Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: TUESDAY, February 1, 1994 TAG: 9402050001 SECTION: EDITORIAL PAGE: A5 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: ROBERT G. BECKEL DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
Look now at the Republican members of the House and Senate, clustered together to Clinton's left, looking for all the world as if they had just heard their favorite dog had been hit by a truck.
Well, in a way, that was true. The dog, in this case, was the GOP hammerlock on such red-hot issues as crime and welfare reform, and the truck was Clinton.
At the end of Clinton's long - probably too long - speech, the Republicans limped from the House floor to the waiting press hordes to report the crime. ``He stole our agenda,'' they insisted, or ``We were there two years ago'' or, my favorite, from House Minority Whip Newt Gingrich of Georgia, ``I said that last year.''How are all these poor Republican souls ever going to pick up the broken pieces of their lives and carry on?
But it wasn't just welfare reform that brought gas to the heart of the downtrodden GOP. Herewith, a trip through the Clinton State of the Union and his words - with the appropriate response from the injured party.
``This year many people urged me to cut defense spending further ... I said no.''
``What,'' say the Republicans, ``that's our line. We already lost our best defense card when all the commies went away. It's the GOP that holds the line on defense cuts.'' Not any more, boys, meet the commander in chief.
``Let us resolve ... to reclaim our streets from violent crime and drugs and gangs.'' And, by the way, said Clinton, let's put 100,000 more cops on the streets and put three-time felony offenders away for good.
This one really hurts. Poor old Phil Gramm, the right-wing senator from Texas and presidential wannabe, was left to mumble, ``Words are one thing, actions another.'' Get a life, Phil - the president was holding the bill passed by the Senate. He told the House to pass it and he'd sign it. The toughest crime bill ever. The Clinton crime bill. Don't you love it Phil?
``Hunters must always be free to hunt, law-abiding adults should always be free to own guns.''
Yep, that's a Democrat talking. This is not to suggest that Clinton won't win the gun-nut vote. But it sends a message to gun owners that, although Clinton will seek tougher gun control, your guns will be protected. No Republican response here save for some guttural sounds.from the stalls in the Capitol men's room.
``Our problems go way beyond the reach of government. They are rooted in the loss of values and the disappearance of work and the breakdown of our families ... . We can't renew our country till we realize that governments don't raise children, parents do.''
The most unkind cut of all. From the Republican general in charge of values, Dan Quayle, to the cultural war minister, Patrick J. Buchanan, Republicans have claimed cultural values as their own. And now this Democratic president, with his own moral problems, lays claim to the mother lode. No way. Way, boys.
You could have had the values message, but you blew it. You assumed the public could never believe that Democrats had any values. After all, Democrats were the party of gays and feminists. But more important, you saw values as a negative-attack agenda against the party and its leader. You saw a value agenda as a way to divide, not unite. You let the Christian right lead your fight - not as forgiving Christians but as moral interventionists.
The American people are suspicious of messengers carrying moral agendas to their living rooms. Clinton understands this. He sees what the majority of the country sees: weWe'd better regain our values as a people together if we're to find our way home, using values as a guide, not as whips.
Clinton used his bully pulpit to rally the country to the great challenges that all Americans face. He did it with words they understand, with an agenda for change and a roadmap to get there together. Do you get it, Bob and Newt?
\ Robert G. Beckel served as campaign manager in 1984 for Democratic presidential candidate Walter F. Mondale.
\ Los Angeles Times
by CNB