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- <text id=92TT0498>
- <title>
- Mar. 09, 1992: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 09, 1992 Fighting the Backlash Against Feminism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 26
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- Searching in Vain for the True Bush
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> In the late 1960s, at a point when he was furious with
- those who had thwarted his White House ambitions, Nelson
- Rockefeller told a group of conservative Republicans, "I'm a
- hawk on foreign policy, I'm a conservative on the economy, and
- I'm a dove on social matters. You've got two-thirds of me. What
- more do you want?" Their answer, of course, was "everything,"
- which Rocky wouldn't, or couldn't, deliver.
- </p>
- <p> A decade later, another moderate Republican seeking the
- presidency applauded Rockefeller's stance. "Two-thirds should
- be more than enough to gain the nomination," George Bush said
- in 1979. But as it wasn't for Rockefeller, so it wasn't for
- Bush. Unlike Rocky, though, Bush finally got the message. To
- join Ronald Reagan's 1980 ticket, the man who had supported
- Planned Parenthood and a host of liberal domestic positions
- anathema to the right reinvented himself as a "reformed"
- pro-lifer and social-policy conservative.
- </p>
- <p> Not to worry, Bush's cronies told those appalled by their
- man's conversion, George doesn't really believe any of it. He's
- still the same centrist Republican who attracted us in the first
- place. When he gets to the top, you'll see the true Bush emerge.
- Just wait.
- </p>
- <p> Well, they're still waiting--and it has become clear
- that the term "true Bush" is an oxymoron. The only thing really
- real about the President is his desire for office, which is
- why, as he himself said, he will do anything to be re-elected.
- And so John Frohnmayer, the head of the National Endowment for
- the Arts, had to go. Bush knew what he was getting when he
- selected Frohnmayer in 1989, and the President's friends
- heralded the appointment as proof that Bush's heart was in the
- right place. But then, on Feb. 20, Pat Buchanan signaled his
- intent to trash the NEA for "subsidizing filthy and blasphemous
- art," and Frohnmayer was gone the next day. "We had to wipe away
- at least one of Pat's points in advance," concedes a Bush aide.
- "Dumping John was craven, but it was just politics."
- </p>
- <p> Bad politics--on two counts. First, as just about anyone
- capable of thinking more than a single chess move ahead could
- have predicted, Buchanan began his air assault anyway. The first
- TV spot hit last week in Georgia. "The Bush Administration," it
- says, "has invested our tax dollars in pornographic and
- blasphemous art too shocking to show." Second, Bush forthrightly
- supported Frohnmayer in March 1990: "...the Federal
- Government," said the President, "(shouldn't get) into telling
- every artist what he or she can paint." Bush stood up--and
- standing up is everything. Ronald Reagan understood that
- principle of leadership (and political survival) better than
- anyone else. The polls routinely described an electorate
- disaffected from a wide range of Reagan's policies. But his
- support held because he was seen to have the courage of his
- convictions. Bush's problem is that he is increasingly seen to
- have neither.
- </p>
- <p> A more serious example of weakness was evident during the
- President's State of the Union address. By most accounts, Bush
- believes the best economic policy is to leave matters alone. But
- he sees that course as politically untenable, and so larded his
- speech with a series of halfhearted palliatives that most voters
- have greeted with a yawn. Better again for him to have told the
- truth as he saw it--better for the economy, perhaps; better
- for his electoral prospects, certainly.
- </p>
- <p> Another test is due shortly. In a few weeks the Senate
- will affirm the House's decision to revoke the Federal
- Government's ban on fetal-tissue research. Unlike the freedom
- to paint what one chooses, this issue has severe consequences
- for millions of Americans afflicted with diseases like
- Parkinson's and juvenile diabetes. Because the tissue required
- to aid these sufferers comes from aborted fetuses, the Bush
- Administration has prevented federal support of the necessary
- research. For the conservatives who control U.S. health policy,
- the legal status of abortion is immaterial. "Yes, abortion is
- still legal," acknowledges James Mason, the Assistant Secretary
- of Health and Human Services who oversees the ban. "But we
- represent the view that says it is immoral, and we're not going
- to support anything that makes abortion more likely." What Mason
- fears most is success. "If diseases are actually cured," he
- says, "the demand for aborted fetuses will be incredible, and
- a woman who might otherwise not have an abortion will have her
- decision tipped in favor of having one simply to help the sick."
- </p>
- <p> Shortly before he died last year, Lee Atwater, the former
- G.O.P. national chairman, told me that "Bush had to get into bed
- with the pro-lifers to get the '88 nomination. But that was the
- politics of then. Do I think staying in bed with them on
- something that holds medical promise for millions could actually
- threaten his re-election in '92? You bet."
- </p>
- <p> Some months ago, two White House aides predicted that Bush
- would "do the right thing" and let Congress's revocation stand.
- Today those same men are certain that Bush will ignore Atwater's
- advice and veto the legislation, thus proving anew that the man
- who got the right's message long ago has been virtually
- imprisoned by it ever since--and so may lose in November
- because of it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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