home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
101094
/
10109917.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-01-31
|
4KB
|
87 lines
<text id=94TT1370>
<title>
Oct. 10, 1994: Congress:Tough Time for Teddy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CONGRESS, Page 32
Tough Time for Teddy
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Sam Allis/Boston
</p>
<p> Blessed by his bloodlines, Edward Moore Kennedy should have
been able to count on the adjective "incumbent" as a perpetual
political heirloom. Even in this season of electoral discontent
with the vagaries and pomposities of politics, his Kennedy and
Fitzgerald legacy retains magic. In spite of scandal, the Senator
still polls a "favorable" rating of 57%. But Kennedy is discovering
that admiration no longer translates into support.
</p>
<p> It seems a particularly vicious irony that Kennedy's political
opponent is the mirror image of the veteran Senator's former
self. Republican Mitt Romney is young, trim and drop-dead handsome.
His life mocks Kennedy's controversial past: the Republican
is a teetotaler, a never-divorced family man and a self-made
millionaire. That should be trouble enough on the campaign trail.
But Kennedy faces a far stiffer obstacle: his constituents crave
change simply for the sake of change.
</p>
<p> In Massachusetts, the hunger is not fueled by the sweep-the-bum-out
mentality that is rattling other incumbents. Rather, it is a
vague sense that Kennedy's time is up. Months before Romney
gained his lock on the Republican candidacy, veteran G.O.P.
pollster Richard Wirthlin came up with some surprising statistics:
while 43% of voters favored Kennedy's re-election, 50% did not.
"His numbers are perfectly good," says Boston Globe pollster
Gerry Chervinsky, "but half the people think it's time for a
change." And a poll released last week by the Globe shows that
while 52% of voters think Kennedy is doing an excellent or above-average
job, 49% believe it is time to give someone else a chance. The
contest is a statistical dead heat, with Kennedy running 48%
to Romney's 46%--in a state where Republicans account for
only 13% of registered voters.
</p>
<p> Bay Staters hold Romney's business experience in high regard:
52% believe it to be appropriate preparation for a job in the
Senate, compared with just 39% three months ago. The son of
former Michigan Governor and 1968 presidential candidate George
Romney, young Romney made his millions during the '80s as a
venture capitalist in Boston. He argues that while his businesses
have helped create 10,000 jobs, Kennedy's activities only funnel
in federal grants: that is, funds derived from taxes. "Ted has
never had a job in 32 years," Romney charges. "He has no idea
how to create jobs, except with government money."
</p>
<p> To counter Romney's image as a family man, Kennedy is campaigning
with Victoria, 40, his telegenic wife of two years. He is also
fighting back with the first negative campaign of his political
life. He is skeptical about Romney's job-creation claims. He
has noted that while Romney says he favors universal health-care
coverage, none of the part-time employees at Staples, the successful
office-supplies chain that Romney helped establish, receive
such coverage from the company. (Then again, part-timers usually
don't.) Last week Kennedy even introduced religion into the
race, demanding to know if Romney, a member of the Mormon Church,
supported church policies that until 1978 excluded black men
from serving as priests. Romney quickly reminded voters how
the Democrat's brother had to fend off questions about his Catholicism
during his run for the presidency.
</p>
<p> The battle is going to escalate. Romney, who expects to invest
$7 million in the ad wars, has outspent Kennedy up till now.
Michael Kennedy, the Senator's nephew and campaign manager,
vows this imbalance will be stopped. "We will not be outspent
in this regard."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>