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<text id=93TT0518>
<title>
Nov. 15, 1993: No Experience Necessary
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ELECTIONS, Page 49
No Experience Necessary
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Ornery voters give the boot to incumbent Democrats, but the
pattern isn't as simple as it appears
</p>
<p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington, Janice C. Simpson/New
York, Jack E. White/Trenton and Michael Riley/Atlanta
</p>
<p> Politicians, beware: voters are still inclined to hold experience
against you. George Bush learned that lesson last year, when
his failure to make a difference during his four years in the
White House cost him his job. This year voters are increasingly
asking whether politicians have improved American lives or prospects
in some visible, tangible way; if the pols can't prove they
have done so--well, look out. And Bill Clinton, who profited
at Bush's expense, had better be taking notes.
</p>
<p> The President was not on any ballot last Tuesday, of course.
But two Democrats he campaigned hard for, New York City Mayor
David Dinkins and New Jersey Governor James Florio, were turned
out of office. Their defeats were the more galling because of
the identity of their Republican conquerors. Former prosecutor
Rudolph Giuliani had lost to Dinkins four years earlier; Christine
Todd Whitman was a relative novice who had held only one minor
elective office in New Jersey and proposed pie-in-the-sky tax
cuts.
</p>
<p> Incumbency became a burden even for some candidates who were
not in office but seemed like political insiders. In the third
nationally spotlighted race, for Governor of Virginia, former
state attorney general Mary Sue Terry at one point held a 29-point
lead in some polls over Republican George Allen. But by Election
Day, Allen had convinced many voters that Terry's Democrats
were treating the Governor's mansion as a virtual hereditary
monarchy; he won by a lopsided 17 points to complete one of
the most amazing turnarounds ever. In a less noticed but important
contest, Coleman Young, mayor of Detroit for 20 years, sought
to anoint Sharon McPhail as his successor; she was buried under
a 12-point landslide by Dennis Archer. Further underlining their
anti-incumbent mood, voters in Maine, New York City and nearby
Suffolk County enacted term limits for officeholders, including
Mayor-elect Giuliani, while New Jerseyites passed a referendum
that will give them the authority to remove any elected official,
including Governor-elect Whitman, even before his or her term
is up.
</p>
<p> Since most of the outs who beat the ins or their would-be heirs
were Republicans, it was tempting for G.O.P. partisans to read
the results as constituting a tide for their party. Republicans
have in fact won all eight of the most important races decided
since Clinton's election a year ago (the earlier ones were for
Senate seats in Georgia and Texas and for mayor of Los Angeles).
Moreover, there were signs--though ambiguous and inconclusive
ones--of a conservative, anti-tax, tough-on-crime, no-to-gay-rights
mood that, to the extent it takes on a partisan coloration,
should benefit Republicans more than Democrats.
</p>
<p> Generally, though, political cognoscenti agreed the results
were less pro than anti, not so much for Republicans as against
almost anyone in office. And even that reading has to be qualified.
The New York City and New Jersey elections were so close that
shifts of a very few votes would have reelected both Dinkins
and Florio and no doubt led pundits to interpret the results
very differently (although most American elections are decided
by relatively small margins). Moreover, it is still possible
for incumbents to win big. In Houston Mayor Bob Lanier promised
to put more cops on the streets and did; the crime rate dropped
significantly. In the election last week no one of any stature
dared challenge him, and he won a second term with 91% of the
vote.
</p>
<p> Increasingly skeptical voters, however, demand results just
about that measurable and turn surly because they rarely get
them. The message of the election returns last week "is a kind
of distemper on the part of the public and a dislike of insiders
of all stripes," says Scott Keeter, who runs the Commonwealth
Poll at Virginia Commonwealth University. Comments Jay Severin,
a New York-based political consultant who often advises Republican
candidates: "I don't think it's a Republican message. It's more
a Perot message. People are angry.''
</p>
<p> Clinton sought to put the best face he could on the election
results. Far from being a repudiation of him, he said, they
indicated a continuation of the very desire for change that
had carried him into the White House. Perhaps, but as Dinkins,
Florio and others have discovered, the desire for change that
can sweep a candidate into office in one election can sweep
him right out again four years later.
</p>
<p> At barest minimum, the results last week will fail to help Clinton
win congressional support not only for NAFTA but for his health-care
reform bill as well. Barbara Kennelly of Connecticut, a deputy
Democratic whip in the House, fears that Clinton's health-care
bill will become more vulnerable to attack--wrongly, in her
view--as too expensive and too likely to promote a growth
of government bureaucracy. On state and local levels at least,
charges of excessive spending and too much bureaucracy have
been proving lethal.
</p>
<p> Those legislative difficulties could pale in comparison to the
ones Clinton may face after the 1994 elections. Losses of even
two or three seats in the Senate and 20 or so in the House,
regarded as normal for the President's party at midterm, would
shave the Democrats' margins so thin as to perhaps bring back
legislative gridlock. Greater losses could virtually end Clinton's
chances for getting any important legislation passed, and the
elections last week indicate that is a distinct possibility.
Very far from a certainty, of course: a recent quickening in
the economic recovery, if it continues and brings an upsurge
in employment, could convince many alienated voters that the
status quo is not so awful after all. But a continuation of
the present anti-incumbent mood could hurt the Democrats badly,
if only because they will have many more Senate and House seats
and governorships to defend next year than the Republicans will.
</p>
<p> Apart from the anti-incumbent trend, the results last week showed
the contrasts and contradictions usual for a clutch of local
contests. One exception: gay rights lost heavily in all three
places they were put to a vote--Cincinnati; Lewiston, Maine;
and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. These are not exactly trend-setting
cosmopolises, but the defeats extend an unbroken string of losses
over several years that has gay activists worried. In most other
areas, however, the results showed patterns were meant to be
broken:
</p>
<p> RACE
</p>
<p> The New York City results were ominously polarized. Dinkins
won 95% of blacks' ballots, while Giuliani took 76% of the white
vote. When Dinkins steps down on New Year's Day, it will mark
the first time in 20 years that none of the nation's four largest
cities have a black mayor. But Minneapolis, which is 78% white,
elected its first black (and first woman) mayor, Sharon Sayles
Belton. In Seattle, 75% white, Norman Rice bore the double burden
of incumbency and race but nonetheless swept to re-election
by a 2-to-1 vote; he has convinced many residents that he is
a problem-solving pragmatist whose race is irrelevant. Mayor
Michael White, a self-described "pragmatic idealist," won a
second term in Cleveland. Detroit's overwhelmingly black electorate
chose Archer despite McPhail's charges that he is too friendly
to white suburbanites.
</p>
<p> TAXES
</p>
<p> They are obviously, and intensely, unpopular. Yet voters in
Washington State approved a $1 billion increase to pay for a
new state health-care plan, and in California, the motherland
of tax protest, voters made permanent a half-cent increase in
the sales tax for hiring more fire fighters and police. Even
in New Jersey, anger at the $2.8 billion increase Florio pushed
through in 1990 would not by itself have been enough to beat
him, in the view of Whitman's campaign manager, Ed Rollins.
His attack against Florio focused on the idea that the state's
economy is still sluggish and schools are still poor, "so you
got taxed a lot more, and you didn't get anything for it." The
upshot, in the view of many analysts: voters will grudgingly
approve tax increases they can be persuaded are needed for specific
purposes--but woe to the officeholder who raises taxes and
has nothing to show for it.
</p>
<p> CRIME
</p>
<p> The crack-down-hard approach is usually a big vote getter. It
helped mightily to elect Giuliani and Allen, and Washington
State voters approved a "three strikes and you're out" law that
mandates life imprisonment without parole for anyone convicted
of a third violent felony. Yet would-be tough guys can lose
too. John Derus based his campaign for mayor of Minneapolis
entirely on a law-and-order appeal but was swamped by Sayles
Belton, who pledged an increase in social services.
</p>
<p> Such mixed results may mean only that the U.S. now qualifies
for an observation often made about Russia: it is so big and
diverse that two flatly contradictory statements about it will
both be true. On the votes could also signify a heartening sophistication
among the electorate, an ability to appreciate that not all
tax-increase proposals or tough-on-crime candidates--or even
all incumbents--are the same and to make discriminating judgments.
Which is not necessarily consoling to most officeholders or
most Democrats, especially the more liberal variety. But it
does indicate that a variety of ideas and politicians have a
fighting chance.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>