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<text id=94TT1648>
<title>
Nov. 28, 1994: Government:After the Revolution
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
GOVERNMENT, Page 28
After the Revolution
</hdr>
<body>
<p> In the turmoil of the GOP takeover, everything is in play, including
Bill Clinton's stand on the school-prayer issue
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by James Carney with Clinton, Mark Thompson and Douglas
Waller/Washington
</p>
<p> A mark of the biggest traumas is that they reach down to the
smallest levels. On the morning after Election Day, the 8-year-old
son of a defeated Democratic Congressman walked slowly into
his third-grade classroom at Horace Mann School in Washington
and announced sadly, "My dad lost." The boy was worried that
he might have to move, and his teacher tried to console him.
"He's too little to understand the full implications," says
principal Sheila Ford. "But he knows enough that it's been real
hard on him."
</p>
<p> Well, that's how it is for more senior Democrats these days
too. As the aftershocks of the G.O.P. triumph go rolling through
the city, every day is moving day now in Washington. What's
moving is everything. Amid the teeming arrival of the ins, mostly
Republicans, and the gloomy expulsion of the outs, mostly Democrats,
any number of things are in motion. The battle lines in Congress,
the power flow in both houses, the political center--all is
in play. So is Bill Clinton, who's being tugged by both sides
of his party while he also manages, in that way of his, to pull
himself back and forth.
</p>
<p> The great challenge for the Democrats, still reeling from their
drubbing at the polls, is to keep their footing as the G.O.P.
pulls the rug out from under them. Clinton's handling of the
first major surprise to be sprung by soon-to-be House Speaker
Newt Gingrich was anything but surefooted. Right after the election,
Gingrich declared that in the next session of Congress, House
Republicans plan to introduce a constitutional amendment to
permit school prayer, an item that didn't appear in the G.O.P.'s
"Contract with America." When reporters asked Clinton about
it in Jakarta, where he was attending the summit of Asian Pacific
leaders, he replied with a small surprise of his own. "I certainly
wouldn't rule it out," he offered. "It depends on what it says."
</p>
<p> His placating instincts got him in trouble. By first appearing
to endorse Gingrich's proposal, Clinton opened himself to attack
from liberals who oppose school prayer. White House aides spent
the next day backtracking, explaining that what the President
had in mind was not a constitutional amendment but a legislative
act to permit a moment of silence in classrooms like the one
he had signed as Governor of Arkansas in 1985. While that could
be acceptable to many Democrats as well as Republicans, the
way the White House handled it reinforced Clinton's image as
the Great Vacillator.
</p>
<p> Although Clinton seemed completely unprepared for the first
rhetorical challenge from the emboldened G.O.P., for Gingrich
to start off with the school-prayer amendment made political
sense. It probably seemed like the perfect thank-you gift to
the Christian right for its substantial role in the Republican
triumph. Even though leaders of the Christian right say it's
not high on their legislative wish list, polls show strong support
for some kind of classroom prayer, making it less contentious
than an antiabortion measure they might prefer. Best of all,
Gingrich could offer the amendment without fully expecting it
to come to pass, with whatever messy, real-world consequences
it might entail. Even if approved by both houses of Congress--affording Gingrich the delicious spectacle of watching Clinton
agonize over a veto--constitutional amendments must be further
approved by three-quarters of the states, a long and bumpy road
where most of them stall.
</p>
<p> Over time, the move could backfire. Liberal groups have seized
on it as a way to energize their despondent troops, and even
conservative Christians are wondering what kind of government-approved
prayer they are going to have to agree to. But so far on this
one it's Gingrich 1, Clinton 0.
</p>
<p> Clinton will soon face a barrage of issues far tougher than
school prayer. When the new Congress convenes in January, Gingrich
plans a fast and furious start in the House, with quick thrusts
on taxes, term limits, welfare and crime. Even in the generally
more collegial Senate, a new lineup of Republican chairmen is
setting traps on such things as defense spending and the global
free-trade agreement. And everywhere the rhetoric is getting
nastier. North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms felt free to say
on CNN that Clinton is not up to the job of Commander in Chief--a remark that was widely regarded, even by some of Helms'
ideological brethren, as very nearly unpatriotic. Earlier in
the week the crusty Senator, who will chair the Foreign Relations
Committee, dispatched what read like a ransom note to the Administration,
threatening tough handling of Clinton foreign policy if next
week's vote on the huge free-trade treaty was not delayed until
next year. That sort of hubris could impede the great Republican
revolution, turning it into little more than an opportunity
for new bottoms to press themselves firmly into old seats of
power. But for now the G.O.P. takeover is shaking up Washington
much more fundamentally. If the Democrats have any idea what
to do about it, there isn't yet much sign of it.
</p>
<p> On his way to Manila three days after the election, Clinton
was already deep into the very Clintonesque process of mulling
things over. Sitting with his aides on the floor of Air Force
One's conference room, he reviewed the political dilemmas of
earlier Presidents, from Lincoln onward, pondering, as a senior
official put it, "how they were perceived, and how they conceived
their presidencies."
</p>
<p> Back in Washington, a lot of party centrists are prepared to
tell Clinton all about how he's perceived. The Democratic Leadership
Council, the group of moderate Democrats that Clinton once headed,
issued a poll conducted right after the voting by Stan Greenberg,
the President's own pollster. It showed that Clinton's support
had vanished among the independent voters who helped put Democrats
over the top in 1992. Said D.L.C. president Al From: "For President
Clinton there is a pretty blunt message in this poll: Get with
the program, or you'll have to pay consequences."
</p>
<p> The view that Clinton must hunker down in the center is shared
by some members of the White House inner circle, notably domestic-policy
adviser Bruce Reed and Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen. Another
camp, which includes deputy chief of staff Harold Ickes and
possibly adviser-in-chief Hillary Rodham Clinton, wants the
President to consolidate his party base. If that means dwelling
on civil rights, abortion rights and labor issues, it's probably
an agenda that would appeal to a too narrow slice of the ever
more conservative electorate. As a rough blueprint for post-apocalypse
strategy, White House chief of staff Leon Panetta, with the
help of several other top aides, produced a memo one described
as a "thought piece." The memo proposed that the President should
attempt to govern from a "forceful center," working with Republicans
who want to share the middle on matters like welfare reform,
health care and the line-item veto, but challenging as radicals
any who propose ideas too far to Clinton's right.
</p>
<p> House Republicans these days are only too happy to find out
what's too far right. Not long after Gingrich unveiled his intentions
on the prayer amendment, Texas Representative Richard Armey,
the next House majority leader, said that within three years
his party will replace the current graduated income tax, which
takes a larger bite from the upper brackets, with either a national
sales tax or a flat tax of 17% on everybody. But it took congressional
Democrats until week's end to utter their first opposition rhetoric.
"We're not about to roll over and play dead while the Republicans
rubber stamp their extremist, supply-side agenda," warned House
Democratic leader Richard Gephardt.
</p>
<p> The smell of blood in the air has encouraged some Republicans
to challenge the President even on an issue that their party
has long supported. Clinton faces real trouble next week in
the Senate, when the lame-duck Democratic Congress convenes
to take up GATT. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
is the laboriously crafted 123-nation agreement designed to
lower tariff barriers. In his threatening letter demanding a
delay of the vote, Senator Helms, who can make "free trade"
sound like some weird practice he once saw in a Mapplethorpe
photo, was trying to exploit the fact that Congress has agreed
to consider GATT under "fast track" rules that allow only a
yes or no vote, with no amendments. Because that rule expires
in January, the next Congress, under G.O.P. control, would be
free to decorate GATT with subclauses sure to kill it because
each one would have to be renegotiated with all 123 signatory
nations. With its 26,000 pages of agreements and rules, GATT
is a behemoth that just a few additions could tip over.
</p>
<p> Sentiment on GATT doesn't divide along partisan lines. Before
the task fell to Clinton, the agreement was championed by Ronald
Reagan and George Bush. Ranged against it now is a loose front
that runs from labor unions, environmental groups and Ralph
Nader to protectionist Senate Democrats like Ernest Hollings
of South Carolina and Republicans like Phil Gramm of Texas.
But Gingrich is a longtime GATT supporter who says he will make
sure the agreement passes the House vote scheduled for Nov.
29. So the man who holds the cards is incoming Senate majority
leader Bob Dole. The Dec. 1 Senate vote on GATT is a cliff-hanger.
The White House may be as many as 10 votes short of the 60 it
needs for passage. Though Dole has leaned toward support, his
presidential ambitions keep him mindful that trade agreements
aren't always popular with those voters who fear they could
be swept away in a free-flowing world economy. As the price
for getting Republican Senators in line, Dole wants assurances
that the U.S. can withdraw from the World Trade Organization
if it "gets shafted" several times by the group, which will
supervise the trade regulations of member states.
</p>
<p> January will bring an even chillier climate for Clinton. Not
only will the Republicans have the majority, but Gingrich is
busy refashioning the House as a fighting unit. Already he has
laid the first strokes of revolutionary discipline on the backs
of his fellow Republicans by skipping over some more senior
members when selecting committee chairmen. So Representative
Henry Hyde of Illinois will be chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee instead of the ranking G.O.P. member, Carlos Moorehead
of California.
</p>
<p> In what looked like a bow to the tobacco industry, the Speaker-to-be
passed over Moorehead a second time in choosing the chairman
of the Energy and Commerce Committee. The outgoing Democratic
chairman, John Dingell, was the impresario of this year's subcommittee
hearings on whether cigarette companies were manipulating the
nicotine level of their product. The new head will be Thomas
Bliley Jr. of the tobacco state of Virginia, who thinks cigarette
regulation has gone quite far enough already. "Carlos is too
kind a man to get into the kind of vicious fights that will
occur over issues before those committees," explains Gingrich
spokesman Tony Blankley. More to the point: the only legislation
Moorehead has successfully launched in recent years is a resolution
declaring Snow White Week.
</p>
<p> With the Republicans back in power, the Pentagon seems to be
wasting no time in playing to a willing audience. Last week
it was announced that three of the Army's 12 divisions were
far below their peak readiness levels. That prompted Representative
Floyd Spence, the South Carolina Republican in line to be chairman
of the Armed Services Committee, to charge that "U.S. military
units are caught in the early stages of a downward readiness
spiral that shows no prospect of easing in the foreseeable future."
</p>
<p> Though part of the problem is traceable to the fact that additional
money approved by Congress to help cover the cost of missions
in Haiti, Rwanda and Kuwait did not flow to Pentagon budgets
until some units were already limping, White House officials
are wondering if they were ambushed. "We gave all of the services
written guidance that readiness was to be their No. 1 concern
and that they were to cut other programs to ensure it be kept
up," an Administration official fumes. "Do you think it's a
coincidence that only days after the Republicans take over,
the Army finds out how much they're hurting?" Army brass emphatically
denies that's the case. "We simply ran out of money because
of Haiti, Kuwait and Rwanda," insists a Pentagon official.
</p>
<p> What can the depleted Democrats do? For now they are falling
back on the hope that Republicans, in the manner of Jesse Helms,
will overplay their hand and that strains within the new G.O.P.
leadership will open up soon. A few are already visible in the
differences between the House and Senate about how fast to move.
Cut middle-class taxes? "It won't happen overnight," Dole said
last week on Face the Nation. Increase defense spending? He
figures, "It may be--very, very slowly." And with cuts in
Social Security out of reach, as all sides agree, balancing
the budget while enacting the tax cuts in the "Contract with
America" will be "very, very difficult," Dole says.
</p>
<p> Once the Republican promises on tax cuts run into the realities
of budget balancing, the Democrats could find an opening to
remake the case that they are the party of fiscal responsibility.
Until then, they will have to get used to being the outs in
the city they ran from the inside for so long. Stunned Democratic
committee staff members who used to feel like kings feel more
now like ghosts at parties where the lobbyists flock to the
Republican staff members. "The Redskins tickets, the lunch and
dinner invitations," one of them laments. "All gone."
</p>
<p> Gone too, before long, may be a fair number of Clinton's inner
circle. Rumors are everywhere in Washington that the Election
Day debacle will give chief of staff Panetta the ammunition
to complete his overhaul of the White House, something that
Clinton has resisted. "If the same cast of characters is in
place three months from now, ((Clinton's)) a goner," says one
Administration official.
</p>
<p> The Democrats harbor the highly ambitious notion of prying out
the Republicans two years from now. Failing that, they can hope
that the Republicans mean it when they promise term limits that
apply to themselves. In a town where everybody and everything
seems to be moving, the upheaval adds up to even more business
for real estate agent Cathie Gill. "Once people come
to Washington, they tend to stay," she says. But for a while,
it will be tough for a large bunch of Democrats to keep paying
their mortgages.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>