home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
94
/
11219914.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-01-31
|
10KB
|
189 lines
<text id=94TT1607>
<title>
Nov. 21, 1994: Cover:Election:Stampede!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER/THE ELECTION, Page 46
Stampede!
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The Republican romp lets President Clinton really feel the voters'
pain
</p>
<p>By John F. Stacks--Reported by Michael Duffy/Washington, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> When General Andrew Jackson was swept into the White House in
1828, voters wanted change. The growing young country seethed
with discontent and rebellion. Farmers and drovers in the West
and South resented the rich Easterners who ran the country for
their own benefit. After the General's Inauguration, his supporters
returned to the White House and proceeded to get liquored up.
In an orgy of populist celebration, they smashed the china and
crystal. Men in muddy boots stood on damask-covered chairs.
The overdressed swells at the party were so alarmed by the rabble
that they fled through the windows of the People's House, along
with the new President himself.
</p>
<p> Last week a simmering American electorate, angry at a Washington
establishment more concerned with serving the vested interests
that pay for its campaigns than with the declining living standards
and perceived moral decay of the rest of America, stormed into
polling booths across the country and chucked much of the nation's
governing class out the window. "We always vote for change,
and we never get it," said Steve Douglas, 39, of Detroit, a
house painter and Democrat who voted Republican this time.
</p>
<p> Gone was 40 years of Democratic control of the lower house of
Congress. Gone was the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
the first holder of that office to be defeated at the polls
since 1862. Gone were Democratic Governors in at least 11 states.
Gone, perhaps finally this time, was the once solid Democratic
domination of the Southern states. Gone was the most eloquent
defender of the liberal faith in America, New York Governor
Mario Cuomo.
</p>
<p> And if not gone, certainly drastically diminished was the prospect
of William Jefferson Clinton's gaining a second term as President.
A "national sea change," he called it, as he struggled to swim
back into the ideological center. But he sounded more like a
drowning man. Voters were saying they felt misled. "I voted
for him, but he's just got it all wrong about where we all stand
on gays and guns and taxes. He sold us a bill of goods is what
he did," said Jerry Smith, 42, a machinist in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, and a new convert to the G.O.P.
</p>
<p> Replacing the Democratic liberals was a herd of Republicans
ranging from the born-again to the libertarian, led by the china-and-crystal-smashing
Congressman from suburban Atlanta, Newt Gingrich, the next Speaker
of the House. After a short burst of conciliation on election
night, he seemed disinclined to throw Bill Clinton a rope. The
President, he said, would be "very, very dumb" to try to stand
in the way of the new conservative agenda. And to sharpen the
point of the election, he called the Clintons "counterculture
McGoverniks."
</p>
<p> Gingrich and the other Republicans had reason to be cocksure
of their standing. Not a single Republican member of the Senate
or the House was defeated last week; not a single Republican
resident of a Governor's mansion was evicted. The anger of the
electorate was anything but inchoate. It was neatly targeted.
The Democrats were seen--not unreasonably, given their control
of the White House and Capitol Hill--as the Establishment
and were made to pay. The anger was not indiscriminate. The
two most outrageous Republican offerings, the vacuous Michael
Huffington and the felonious Oliver North, together spent more
than $40 million on their egregious ambitions, and lost anyway.
</p>
<p> That voters were angry was not the surprise. They were plenty
angry two years ago, when George Bush felt the pain after one
term for failing to pay attention to the concerns of average
Americans. But the Democrats thought they were the solution,
not the problem. They became entranced with the big-picture
economic statistics that showed a growing economy, rising employment,
low inflation and a shrinking deficit. What they missed was
the undiminished economic anxiety of the large working class.
Overall the economy seemed to be doing fine, but most voters
still felt the recession was unbroken in their area. A large
number, 58% in a recent TIME/CNN poll, said they did not feel
better off as a result of the brighter economic picture. America
may be No. 1 again in productivity, but the middle-class workers
who made it so have seen many of their colleagues laid off,
have been forced in some cases to settle for temporary jobs
and in general have suffered an actual decline in disposable
income.
</p>
<p> At the same time, the upper class has actually increased its
share of the nation's abundance. The top 20% of the country's
income earners control half the country's wealth, and only that
group's real income has been increasing over the past two decades.
These numbers fuel a growing us-vs.-them psychology in the electorate
and a decidedly jaundiced view of the political establishment:
"they" are the people who vote themselves pay raises, take junkets,
do favors for the financial establishment and provide themselves
with generous health-care packages.
</p>
<p> Clinton did understand these facts as he campaigned for the
presidency in 1992. He preached against the unfairness of the
Reagan years, which provided tax breaks for the wealthy. His
mantra was that people who "work hard and play by the rules"
were getting worked over by pols who played around with the
rules. But once in office, Clinton seemed not so much a friend
of the working class as a captive of the economic and cultural
elites. Most disastrously for the Democrats, he failed to understand
that the most powerful expression of middle-class economic anxiety
is an insistence that the government lighten the burden of taxation
by shrinking itself and its role in the nation's life. "I was
angry that every problem identified by Washington was considered
a crisis and that the only answer they could come up with was
to throw more money at it," said Bill Kovach, 39, a Chicago
medical-supplies salesman and Democrat who helped oust Dan Rostenkowski
last week.
</p>
<p> Most disastrously for Clinton, his top-down, bureaucratic health-care
proposal, while rightly aimed at one of the prime causes of
middle-class anxiety, was easily made to look like the epitome
of tax-and-spend liberal programs. That he and his wife had
benefited from a chummy round of commodities trading and finagled
a real-estate development deal didn't exactly make them appear
to be champions of the hard-pressed middle class.
</p>
<p> The Republicans have cast themselves again as enemies of Big
Government, and thus as friends of the people. Tim Matuszewski,
a machinist in Bay City, Michigan, believes it. "I'm sliding
to the Republican side because they are more for the little
guy." But the new G.O.P. majority on Capitol Hill is no less
beholden to the special interests for campaign funds than are
the Democrats. It has been no more willing to unravel the elaborate
system of entitlements like farm subsidies and Social Security
and a variety of tax preferences that favor the rich and the
established and make real tax relief for the working class unaffordable.
Some of the G.O.P. have as great a penchant for social engineering,
in the form of making moral rules for the country to follow,
as the Democrats do for contriving Great Society programs. And
despite their fondness for building jails and imposing tough
rules for sentencing criminals, they may be no more adept at
providing one of the basic voter demands: safe streets.
</p>
<p> The G.O.P. is still divided. While making war on Clinton, they
will make war on themselves. By and large the new congressional
Republicans, led by Gingrich, are of the busybody moralistic
sort. But in the statehouses, Republicans like William Weld
in Massachusetts and Tommy Thompson in Wisconsin are of the
libertarian, problem-solving sort. The Democrats, in a division
embodied in Clinton himself, are split between old-line, Big
Government sorts and a faction that sees the limits of state
intervention. A stable middle has yet to be established. Neither
party has the leaders or the programs to transcend the need
to satisfy the fire breathers on the edges. The electorate,
meanwhile, veers back and forth trying to reach an equilibrium.
Democrats are down, then up. Republicans out, then in. The search
is on in earnest for a party and a program and a leader that
are not captive to Washington and its aura of self-preservation
and self-aggrandizement. It was certainly premature to declare
a permanent Republican hegemony. One senior White House official
had it right: "What the people have said is, `We're going to
make you folks co-CEOs. We know you don't like each other. But
if you don't get together and do the job, we may just fire both
of you.'"
</p>
<p> It will not be easy for any Washington politician, including
the newly incumbent, to break free of the capital's grip. Even
Andrew Jackson couldn't resist the privileges of power. After
his people had trashed the White House, he retained three servants
who had worked for his elitist predecessor--a French chef,
a steward and a butler--and began serving the finest clarets
at dinner. He also hired a painter, who promptly began immortalizing
his subject in heroic oil portraits. The rest is history.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>