home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
051793
/
05179932.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
6KB
|
124 lines
<text id=93TT1729>
<title>
May 17, 1993: Remaking of the President
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 41
Remaking of the President
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Accused of lacking focus, Clinton hires a new aide, pushes back
the health-care plan and apologizes to Bob Dole. But will he
go to bed earlier?
</p>
<p>By MARGARET CARLSON/WASHINGTON
</p>
<p> In the middle of the afternoon last Wednesday and in a
rare break from meetings on Bosnia, the White House first team
met in the Roosevelt Room to get the Administration back "on
message." There were the President and Hillary, Vice President
Al Gore and Tipper and the senior staff, plus Democratic
National Committee chairman David Wilhelm and campaign
consultants Paul Begala and James Carville. The day before, the
President had surprised reporters by admitting in the Oval
Office that he could use a little "tighter coordination" and "a
little better focus."
</p>
<p> Hillary, the Clinton who has both focus and coordination
already, said people had to understand what the President was
trying to accomplish and the best way to do that was for him to
resume trips outside the Beltway. Thus Clinton is scheduled to
visit Cleveland, Chicago and New York City this week to sell his
budget proposals. One of those present said Carville pointed to
Clinton and said it was important that the President should not
become part of the "culture of Washington" that prefers more of
the same over change. Clinton has begun quoting some of
Carville's latest folk wisdom: "If you never want to stumble,
stand still."
</p>
<p> The White House knew matters had deteriorated when
Clinton, making a routine appearance at the White House
Correspondents Association's annual dinner the previous weekend,
bombed with jokes about Senate minority leader Robert Dole and
radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh that turned out not to be
funny. The dinners are one of the few times that the permanent
Washington establishment is primed to fawn over the President.
But the range of acceptable presidential behavior is narrow,
from self-deprecation to groveling, and by no means can the
evening be used to settle scores--even with the person who
killed your stimulus package. The dinner produced three days of
apologies and re tractions and gave Dole the opportunity to
charge that Clinton has a bunch of "sophomoric kids working for
him, engaging in minor-league politics."
</p>
<p> Clinton moved quickly to add one major grown-up to his
staff: Roy Neel, the top adviser to Vice President Al Gore for
the past 15 years, joined Mark Gearan as deputy to chief of
staff Thomas McLarty. Neel and Gearan will handle the day-to-day
operations, allowing McLarty to concentrate on minding Clinton
and worrying about long-range planning, which will initially
mean holding three-day-a-week 8:30 a.m. conferences aimed at
shepherding what remains of Clinton's economic plan through
Congress. Neel at 47 exceeds the median age in the White House
by at least a decade and brings adult supervision to the place.
But no one has a mean word to say about Neel, and therein may
lie a problem. Says a White House aide: "We now have the three
nicest guys in the world--Mack, Mark and Roy--in the chief
of staff operation."
</p>
<p> One of the people who could make the White House stop
behaving like a dorm on a perpetual all-nighter is Harold Ickes,
who took himself out of the running for the deputy chief of
staff job in January when an old allegation surfaced about a
union he once represented having ties to organized crime. The
President consults Ickes frequently, and he will be spending
time at the White House this week. Associates urging Ickes to
do more say that he does not want to until the union inquiry is
completed.
</p>
<p> The other gray-haired presence called in by the President
is old friend and former Inaugural chairman Harry Thomason, who
will temporarily move into an office in the Old Executive
Office Building. One aide says Thomason is the perfect person
to bring in: "He has three hit television shows, $40 million and
so no agenda but the President's." What will Thoma son be
doing? "Whatever is asked," Thomason replies.
</p>
<p> The wisdom about Clinton is that he doesn't make the same
mistake twice, but he can make the same mistake for a long time.
Even in a week when the President was trying to focus, he
introduced an $8 billion city-renewal plan, legislation for
campaign-finance reform, a scaled-back immunization program and
prepared to send up a pared-down stimulus package. He is as slow
to criticize his staff as to end a meeting, as quick to solicit
advice as to ignore it, and he has a weakness for imposing
unrealistic deadlines on himself. He admitted to this final
failing last week, remembering that it was his self-imposed
Christmas deadline on filling his Cabinet that led him to pick
Zoe Baird as Attorney General. When he decided this week to
postpone announcing his health-care plan until mid-June, he did
so because he doesn't want to have a legislative pileup. But he
also admitted, says an aide, that "getting it right is more
important than getting it out on time."
</p>
<p> Staff changes are likely to continue this week while
Clinton takes his program on the road again, trying to shore up
his 48% job-approval rating. But the one thing the toughest
staff can't do is put him to bed. On Wednesday, after the
President finished a round of late-night meetings on Bosnia, he
went back to the residence and unwound watching the Los Angeles
Clippers-Houston Rockets basketball game. He did not get to bed
until well after midnight.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>