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<text id=93TT0315>
<title>
Oct. 04, 1993: Picture Of Health
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE PRESIDENCY, Page 28
Picture Of Health
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Clinton wows the crowds with his vision of reform, but can he
persuade Congress to help him deliver his dream?
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL DUFFY/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett and Julie Johnson/
Washington
</p>
<p> Bill Clinton had just finished signing some letters in the
Oval Office last Tuesday night when he paused for a moment to
take stock. Earlier in the day he had signed his cherished national-service
bill, and he was preparing to spend the evening making more
than 60 changes to a draft of the health-care speech he would
deliver the following night. Obviously pleased to return to
two issues that had served him well in the campaign, Clinton
shoved some papers into his briefcase and said to an aide, "I
think things are really coming together. We're doing what we
were elected to do."
</p>
<p> Perhaps the Clinton presidency is just getting under way. After
a nearly disastrous start that left him questioning his own
performance, Clinton has repositioned himself as a problem solver.
He and his aides are learning that they can frame the debate
on only one issue at a time, and sometimes not even then. And
while there are plenty of questions outside the White House
about the wisdom of Clinton's course, there is also palpable
relief inside that the President is finally on the move. As
Hillary Clinton told 150 White House officials at a midnight
East Room celebration following the speech Wednesday, "It's
the end of the first quarter, and we're in the game."
</p>
<p> Though short on specifics, Clinton's speech Wednesday night
proved that he is remarkably persuasive at making the case for
his policies--a key test of leadership. "If Americans are
to have the courage to change in a difficult time, we must first
be secure in our basic needs," he said. "The health-care system
of ours is badly broken, and it is time to fix it." By personalizing
a complex subject with stories of people who had lost their
health insurance or faced a choice between medicine and food,
Clinton asserted what a senior official described as "moral
passion" and established that the cost of doing nothing will
exceed the cost of change. White House officials admit that
Clinton must still explain how the plan will be financed. But
there is resistance to being too precise. "I would not assume
that the public is going to want to know every detail," said
a senior Administration official. "The public is far more interested,
as far as we can tell, in knowing that the plan is rooted in
sound values."
</p>
<p> The White House is monitoring public opinion closely. The Democratic
Party invited nearly 100 disaffected Clinton supporters and
Perot backers in Dayton, Ohio, to watch the speech Wednesday
night and use hand-held dials to register their approval and
disapproval. Though such sessions aren't as reliable as telephone
polls, the results encouraged the White House that its message
was on target. Support for Clinton's health-care plan more than
tripled over the evening, several officials reported; Clinton's
personal approval rating among the group jumped nearly 50%.
</p>
<p> A new TIME/CNN poll supports this conclusion. In the survey,
57% said they favor Clinton's health-care plan. And for the
first time in four months, Clinton's overall approval rating
exceeds his disapproval rating: 50% of those polled on Thursday
night approve of his performance as President, in contrast to
41% who disapprove. To a White House that believes 43% is a
"mandate," this is good news. "People feel he is trying," said
George Stephanopoulos, the President's senior adviser. "Whether
they agree with him or not, they feel he is doing big things."
At the same time, a nettlesome rival is losing steam. In the
TIME/CNN poll, the portion of those surveyed who have a favorable
impression of Ross Perot dropped to 44%, down from 52% in August.
</p>
<p> According to Stan Greenberg, the White House pollster, Americans
believe the prospect for change is improving now that Clinton
has turned his attention to such middle-of-the-road concerns
as health care, free trade and "reinventing" government. A day
after his health-care speech, Clinton flew to Florida for a
Nightline-televised national town meeting on health care and
for more than two hours demonstrated his formidable grasp of
the problem. "It has been a long time since the public has seen
him wrestle with the problems of everyday working Americans,"
said a White House official. "They didn't see it on gays, and
they didn't see it on the budget. Now they see it." Mandy Grunwald,
an outside political adviser, put it more succinctly: "He's
fighting the right fight."
</p>
<p> The Clinton team has lately improved its lot by tempering its
relations with Congress, where members of his own party have
been giving him fits since the day he was inaugurated. After
12 years out of power, Democrats have had trouble getting accustomed
to being part of a governing majority and felt free to treat
any President like the opposition. "It takes an adjustment,"
admits Senate majority leader George Mitchell. "There's a substantial
difference when the President is of your party. The necessary
discipline and restraint are not in the tradition of the Democratic
Party."
</p>
<p> Clinton exacerbated the problem several ways. By slaloming between
liberals and moderates during the spring and summer, Clinton
appeared to be just a middle-aged Democrat, rather than clearly
old or new. Such artful ambivalence is often necessary in Washington,
but Clinton's was on display all the time, and he gave both
factions license to carp at him as inconsistent. In addition,
he gave insufficient deference to committee chairmen like Sam
Nunn and Pat Moynihan and paid dearly for the slights: Nunn
has nearly shut down Clinton on gays in the military, and Moynihan
last week suggested that Clinton's health-care financing scheme
was spun from whole cloth.
</p>
<p> The White House would have dismissed such criticism in March,
but Clinton is more solicitous now. Two days after Moynihan
took his potshot, Clinton invited the Finance Committee chairman
and Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey to the Oval Office, where they
urged him to level with Americans about the costs of his health-care
plan. Americans must be told, Kerrey said, that they will have
to pay more for better health care either in the way of higher
premiums or in lost benefits. Otherwise Clinton would run the
risk of overpromising and underdelivering. Clinton did not go
as far as Kerrey wanted, but within hours he beefed up the section
in the speech on "personal responsibility."
</p>
<p> The White House is also going easy on Democrats who go astray
on the North American Free Trade Agreement. Clinton's manifold
agenda makes it impossible to do otherwise: the White House
made no move to punish Senator Don Riegle, who opposes NAFTA
and gave Ross Perot a platform to blast the President in Michigan,
in part because he was marking up Clinton's community-development
banking bill three days later. Though House majority leader
Richard Gephardt and whip David Bonior have announced they will
oppose Clinton on NAFTA, both supported the President on the
budget, and will repeat the favor on health care. The day Gephardt's
announcement appeared on page 17 of the Washington Post, Clinton
joked privately that "the only thing good about Boris Yeltsin
knocking national service off the front page was that it knocked
Dick's speech off too."
</p>
<p> Given Clinton's appetite for taking on policy challenges, White
House officials say they have no choice but to build a separate
coalition for each measure he sends to Congress and then work
behind the scenes to minimize the conflicts of interest. "It
isn't pretty," said a White House official, "but people are
getting used to it.".
</p>
<p> Looking back, top aides see the turning point in Clinton's effectiveness
as his August vacation, when he decided to concentrate less
on the day-to-day operation of the White House. For months Clinton
had functioned more or less as his own chief of staff, insisting
on seeing dozens of aides daily despite warnings that he needed
a stronger doorkeeper. During his vacation on Martha's Vineyard,
Clinton tried a new approach for two weeks: talking only to
chief of staff Mack McLarty and, on occasion, Treasury Secretary
Lloyd Bentsen. Since then, said an aide, "he's just let go."
Says a top aide: "He doesn't have to micromanage as he once
did. He doesn't have to be the organizer-in-chief, the actuary-in-chief,
the commentator-in-chief. That's not what they elected him to
do."
</p>
<p> It will take discipline to make the new discipline work. The
Clinton White House can still resemble a continuous fire drill.
The health-care speech was conceived amid the usual creative
chaos that the Clintons call home. Disappointed by the initial
draft, Clinton asked Deputy Assistant to the President David
Dreyer to work on a new version with Jeremy Rosner, a National
Security Council staff member with a background in health-care
policy. With an outline all but dictated by Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Dreyer and Rosner on Tuesday night turned in their draft, which
concentrated on six principles: security, simplicity, savings,
choice, quality and responsibility.
</p>
<p> Clinton edited the second draft overnight and began practicing
the speech Wednesday afternoon. More changes were made as Clinton
practiced for top aides and a video crew in the small theater
in the East Wing. He would cut and add new material off the
top of his head as he talked, while aides tried to write it
all down nearby. After three dry runs, his wife, dressed in
a blue sweatsuit, walked in to listen. When he reached the part
about choosing a "talented navigator" with "a rigorous mind"
and "a caring heart," both Clintons burst out laughing. "Oh
please, stop, enough," said the First Lady, hiding her face
in her hands.
</p>
<p> Dreyer added the latest changes by 8:30, copying the speech
onto three small diskettes and the hard drive of his laptop
computer. Clinton made more changes during his limousine ride
to Capitol Hill; Stephanopoulos typed those directly into the
TelePrompTer. What no one realized was that a White House communications
aide had already accidentally merged the new speech with an
old file of the Feb. 17 speech to Congress. Then they simply
scrolled to the top of the document and waited for Clinton to
begin.
</p>
<p> When Clinton took the podium minutes later, he was understandably
alarmed to see a seven-month-old speech on the TelePrompTer's
display screens. Clinton told the news to Gore, who didn't believe
it at first. "You're not reading it," said Clinton. "Read it."
Gore did, and then said, "I believe that's the February speech."
Gore summoned Stephanopoulos, who scrambled to fix the mistake,
eventually downloading the correct version from Dreyer's laptop.
But for seven minutes, Clinton vamped with just notes. "I just
kind of thought," Clinton told an aide later, " `Well, God,
you're testing me tonight.' "
</p>
<p> Clinton's aides let it be known last week that the President
worried aloud during speech preparation that he had to deliver
the bad news along with the good. But he is already being criticized
for sugarcoating his plan, and some advisers add that Clinton
may have raised expectations too much. "It's heresy to say it
around here," said a White House official, "but there's some
worry that the speech was a little too good. The plan may not
live up to the speech."
</p>
<p> That is a danger, but the Clintons seem to sense it. After the
speech, the Clintons and the Gores returned to the White House
and made a triumphant visit to the troops in the health-care
"war room" in the Old Executive Office Building. Greenberg and
Grunwald pulled Clinton into an adjacent office to deliver the
results of the networks' instant polls. But the new challenge
was summed by Mrs. Clinton, who stood on a chair in the middle
of the room and said, "After tonight, this is no longer the
war room. It's the delivery room."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>