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(...not about
school uniforms
and the
V-chip, but
about smart
government
initiatives in a
small government
world.)
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Ten years
ago this
past
January,
Bill Clinton
delivered
his State of
the Union
Address in
which he
famously
declared
that “The
era of big
government
is over.”
In this same
speech, he
also
reiterated
his support
for school
uniforms and
the V-chip.
His endorsement of these
two initiatives
won him praise
and criticism
from both sides
of the aisle. It
also helped set
the stage for a
run of political
successes over
the next 10
months that
culminated not
only in his
victory over Bob
Dole in
November, but in
Democrats
picking up seats
in Congress, as
well.
During this period,
President
Clinton pushed
forward with a
series of
proposals
intended to help
show that he was
in touch with
the American
people and was
working on their
concerns. He
talked about
tuition tax
credits for
college
students,
proposed that
workers be able
to take time off
instead of extra
pay for
overtime, and
went after
deadbeat dads by
garnishing their
federal benefits
and plastering
their mugshots
in post offices
across the
country.
In his book,
Behind the Oval
Office,
former Clinton
advisor Dick
Morris described
these
initiatives as
being part of a
positive values
agenda that
sought to put
Republicans on
the defensive.
“Trivialized in the press
as ‘small
bore,’” Morris
wrote, “it [the
values agenda]
nevertheless
showed voters
what an activist
President could
do for the
average person
with the help of
Congress and
often without
it.”
Clinton’s support for
these “small
bore”
initiatives also
showed voters
something else –
mainly, how a
President or
political party
could express
their support
for limited
government and
pursue an
activist
government
agenda, too. It
was a balancing
act Republicans,
at the time at
least, never
quite
understood.
Indeed, in the
years after they
took control of
Congress in
1994, GOP
rhetoric and
talking points
focused almost
exclusively on
the need to cut
the size of
government.
While this
appealed to the
party’s base, it
failed to
recognize that
most Americans
do not just want
smaller
government. They
want smarter
government, as
well.
Bill Clinton recognized
this. So, too,
did George W.
Bush, who, when
he ran for
President as a
compassionate
conservative in
1999, stated
that,
“Government
should do a few
things, and do
them well.” Some
might argue that
some of the
President’s
problems these
days stem from
the fact that he
seems to have
forgotten these
words. Under his
administration,
government has
gotten larger,
not smaller.
And, given the
response to
Hurricane
Katrina, it’s
safe to say that
most Americans
do not perceive
the federal
government as
being very
smart.
The challenge for
Republicans this
November is to
change these
perceptions. And
to do this, they
need to put
forward positive
ideas designed
to reaffirm to
voters that
Republicans are
committed to
making limited
government more
effective. The
Suburban Agenda
is one such
idea. It is a
comprehensive
effort by House
Republicans to
make government
work without
making
government
bigger. The
proposal to
establish a
Sunset
Commission is
another idea. It
is an attempt to
set limits and
promote
accountability
within the
Washington
bureaucracy –
two things that
are essential if
smaller, smarter
government is to
succeed.
The key thing for
Republicans is
to present a
positive plan.
In his book,
Dick Morris
referred to this
as a “message of
relevance.”
Maybe that’s the
key lesson to
take away from
the values
agenda President
Clinton promoted
in 1996. It
wasn’t about
school uniforms.
It wasn’t about
the V-chip. It
wasn’t about any
of the
initiatives he
pushed in his
drive for
reelection that
year. Rather, it
was about being
relevant –
which, when you
think about it,
is not just
smart
government, but
smart politics,
as well.
Louis M. Zickar
is the Editor of
the Ripon Forum |
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