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<text id=94TT1574>
<title>
Nov. 14, 1994: Politics:Alone in the Middle
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
POLITICS, Page 52
Alone in the Middle
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The President is likely to find the new Congress a sharply divided
body, resistant to deal making
</p>
<p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett, James Carney and Karen
Tumulty/Washington
</p>
<p> Voting in the midterm elections was still a few days away,
but Republican Senator John Chafee of Rhode Island was already
feeling lonesome for the old gang. Surveying the voluntary departures
of such Senate moderates as Minnesota's David Durenberger and
Missouri's John Danforth as well as worrying about the loss
of several others on Tuesday, a mournful Chafee said, "I'd like
to say we're going to have some unforeseen support, but I must
say, the middle is shrinking."
</p>
<p> If any prediction about the elections this week could be considered
safe, it was that Congress, paralyzed by bitter partisan warfare,
was about to become even more divided along ideological lines.
The Republicans, their ranks moving increasingly to the right,
were poised to control more seats than at any time in the past
40 years. In the Senate, where G.O.P. control was only seven
seats away, conservative candidates were faring better than
more pragmatic hopefuls. In both parties, moderates were in
retreat. The trend, said Senator John Breaux, a Louisiana Democrat
and committed middle-of-the-roader, is "not conducive to bipartisanship
and building coalitions."
</p>
<p> Nor were the harsh, bridge-burning proclamations that rang across
the country as the midterm campaigns went down to the wire.
In fact the 11th-hour tactics--as well as their implication
for the next Congress--seemed destined only to make voters
angrier. On Halloween, Bill Clinton launched an eight-day, scare-out-the-vote
tour, arguing that the Republicans would do everything from
closing Yellowstone National Park to slowing racial progress.
His favorite gambit was to claim at nearly every stop that Republicans
wanted to cut the benefits of Social Security recipients by
$2,000 each. However improbable--and hypocritical, since Clinton's
own budget director suggested a similar package of entitlement
cuts recently--the ploy helped the Democrats win 26 seats
in the mid-term elections during Ronald Reagan's first term.
And Democrats have been faithfully trotting it out ever since.
</p>
<p> Haley Barbour, chairman of the Republican National Committee,
called the Social Security tactic "the big lie." Conservative
strategist William Kristol snapped that the fear mongering proved
that Clinton was "brain dead" and "exactly what he once accused
George Bush of being: an out-of-touch, visionless President
with only a few questionable foreign policy accomplishments."
At a minimum, Clinton's maneuvers will make it harder for either
party to propose or accept cuts in spending and entitlements,
which they both know is necessary in order to keep the deficit
from ballooning again. At worst, the President's tactics were
a harbinger of broader gridlock to come. Said a veteran Democratic
Party official: "I don't know how Clinton is going to govern,
given the tenor of what he is doing."
</p>
<p> The G.O.P., meanwhile, was having problems of its own as a result
of its move toward the right. Some of the few prominent moderates
left in the party engaged in a mutinous round of endorsements.
Only six days after New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani endorsed
New York Governor Mario Cuomo over Republican George Pataki,
Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan threw his support to Senator
Dianne Feinstein rather than Republican Michael Huffington.
Ross Perot extended his vendetta against the Bush family across
the generations by backing Texas Governor Ann Richards over
First Son George W. Bush. In Pennsylvania, Teresa Heinz, widow
of Republican Senator John Heinz, dismissed G.O.P. upstart Rick
Santorum in favor of the more patrician Democrat Harris Wofford,
calling Santorum "short on public service and even shorter on
accomplishments." In the G.O.P., at least, the center would
not hold.
</p>
<p> The string of crossover endorsements gave the White House some
badly needed cheer. Clinton aides made hopeful claims that they
might reduce Democratic losses in the Senate by taking over
seats in Minnesota and Vermont. Clinton stopped twice in Minnesota
last week while crisscrossing the country in an effort to lift
Democrat Ann Wynia above Republican Representative Rod Grams.
</p>
<p> Behind the scenes at the White House, aides were doing advance
work on a damage-control campaign to explain the Tuesday results.
Officials said Clinton would appear at an East Room press conference
Wednesday afternoon and argue that the real lesson of the election
is pretty much what it was in 1992: that voters want change
in the way business is done in Washington. Clinton has told
his top advisers that he will seek Republican votes on welfare
reform, a bill designed to overhaul telecommunications regulations,
a reauthorization of the Superfund toxic-waste-treatment program,
as well as a clean-water measure. The agenda represents a move
to the middle, which aides say is deliberate and unavoidable.
Said a White House official: "No matter what the results are,
it is absolutely essential for us to work with Congress in a
bipartisan way."
</p>
<p> But with whom? In the House, an unusual number of Democratic
Southerners are either retiring, vacating their seats to run
for higher office or expected to lose. They will be replaced,
most likely, by G.O.P. lawmakers of much more conservative bents.
White House aides have begun to target 30 or so veteran Republicans
who they hope will be swing voters to create the alliances the
President needs. Last year they voted with Clinton on gun control
and the North American Free Trade Agreement. But Clinton aides
admit that these G.O.P. Representatives will be under intense
pressure from their leaders to toe the line. In the Senate,
Republican moderates are stepping down or struggling to win,
while much more conservative Republicans such as Ohio's Michael
DeWine and Missouri's John Ashcroft are expected to cruise to
victory. The result may be that just as Clinton moves to the
middle, he will have a much narrower pond in which to fish for
votes.
</p>
<p> Moreover, reaching compromise on water quality is one thing;
getting there on spending, taxes and values is something else.
On welfare reform, for example, there are enough votes in both
parties to pass legislation next year. But the Republicans will
be able to up the ante at every turn. They could conspire to
toughen Clinton's plan to force welfare recipients back to work,
cutting the time limit from two years to one year; his plan
to provide public-sector jobs after that interval could disappear
entirely. Clinton may be forced to abandon or veto welfare reform
if it is amended to conservative taste.
</p>
<p> If the Republicans were to take the Senate, they would be aided
in this game by the fact that nearly all the key committee chairmanships
would be in the hands of conservatives such as South Carolina's
Strom Thurmond or Utah's Orrin Hatch (Judiciary), North Carolina's
Jesse Helms (Foreign Relations) and New York's Alfonse D'Amato
(Banking). As they lure Clinton to the center in the hope of
compromise, Republicans know that they will be sparking a rebellion
on Clinton's left, particularly among labor and minorities.
Said a liberal Democrat, "The more he wants to govern, the more
he is going to alienate his base."
</p>
<p> Several Republicans said the G.O.P. will cooperate with Clinton
for a while, if just to demonstrate that they are not party
to gridlock. But after that comes what veteran Republican consultant
Tom Korologos calls "the mother of all gridlock." As he envisions
it: "For six months, there will be this fandango between the
President and Newt Gingrich and Bob Dole. Everyone will marvel
at how collegially they are working together. And then, along
about the Fourth of July, everything goes kaput. Because the
Republicans aren't going to let anything pass, and the Democrats
aren't going to be able to pass anything."
</p>
<p> Which is why White House officials admit that sooner or later,
the Administration will turn to measures that aren't so much
designed to pass as simply to "define" which party is on the
side of the angels. Clinton will propose a health-care-reform
program, perhaps aimed at children only. He may, depending on
the scope of the election results, offer a tax credit for middle-class
families, financed by increased taxes on the wealthy. Says Democratic
adviser Tony Coehlo: "Let's make sure we propose things that
we can either prevail on or we can educate the American people
on."
</p>
<p> Of course, this is exactly the kind of behavior that got the
voters so angry in the first place. But it is deeply rooted
in both parties' collective thinking. A Democratic official
went so far as to venture that it was in Clinton's interest
for the moderates to languish and disappear so that Americans
will know that the Republican Party is, as he put it, controlled
"by the crazies." More level-headed Democrats know the loss
of the middle is a made-to-order blueprint for a strong third-party
candidacy in 1996--or worse. "Two years of polarization,"
said Senator Tom Daschle, a South Dakota Democrat who might
succeed retiring majority leader George Mitchell, "is going
to kill us all."
</p>
<p> Clinton, according to a Democratic Party operative who spoke
with him last week, is anxious and confused about his looming
migration to the middle. One reason is that Clinton still deeply
resents the Democratic moderates for abandoning him on elements
of his economic program and health-care reform. Now he must
turn to them to revive his presidency--only to find their
ranks depleted. For Clinton, the scenario is almost sad: elected
as a New Democrat, he stumbled during his first two years in
office largely because he proposed Big Government solutions,
like his health-care plan, to a populace that thought it had
already rejected them. Now, as he finally tries to occupy the
middle, he may find that nobody's home.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>