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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=91TT0617>
<title>
Mar. 25, 1991: No Donkeys In This Horse Race
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 24
No Donkeys in This Horse Race
</hdr><body>
<p>As Bush savors the gulf victory and lengthens his odds for 1992,
the Democrats shy away from the starting gate
</p>
<p>By Margaret Carlson--Reported by Laurence I.
Barrett/Washington
</p>
<p> The only thing more embarrassing to the Democrats than the
spectacle of seven dwarfs scrambling for the presidential
nomination 20 months before the election is the absence of any
candidates at all. At this point in the run-up to the 1988
voting, a bomb blast in Des Moines' Savery Hotel would have
wiped out much of the Democratic field of candidates and most
of the political press corps. Now Iowans just sit and watch the
hogs fatten.
</p>
<p> If few Democrats seemed eager to run before Jan. 15, the
gulf war has done little to whet anyone's appetite. Running
against an incumbent President is hard enough; running against
a triumphant Commander in Chief is nearly impossible, no matter
how much bunting a candidate drapes himself in. Campaigning is
often absurd under any circumstances--a gaggle of politicians
asking to be taken seriously while begging to be liked. Who
wants to leave himself or herself open to the sort of antics
of elections past--Ronald Reagan grabbing the microphone he
paid for in New Hampshire, Bruce Babbitt comparing himself
unfavorably to a talking horse, Pierre Dupont IV pleading to
be called Pete--while the President is welcoming back his
victorious troops and addressing a flag-waving joint session
of Congress?
</p>
<p> Jay Leno joked last week that Saddam Hussein's humiliation
should be made complete by choosing him as the 1992 Democratic
nominee. The fear of such ridicule--and the bad odor
Democrats attach to their has-runs--are two reasons why no
one is racing to set up phone banks in Davenport, Iowa. Says
Democratic Party treasurer Bob Farmer: "The party has got into
the habit of eating its nominees for lunch if they lose."
</p>
<p> Congressman Richard Gephardt, who had made Iowa his second
home by February 1987, denies both that he is running again and
that Farmer will be his top money man. "We have no campaign
staff because we have no campaign," huffs press spokeswoman
Deborah Johns. The strongest signal that Senator Lloyd Bentsen
will not try again is his rejoining the exclusive private clubs
from which he resigned during his vice-presidential bid. But
fear of ridicule has not kept George McGovern, who lost 49
states in 1972, from announcing that if someone didn't get into
this race soon, he would.
</p>
<p> That's the kind of suicidal challenge that Democrats, who
prefer running against each other to running against a
Republican, usually rise to. So far, it has not been enough to
draw out dark horse Bob Kerrey, the Nebraska Senator whose vote
against using force in the gulf is offset by his Vietnam War
record. Yet it did bring out one dark, dark horse: former
Massachusetts Senator Paul Tsongas, who announced he might run
while fellow liberal Michael Dukakis was vacationing in Hawaii
and unavailable for comment.
</p>
<p> The war seems to have obliterated the nomination chances of
Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Sam Nunn, who voted
against force in the gulf, and raised those of Tennessee
Senator Albert Gore, who was for it. Predicts Maryland state
chairman and fund raiser Nathan Landow: "As things stand now,
Gore has the best shot. The vote on the war was important." The
irony is that his pro-war vote, a prerequisite for having a
chance in the general election, could deny Gore his dovish
party's bid. It is not lost on his colleagues that every time
Gore defends their vote against force, he gets to rub in the
fact that he chose right on the biggest foreign-policy issue
of the past decade. When asked last week, Gore went so far as
to say he was "actively thinking about" running. Other "go"
signals: he looks 20 lbs. thinner, and he has $1 million left
over from his 1990 Senate campaign.
</p>
<p> Until now, Virginia Governor Douglas Wilder has been the
most visible noncandidate, crisscrossing the country giving
speeches, wooing deep pockets in Hollywood and devising a
catchy slogan--"the New Mainstream." He's even survived what
might have been a fatal blunder after flying on a state-owned
aircraft to visit former model Patricia Kluge, recently
divorced from one of the wealthiest men in the U.S. For good
measure, Wilder appointed Kluge, star of the soft-porn movie
Nine Ages of Nakedness, to the board of visitors of the
University of Virginia. But running in a race without
challengers means never having to say you're sorry. When the
episode became public, Wilder simply reimbursed the state
$3,707 for the plane ride and said of Kluge, "We're friends."
Gary Hart, call your PAC manager.
</p>
<p> As nonrunners go, no one can compete with Zen candidate
Mario Cuomo, who by never running always looms as the front
runner. Cuomo trumped Wilder last month by announcing that he
doesn't plan to make an announcement that he is not running in
'92. Is that perfectly clear?
</p>
<p> War has unintended consequences--and improving the
presidential campaign by shortening it is not the least of
them. There are even those, such as Al From, director of the
Democratic Leadership Council, who gamely argue that "the war
may turn out to be the best thing that has happened to the
Democratic Party in years. It provided a real shock to the
system at a phase in the cycle when we can rethink our
approach." That may prove hopelessly optimistic. But one thing
seems true: from their current below-sea-level crouch, the
Democrats have nowhere to spring but up.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>