home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0041>
- <title>
- Jan. 07, 1991: At Home:A Case Of Doing Nothing
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 07, 1991 Men Of The Year:The Two George Bushes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEN OF THE YEAR, Page 28
- AT HOME: NO VISION
- A Case of Doing Nothing
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Bush's feckless approach to America's ills is no accident, but
- a conscious strategy for defending the status quo
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy
- </p>
- <p> George Bush has always been more a man of action than
- introspection. When faced with a complicated problem, he often
- plunges headlong into physical activity--gunning his
- speedboat, pitching horseshoes, flailing away on the golf
- course. It is Bush's way, says an aide, to "drive those demons
- of indecision out of his mind."
- </p>
- <p> So it was fitting that the hollow center of the President's
- domestic policy collapsed last Oct. 10 while he was jogging in
- Florida. Five days earlier, an unlikely coalition of right-wing
- Republicans and liberal Democrats had revolted in the House of
- Representatives, scuttling the deficit-cutting budget plan
- crafted during four months of tortuous negotiations between the
- Administration and congressional leaders. Only a stopgap
- continuing resolution kept the government afloat while frenzied
- efforts to devise a new deal bogged down. The sticking point:
- Would Bush agree to a Democrat-backed rise in income tax rates
- for the affluent in exchange for his cherished cut in taxes on
- capital gains?
- </p>
- <p> For 24 hours, Bush had sown confusion by flipping and
- flopping on the issue like a beached bluefish. First he signaled
- that he would accept the swap. Then, under pressure from
- Republicans who argued that Bush's change of heart would only
- trigger further Democratic demands, his top aides announced that
- the deal was no longer acceptable. Now, as he jogged a few laps
- in St. Petersburg, the time had come for the Commander in Chief
- to explain himself. Asked by reporters to clarify his stand,
- Bush opted instead for a snide play on the campaign slogan that
- had helped get him the job in the first place. "Read my hips,"
- Bush said with a smirk, and jogged on.
- </p>
- <p> Read my hips. Was this any way to lead the most powerful
- nation on earth?
- </p>
- <p> No, but neither was what the President did during the next
- 24 hours. Bush reversed himself twice more on the tax issue,
- completing a quadruple somersault that twisted members of his
- own party into knots, sent Democrats into orbit and helped cut
- more than 20 points from his approval ratings in the space of
- six weeks. That was the most precipitous dive in popularity,
- absent a major scandal, for any 20th century President.
- </p>
- <p> A Formula for Ruling Forever
- </p>
- <p> At that moment, many Americans concluded that in George Bush
- they had elected two Presidents: a highly capable captain of
- foreign policy and a dawdling, disengaged caretaker of domestic
- affairs. That impression was understandable but by no means
- complete. The shilly-shallying performance on domestic issues
- that has marked Bush's first two years in office is not the
- result of ineptitude. It is the consequence of a shrewd
- calculation made soon after Bush, one of the most ambitious and
- pragmatic men ever to reach the White House, assumed the
- presidency.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after his Inauguration, Bush and his top advisers
- figured that if the economic and domestic conditions that
- existed then could be frozen in time, Republicans could hold the
- White House indefinitely. That led to an obvious conclusion: do
- as little as possible. "We inherited a situation that was
- basically A-O.K.," says a senior official. "People were happy
- with the status quo. No domestic revolution was about to take
- place. With a few changes here and there, the G.O.P. could rule
- forever."
- </p>
- <p> It is no coincidence, then, that Bush's highest domestic
- priority has been to preserve the situation he inherited from
- Ronald Reagan. Hemmed in, as are Democrats, by budgetary
- constraints, he has initiated only a handful of new domestic
- programs. He can claim some genuine progress--passage of the
- first clean-air legislation since 1977, a new law protecting the
- rights of the handicapped, and a five-year budget deal that may
- finally force Washington to start living within its means. But
- most of these were long overdue or inevitable or were launched
- out of necessity more than conviction. Bush has devoted far more
- energy to thwarting Democratic initiatives or amending them in
- such a way that the Administration could share in the credit. As
- an official explains, "The key around here has always been
- stopping the Democrats. If we couldn't stop them, we tried the
- next best thing: turning the Democratic drive for reforms into
- G.O.P. alternatives. We wanted to try to turn an apparent
- political liability into something we could claim credit for."
- </p>
- <p> In Bush's mind, the real business of Presidents is the
- conduct of foreign policy. He regards the management of domestic
- affairs merely as an extension of politics, the unpleasant, even
- silly, things one must do to win an office or keep it. When he
- delves into homegrown problems, Bush cares less about the issues
- themselves than their political implications. In foreign affairs
- the opposite is true: Bush resists pressure to view world events
- through a political prism, believing that the nation's long-term
- interests are often better served by sitting quietly instead of
- rushing to the ramparts.
- </p>
- <p> So though Bush bravely trumpets the promises of a new world
- order abroad and takes bold steps to bring it about, his top
- aides blithely admit they have no agenda at home for the next
- two years. While Bush retains a tight grip on foreign policy
- decisions, he has virtually abdicated responsibility for
- domestic affairs to his pugnacious chief of staff, John Sununu,
- whose attitude toward Congress is marked by contempt. Asked
- recently what Bush has left to do at home, Sununu replied with
- a smile, "Not that much."
- </p>
- <p> Even the President concedes that he finds handling foreign
- policy more "fun" than domestic issues. As he put it the day
- before his swivel-hips remark, "People really basically want to
- support the President on foreign affairs, and partisanship does,
- in a sense, stop at the water's edge. Whereas on domestic
- policy, here I am with Democratic majorities in the Senate and
- Democratic majorities in the House, trying to persuade them to
- do what I think is best. It's complicated."
- </p>
- <p> It is not only complicated but dangerous as well. The U.S.
- faces a mountain of nagging domestic needs and an abyss of debt.
- On most of these problems, Bush has been inactive, if not
- silent. At best, he has tinkered at the margins of America's
- domestic ills. Rather than battle a national decline that some
- fear has already begun, Bush is trying only to manage it. Read
- my hips.
- </p>
- <p> Officials in the Bush Administration offer various
- rationales for their boss's disdain for domestic affairs:
- historic developments abroad; divided government at home;
- truculent Democrats on Capitol Hill; a $3 trillion national
- debt; unending deficits; constitutional powers that, by allowing
- the President to brush off Congress, make operating in the
- foreign policy arena easier and more rewarding.
- </p>
- <p> Good reasons all. But the real explanations may be found in
- Bush's past. One is his almost pathological fear of the G.O.P.'s
- right wing, a phobia that dates from his start in politics. The
- other is a lack of conviction that renders him directionless at
- home. From his earliest days in politics, he has risen by
- loyally associating himself with powerful patrons, recasting his
- views to suit those of the man at the top. As a candidate, he
- has at one time or another positioned himself as a Goldwater
- conservative, a moderate mainstream Republican, an effective
- critic and then staunch supporter of Reaganomics--whatever it
- took to advance. And all along he has demonstrated a willingness
- to compromise or jettison his positions to ensure conservative
- support.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks ago, Bush stepped back from a 42-year commitment
- to support for black colleges when he allowed a mid-level
- Education Department lawyer to challenge the legality of public
- support for minority scholarships. Many of Bush's aides
- despaired at their boss's unnecessary capitulation to
- conservative notions. Says one: "This is one of those few areas
- where we actually have some convictions, and now it looks like
- we don't have the courage to stand by them."
- </p>
- <p> Bush is under pressure from the right again, this time to
- adopt its new "reform" agenda, a campaign for tax cuts and term
- limits on members of Congress and against affirmative action.
- While the wisdom of this approach is under intense debate at the
- White House, there are indications that Bush may try to mollify
- the right for two more years, even if that means returning to
- the racially divisive themes that helped elect him in 1988.
- </p>
- <p> A Yalie Goes To Texas
- </p>
- <p> Old habits die hard. In 1948, when Bush, then 24, moved his
- family into the heart of the oil-rich Permian Basin, Texas was
- a two-party state: liberal Democrats and conservative "Tory"
- Democrats. Republicans just weren't in the picture. "If you were
- a Texas Republican in the 1950s," recalls Don Rhodes, an old
- Bush friend who now works as a personal aide to the President,
- "you didn't let anybody know it." When Bush organized his first
- Republican precinct primary, in Midland in the early '50s, only
- three people showed up during 12 hours of voting--the future
- President, his wife Barbara and a lone Democrat who, Bush later
- wrote, "stumbled into the wrong polling place."
- </p>
- <p> For a budding Republican politician, this was a discouraging
- situation. And if being in so tiny a minority wasn't
- embarrassing enough, the minority itself was. The nascent Texas
- G.O.P. was made up of farmers and ranchers and a group of newer
- city dwellers whose numbers and affluence were growing along
- with the Lone Star State's gas and oil interests. And then there
- were "the crazies," a small but noisy claque of John Birch
- Society regulars who never controlled the party but kept it off
- balance for years with their ultra-right stands and defeatist
- tactics. Though they were gradually eclipsed during the 1960s,
- the crazies didn't go quietly. In 1960 one group roughed up
- Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson in a celebrated incident at Dallas'
- Adolphus Hotel. In 1968 another group criticized a Republican
- candidate for appearing with his arm around a black football
- player.
- </p>
- <p> Accommodating this faction was bound to be tricky,
- particularly for the son of an aristocratic Republican Senator
- from Connecticut to whom moderate Republicanism was a kind of
- birthright. Despite his 14 years in Texas, there was no
- mistaking Bush's Eastern Establishment roots. His views on
- foreign policy matched those of the locals well enough--everyone, even Texas Democrats, was staunchly anticommunist. But
- on domestic affairs, Andover-Yale was not Midland-Odessa.
- Bush's moderate Republican views on states' rights, civil rights
- and most social issues clashed with those of the Birchites. As
- an old friend notes, "Bush was not sitting there asking himself,
- `How do we impeach Earl Warren?'"
- </p>
- <p> In 1964, a terrible year for Republicans, Bush lunged for
- a seat in the U.S. Senate, challenging liberal Democrat Ralph
- Yarborough. For Bush just to lose respectably required a shift
- to the right. He called himself a "100%" Goldwater man and
- lashed out at the 1964 Civil Rights Act, labor unions and the
- 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. He lost but garnered more votes
- than any Republican in Texas history. That won him the notice
- of Richard Nixon, who campaigned for him in 1966.
- </p>
- <p> Bush later confessed to an Episcopal minister, John Stevens,
- that he was ashamed of his pandering to the right in 1964. "I
- took some of the far-right positions I thought I needed to get
- elected," Stevens recollects Bush saying. "And I regret it. And
- hope I never do it again."
- </p>
- <p> A Schizophrenic Straitjacket
- </p>
- <p> Of course he did do it again, although not immediately. In
- 1966 Bush ran for Congress from Houston as a moderate, attacking
- "extremists" in his own party. "I want conservatism to be
- sensitive and dynamic," he said, "not scared and reactionary."
- That led some Republican groups to tag Bush as a liberal and
- endorse his conservative Democratic opponent, Frank Briscoe. But
- Bush prevailed, in part because Texas' Seventh District was then
- one of the state's few Republican strongholds.
- </p>
- <p> Bush nonetheless kept an eye on the right. In 1970, when he
- gave up his safe seat to run for the Senate against Democrat
- Lloyd Bentsen, he endured boos and catcalls at nearly every
- campaign stop because he had supported a fair-housing law in
- 1968. Bush had indeed said aye to the bill, but only after
- voting for a procedural amendment that could have killed it.
- Paul Eggers, who campaigned with Bush that year as the G.O.P.
- gubernatorial candidate, remembers his teammate's favorite
- stump-speech line: "If you don't want to vote for me because of
- open housing, then don't vote for me."
- </p>
- <p> Most didn't. Bentsen won, and Bush spent the next six years
- working for Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford in a variety of
- positions in which his future did not depend on the whims of
- voters. By 1980 Bush was running for the presidency, at first
- criticizing his rival Ronald Reagan on economic and foreign
- policy and then adopting most of Reagan's views once the
- Californian put him on the G.O.P. ticket. Bush deep-sixed his
- lament of "voodoo economics" and his support for the Equal
- Rights Amendment. "Please do not try to keep reminding me of
- differences I had" with Reagan, Bush pleaded with reporters.
- </p>
- <p> As Vice President, Bush continued to swallow his many
- objections to Reagan's policies. By 1986, when he began his own
- race for the White House, Bush had shuffled to the right at the
- suggestion of his campaign advisers. "He took a lot of heat for
- it," says one who backed the strategy, "and he didn't like it.
- But it had the effect of putting enough deposits in those
- accounts so that we didn't have to worry about them anymore."
- And in 1988 Bush based his campaign on "no new taxes" and the
- furlough of convicted murderer Willie Horton, wrapping the whole
- unsavory package in the American flag. The campaign was so
- inflammatory that Bush's old hero Barry Goldwater came out of
- retirement and told him to knock off the foolishness and "start
- talking about the issues." When he took office, Bush sought to
- appease conservatives further by selecting a top domestic
- adviser who could act as a kind of ambassador, fluent in the
- language, totems and rituals of his party's suspicious right
- wing. So he chose John Sununu.
- </p>
- <p> The constant care and feeding of the right, says a senior
- aide, "has given Bush not only an uncertainty about domestic
- affairs but an alienation from them as well." Body language--often Bush's most candid form of communication--betrays his
- discomfort with his predicament. Capable of approaching
- eloquence when he speaks of a "Europe whole and free," Bush
- delivers domestic speeches that are perfunctory and marred by
- disingenuous gestures. When he held aloft a bag of crack cocaine
- obtained after an intricate sting in Lafayette Square across
- from the White House last year, he broke into an awkward smile,
- as if to say, "Can you believe I'm doing this?" Says a former
- adviser: "He's basically embarrassed to be a politician. It's
- tacky. He has to do these horribly embarrassing things, and he
- finds it distasteful, except as a competitive exercise."
- </p>
- <p> Catering to the right has also turned the President into
- something of a political contortionist. Even as he sought to
- convince Americans that he was a kinder, gentler incarnation of
- his predecessor, he was straining to appease conservatives by
- opposing most gun-control efforts and proposing a constitutional
- amendment against flag burning. By trying to walk simultaneously
- in opposite directions, he put his presidency in a schizophrenic
- straitjacket.
- </p>
- <p> From the outset of his Administration, Bush calculated that
- he could keep his poll numbers up merely by reminding voters
- that he was aware of America's domestic problems. The White
- House based this strategy on pollster Robert Teeter's surveys
- and focus groups, which showed that while Americans were
- concerned about drugs, education and the environment, they were
- also deeply suspicious of any federal attempts to solve the
- problems. Thus Bush promised to be the "education President" and
- announced some badly needed educational goals last year. But for
- nearly two years he retained in his Cabinet an Education
- Secretary, Lauro Cavazos, who, by his own staff's admission, was
- ineffective. He postponed politically painful choices on energy,
- housing and transportation policy but has flown to the West
- Coast twice in 14 months to plant a single tree in the name of
- environmentalism. Midway through his term, some of his own aides
- seem weary of the shell game. "You see a lot of blue-ribbon
- panels and commissions around here," says a staff member. "It's
- so much easier to do something innocuous than something real."
- </p>
- <p> Even where Bush has made improvements in the American
- condition, he has worked hard to keep them secret. Though Bush
- privately regards the budget pact as his greatest domestic
- achievement to date, he declared in public two months ago that
- the deal made him "gag." Though Sununu rightly claims that the
- clean-air legislation "will change America," the chief of staff
- tried to cancel a public bill-signing ceremony for the landmark
- measure. When old friends press Bush on this refusal to trumpet
- his accomplishments, he responds by saying he will ultimately
- be judged "by deeds, not words." But they suspect that Bush is
- leery of calling attention to anything that might upset
- conservatives.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the President's constant wooing, the hard right
- never seems satisfied. In the aftermath of the budget debacle,
- a variety of conservative luminaries began clamoring about a
- possible challenge to Bush in 1992. Though they stand no chance
- of ousting Bush alone, the right-wingers could help Democrats
- by sitting on their hands in 1992, narrowing G.O.P. margins in
- key states. In an attempt to co-opt this volatile faction, Bush
- will spend the next two years being "against" things
- conservatives loathe: quotas, taxes, mandated government
- benefits, anything that can be termed liberal or Democratic. The
- idea isn't to get anything accomplished; it is to burnish Bush's
- conservative credentials as he prepares for re-election. Says
- an official: "There are some things you want to have a fight
- on."
- </p>
- <p> Quite a few things are worth fighting over, in fact, but all
- too often Bush has found himself in the wrong corner. On issues
- like extending opportunities to minorities and cutting the
- deficit, for example, the President has permitted his indecision
- and fear of the right to overrule his better instincts. It is
- a pattern that, in the short term, may get him re-elected in
- 1992. It is not one that will, as Bush promised in his
- nomination speech of 1988, "build a better America."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-