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<text id=92TT1811>
<title>
Aug. 10, 1992: The Political Interest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Aug. 10, 1992 The Doomsday Plan
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 27
Amateurs, but Playing Like Pros
</hdr><body>
<p>By Michael Kramer
</p>
<p> Politics, Bill Clinton has explained, is like football.
Elaborate strategies are crafted in advance, but execution and
stamina trump planning and practice. Reality defies theory,
confusion reigns, new tactics are implemented on the spot. At
some moments, the best defense is a good offense; at others, the
best offense is a good defense. In both battles, the winners are
hailed as professionals and the losers are derided as amateurs--and for more elections than the Democrats care to recall, the
Republicans have been the professionals. Until now. With the
G.O.P. convention only two weeks away, the Republican incumbents
are acting like amateurs and the Democrats are performing almost
flawlessly. "We've finally met our match," says a senior Bush
aide. "Clinton punches and counterpunches like a Republican--and worst of all, he obviously understands how important it is
to strike back in the same news cycle. So far, nothing we've
thrown at him has gone unanswered by the evening news
broadcasts."
</p>
<p> Which is no accident. "You know how, in college football,
coaches let up on the other team to spare them embarrassment?"
Clinton asked. "Pros don't do that. You never let up. You keep
scoring till the game's over. You hit back, and you hit back
again. If you don't, you lose."
</p>
<p> No incident better illustrates the Democrats' ability to
counterpunch than last week's attack on Clinton by Bush's
Southern campaign chairman, South Carolina Governor Carroll
Campbell. At a Washington press conference last Wednesday,
Campbell blasted Clinton's Arkansas record and reiterated the
G.O.P.'s standard line: Clinton's a closet liberal who favors
"tax and spend all the way." Thanks to the news wires,
Campbell's pending appearance had been noted in Little Rock, and
thanks to Betsey Wright, Clinton's former gubernatorial chief
of staff, the Democrats struck back even before Campbell spoke.
Wright has collected just about everything anyone has ever said
about Clinton (a research task that required poring through
1,200 boxes of Clinton's papers), and as journalists listened
to Campbell's thrust, they had in their hands Clinton's
two-pronged parry: a January 1989 letter in which Campbell
praised Arkansas' "innovative ways," designed to make the South
"more internationally competitive," and an August 1989 newspaper
article in which Campbell said Clinton's "not one of those
liberals. He's not a radical." "We got our clocks cleaned on
that one," says a Bush aide. "We expected a nice sound bite that
evening. We got bitten instead."
</p>
<p> The Clinton camp considers its Campbell rejoinder "simple
stuff." True elegance was on display last Wednesday, when
Clinton visited New Orleans, the site of Bush's 1988 "Read my
lips" pledge. The centerpiece of the G.O.P. strategy is hardly
mysterious. Two words, values and trust, symbolize Bush's
attempt to portray Clinton as publicly "too slick" and privately
"too loose" to be President. Until last week, when Clinton
finally found a way to expand the definition of those words to
his benefit, his responses had been less than satisfying. On
Tuesday the Administration's Budget Director, Richard Darman,
told a congressional hearing that everyone but the White House
should be blamed for the nation's sagging economy. After
learning of Darman's remarks, Clinton's chief strategist, James
Carville, fairly screamed, "That's the hook we need!" So the
very next day in the Louisiana Superdome, Clinton attacked Bush
for failing the ultimate values test--the willingness to
assume responsibility for one's own shortcomings. "That was some
piece of work," says a Bush campaign official, "and I'm sure
we'll be hearing more in the same vein. We're trying to remind
people of Clinton's sordid past, and he's saying the President
lacks the guts to face his own complicity for what's wrong. We
look cheap, and Clinton looks presidential."
</p>
<p> Where does all this leave Bush? In a deep hole. After the
1988 campaign, then G.O.P. chairman Lee Atwater said, "The
ticket of admission to play in the [general election] game
with a chance to win meant we had to hold Dukakis' lead to under
10 points at the time our own convention began. Anything worse,
and we'd likely lose." By this standard, Bush is flirting with
disaster; the latest polls have Clinton ahead by at least 20
points. "At the rate we're going we may end up having to do the
McGovern spot," says a Republican consultant. At the end of his
disastrous 1972 campaign, George McGovern ran a TV commercial in
which a conflicted citizen considered his choice in the voting
booth: "Either way it won't be a disaster," the man muttered to
himself. "So I'll be voting for Nixon. Why rock the boat? I'm
not crazy about McGovern...But me vote for Nixon?...My
father would roll over in his grave...Maybe McGovern can do
the job...Yeah, McGovern."
</p>
<p> "Sometimes," says the G.O.P. consultant, "all you've got
is the `lesser of two evils' argument. McGovern did it kind of
nicely." Yes, he did, but he lost.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>