the Clinton design, Americans must
- believe 1) the burdens are being shared fairly by all and 2)
- their sacrifices will pay off for them ultimately. If Americans
- believe their higher taxes and other sacrifices are going to
- pay for more bureaucracy, they will rise up with pitchforks.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton began a campaign last week to convince Americans that
- the sacrifices will be fairly shared. "I believe government
- can both care about people and be careful with their money,"
- he said. The Reagan-Bush era of expanding government privileges,
- he announced, "has come to an end." Clinton will try to shut
- down 700 government commissions and boards controlled by the
- Executive Branch, at a saving of $150 million. Gone will be
- the Cognition, Emotion and Personality Research Review Commission
- and the Technical Advisory Group for Cigarette Fire Safety.
- Clinton's aides took special delight in proposing to abolish
- the President's Council on Physical Fitness. Hasta la vista
- to its chairman and sometime Bush campaign cheerleader, Arnold
- Schwarzenegger. Philip Rosenbloom, a Minneapolis insurance executive,
- suggested Clinton might take a 5% or 8% cut in pay as a symbolic
- gesture.
- </p>
- <p> The chastened attitude of Americans about their place in the
- global economic scheme of things makes them hospitable to the
- theme of sacrifice, fairly distributed. Carl Wangman, managing
- director of the Association for Corporate Growth, points out
- that a kind of national culture of sacrifice is already in place:
- "The majority of our corporate people are doing more with less."
- Yet the spectacle of corporate chief executives being magnificently
- paid even as their companies decline has reinforced a bruised
- sense of inequity, an outraged perception that reward had been
- detached from performance and merit.
- </p>
- <p> The themes of sacrifice, fairness and a healthier national sense
- of community may merge in the most hopeful reading of Clinton's
- vision. During the Depression, Franklin Roosevelt managed to
- draw Americans into some community of sacrifice. Much of the
- secret was his leadership and credibility. Says University of
- Pennsylvania historian Bruce Kuklick: "Americans were willing
- to put up with hard times because they believed he was trying
- to work things out."
- </p>
- <p> In 1993 Clinton's task is (fortunately) not framed in such a
- context of misery and economic breakdown. The deficit is a sort
- of dark hallucination in the minds of most Americans; they have
- little immediate sense of its danger. Layoffs have cut into
- millions of American families, yet the economy now shows some
- signs of revival. John Kennedy once said Americans are at the
- best when things are either very good for them or very bad.
- Americans today feel they are floating uneasily somewhere in
- between.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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