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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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02019930.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Feb. 01, 1993) Thumbs Down
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 26
Thumbs Down
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In the Zoe Baird case, it was American public opinion that forced
Clinton to deliver on his repeated promise of a higher moral
standard in government
</p>
<p>By NANCY GIBBS - With reporting by Ann Blackman and Michael
Duffy/Washington and Priscilla Painton/New York
</p>
<p> There was something extraordinary about returning to the
chambers of the Senate Judiciary Committee for another livid
lesson in how America really lives. For the second time in less
than two years, this time in the wake of a convulsive election,
the American people took their leaders by surprise, sat them
down, chewed them out, and then wearily explained in
one-syllable words what voters feel they should be able to
demand of the people with the privilege of borrowed power.
</p>
<p> It turned out that Bill Clinton had something to learn.
For the first half of the week, as the new President prayed and
played and paraded and swore his oath of office, his nomination
of Zoe Baird as Attorney General seemed nearly as secure as
those of the rest of his Cabinet, stars and hacks alike. She had
freely admitted hiring undocumented workers, to both
Administration officials and Senators who were questioning her,
and they had generally brushed it off as "an honest mistake."
But within 72 hours, her nomination was unsalvageable, and she
became the first U.S. Cabinet nominee in 120 years to withdraw
her name from consideration.
</p>
<p> In the middle of Baird's ordeal, Clinton awoke on a
bright, glassy morning and embraced a quarter of a million
people. He had promised upon his nomination that he stood for
the people who paid their taxes and played by the rules, and he
vowed upon his Inauguration "to reform our politics so that
power and privilege no longer shout down the voice of the
people." Before the day was over, it was the people who were
shouting about something that outraged them, and by the end of
the week the message finally got through.
</p>
<p> Americans for the most part are enormously forgiving of
wealth, remarkably tolerant of the gap between the rich and the
poor in this country. But they reserve a special contempt for
rich people who cheat. Outside Washington, the Baird story came
across as an issue of people who play by the rules vs. those who
don't and get away with it. Baird's story of the difficulty of
finding safe, reliable child care might have won her the
sympathy of millions of parents who face the same predicament.
But when a couple with a net worth of more than $2 million hire
not only an undocumented nanny but a driver as well, when they
fail to pay the Social Security and workers' compensation taxes
they owe, when a topflight corporate lawyer married to a
renowned Yale law professor blames their troubles on "bad legal
advice," the sympathy hardens into fury. As consumer advocate
Ralph Nader observed, "This was a family that could afford to
hire Mary Poppins."
</p>
<p> The scene at the Senate played out like Kabuki theater.
Here the ghost of Anita Hill welcomed two new committee
members, Carol Moseley-Braun and Dianne Feinstein, who owed
their election in some measure to her. Here sat some of the same
members who had been lambasted for their handling of Hill, eager
for the chance to display their elaborate courtesy and newfound
sensitivity. Here was Hill's chief tormentor, Orrin Hatch,
praising Baird's competence, her record as a corporate lawyer,
knowing full well that for his conservative purposes Baird was
the best candidate he could hope for, and if he saved her job
she owed him.
</p>
<p> And here was the first woman ever nominated for the
nation's top law-enforcement job being drawn and quartered for
the decisions she made about her child's care. But as hot an
issue as working motherhood may be, this was not about child
care, not about motherhood, not really much of a gender battle
at all, as the furious phone calls from men and women across the
country attested. Though there was much comment over what looked
like a convenient double standard--had a male nominee ever
been asked about his child-care arrangements?--the gender
issue was quickly neutralized when two respected women
lawmakers, Senator Nancy Kassebaum and Representative Marge
Roukema, along with former Representative Barbara Jordan, came
out against the nomination. Rookie Democrats Moseley-Braun and
Feinstein were in no way inclined to ride to Baird's rescue.
Feinstein, from California, knows something about the
exploitation of undocumented workers, and Braun, a black woman
from Chicago, knows something about who loses the jobs that
illegals take.
</p>
<p> Fifteen months ago in these chambers, Clarence Thomas
tried to turn his confirmation into a race issue, to minimize
the gender battle. Baird shrewdly cast her trouble in gender
terms, thereby discounting the simple issue of hypocrisy. "Quite
honestly, I was acting at that time really more as a mother than
as someone who would be sitting here designated to be Attorney
General." The implication was that if she had known that she
might one day be called on to enforce these laws, she would
never have broken them. This time around, the Judiciary
Committee got the point.
</p>
<p> "Do you have any sense of the feelings of outrage," asked
Judiciary Committee chairman Joseph Biden, "about the action
taken by you and your husband? There are millions of Americans
out there who have trouble taking care of their children, with
one-fiftieth the income that you and your husband have, and they
do not violate the law." In a moment of near moral unanimity,
the hosts, pollsters and casual eavesdroppers all seemed to echo
the anger. "This counted to people," says University of Southern
California law professor Susan Estrich, who managed Michael
Dukakis' presidential campaign in 1988 and now hosts a radio
talk show. "It was an issue people could understand and get
their hands on much more than who is funding which party."
</p>
<p> Feinstein's offices in Washington and San Francisco
received more than 3,000 calls, 2,872 of them opposing Baird's
confirmation. "We have people who can't put food on their
tables, who commit crimes and get hammered," says David Tuma,
a retired Navy officer and father of four from Port Hueneme,
California. "Then you have a person who doesn't have to worry
about that and makes an unethical choice, and we want to make
them Attorney General. I can't put the two of those together
very well."
</p>
<p> To be fair, the White House was not alone in
underestimating the depth of feeling. For days the editorial
writers and pundits tiptoed around the controversy. "Is this
minor scandal troubling?" asked the Los Angeles Times. "Yes.
Should it embarrass Clinton and the Bairds? Most certainly.
Should it disqualify Baird from being Attorney General? We think
not." But the people's press, especially the radio shows, came
down very differently. "Talk shows were like town meetings,"
says Estrich. "When an issue takes hold with the people, you
don't need a formal political process for the country to reach
a decision. They reached it on their own, without leadership
from Washington, and communicated that decision to the talk
shows and television shows, and the matter was concluded within
a few days."
</p>
<p> But Clinton somehow still managed to miss the point. In
his statements after her withdrawal, Clinton declared that he
was "accepting the judgment" of his nominee that she would not
be able to serve effectively. He made no moral judgment of his
own; in fact, his letter to Baird said he would like to find
another place for her in his Administration. Spokesman George
Stephanopoulos suggested that the President thought Baird would
make a fine Attorney General and that he was not happy that she
withdrew. But that left him in a small minority.
</p>
<p> Clinton had, in a sense, set himself up. For more than a
year he had promised Americans a higher moral standard. He
learned early on the depth of the public's resentment at the way
elected officials arrive in Washington and instantly set about
ignoring or rewriting the rules. He played on the fury at a
government that does not pay its bills, exempts itself from
civil rights laws, exploits its power for profit. He spoke of
sacrifice, of middle-class tax relief, of returning government
to the people who pay for it. He called himself the man from
Hope, Arkansas, born into a single-parent family, who understood
about hard times.
</p>
<p> But then he and his team were put to the test. One after
another the signals came: Chelsea's private school, Commerce
Secretary Ron Brown's reluctance to sever his ties to his
lucrative clients, the corporate sponsorship of the Inaugural
hoopla. He nominated a core of advisers that included 14
lawyers, many of them multimillionaires, all of them earning
more than $100,000--a feat matched by only 3% of all
Americans. His inner circle belongs to a class defined not by
its inheritance but by its graduate degrees. At least five, like
Clinton, studied in England, and half a dozen attended Harvard,
Yale or Georgetown, the same schools as the President and Vice
President Al Gore. Their promise is to be the brilliant,
creative, technocratic problem solvers--not the same old
elitists behaving as elitists behave.
</p>
<p> Having a blue-chip resume is fine, but not at the expense
of sensitivity to everyone else's plight. "This is a crowd that
doesn't have the stature to demand sacrifice," says Kevin
Phillips, author of the new book Boiling Point: Republicans,
Democrats and the Decline of Middle Class Prosperity. "These are
people who spent Vietnam in Oxford; they are $500,000 lawyers
who hire illegal immigrants as baby-sitters; they are hotshot
lobbyists. This group has no understanding of the kind of
sacrifices made every day by the $26,000-a-year couple in
Peoria, Illinois. They don't speak the language of the older
generation that fought in World War II or the language of the
under-30 generation that hasn't shared in the circumstances of
the boomers."
</p>
<p> During the campaign, it often seemed that Clinton's great
political gift was his ability to mediate between his friends
in the intellectual elite and his friends in Arkansas. "He has
tried to present the ideas of the elite to ordinary people, and
he has tried to present ordinary people to the elite," observes
Ralph Whitehead, journalism professor at the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst. "He can speak wonk, and he can speak
American." But that is too rare a skill in his present circle.
"On the campaign trail, he had Jim Carville, who had no trouble
making himself understood in barrooms. He needs people in the
Administration who will do the same."
</p>
<p> Those around him in charge of finding, vetting and
recommending appointees like Zoe Baird did not share the
populist instincts of campaign advisers like Carville and Paul
Begala. Even according to officials who participated in the
Baird case, it is not surprising that high-paid, high-powered
corporate lawyers did not see trouble coming. When Clinton put
millionaire superlawyers Warren Christopher and Vernon Jordan
in charge of his transition, he laid the foundation for Baird's
destruction. "What happened here," said a transition official,
"was that a lot of people who live in million-dollar houses and
think nothing of hiring illegals were in charge of the process."
</p>
<p> The tax evasion alone should have been enough to
disqualify Baird, whatever her salary. Baird explained that she
and her husband had been sponsoring their employees for U.S.
citizenship and that their violation was a "legal technicality."
Even after it all unraveled, some still just didn't get it. In
her letter to Clinton, Baird said she was "surprised at the
extent of the public reaction."
</p>
<p> If Clinton is still struggling to understand the anger, he
might want to talk to his own Labor Secretary, Robert Reich. In
his book The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for 21st
Century Capitalism, Reich describes how America's new
professional elite has grown ever more distant from the rest of
society and disengaged itself from communal spaces, institutions
and obligations. "The most skilled and insightful Americans,"
he wrote, "who are already positioned to thrive in the world
market, are now able to slip the bonds of national allegiance,
and by so doing disengage themselves from their less-favored
fellows. The stark political challenge in the decade ahead will
be to affirm that, even though America is no longer a separate
and distinct economy, it is still a society whose members have
abiding obligations to one another."
</p>
<p> Some of the callers last week reminded the lawmakers that
citizens are required to obey even the laws that they disagree
with, or are inconvenient, or are hard to enforce. The anger
reflected an impatience with the notion that this generation can
pick and choose which rules are worth obeying. "We've excused
all the hippie crimes," says Sheila Bihary, a 45-year-old San
Francisco lawyer. "Now we've got the yuppie crimes, but these
are the same people who used to be hippies."
</p>
<p> It is possible to have enormous sympathy for the pain of
working parents trying to do right by their children, and to
have little for Zoe Baird. Millions of working men and women
lose sleep every night wondering whether their children are safe
during the day. The search for someone they are willing to trust
their children with can be endless, the paperwork onerous, the
expense breaking. It is an entirely different task from finding
a reliable mechanic or a gifted gardener. Simply understanding
the laws that apply would take the mind of a law professor--like the one Baird married.
</p>
<p> Baird was not without defenders, particularly among
parents with firsthand experience of a child-care nightmare. "It
is ironic," wrote columnist Anna Quindlen, "that the first
woman At torney General-designate has been tripped up by that
thing that trips us up day after day, makes us late for
meetings, causes us to call in sick when we are well: the
struggle for good surrogate care for our kids. Hard sometimes
even if you are well to do. Horrid often if you are not." Anne
Nelson, author of "Rock-a-Bye Nino: Confessions of a White
Mother with a Brown Caregiver" in Mother Jones, contends that
"Professional women with the income and requirements of child
care are saying, `Why is the Washington male crowd picking on
this woman?' " They may be sympathetic to Baird, she says,
because they know how precarious the relationship between
parents and caregivers can be. "You feel you want professional
qualifications--some sense of child development--yet you're
offering the working conditions of a servant. For both sides,
the whole situation is a disaster."
</p>
<p> If the President ended the week regretting the sour finale
to his Inaugural week, then he was missing a great opportunity.
The outcry over Zoe Baird was a noisy reminder of how deeply
voters wanted to believe his promises about a new way of doing
business in the capital. It would have been a sad start to a
historic presidency if Americans had been willing to accept
anything less than the ideals that Clinton himself did so much
to renew.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>