Twenty years ago this month, the Republican Party,
given the upper hand in the prior year’s midterm elections, did something it
would resort to repeatedly in the following two decades: badly overplay its
hand. In refusing to come to terms with President Bill Clinton, they forced the U.S. federal government to shut down.
Americans in prior generations would have been
astounded that for five days starting November 13, approximately 40% of the
nondefense workforce went on “furlough”—the inevitable result when Congress
sent Clinton a continuing resolution that would have raised Medicare premiums,
forced him to balance the budget within seven years, and curtailed environmental regulations,
among other provisions. The President, backed into a corner, came out swinging.
His veto triggered the shutdown.
But even that wasn’t the truly amazing part.
This was: the GOP, having decided they had not
really gotten the better of the President (even though he had agreed to their
demand for a seven-year target for a balanced budget), refused to compromise
again in December. Their continuing resolution passed in November to keep the government going lasted
only a month. Their insistence that the President use budget projections by the
Congressional Budget Office rather than the more optimistic Office of
Management and Budget forced another
shutdown.
Only this time, the mad act of destruction lasted 21
days, not just a weekend, as had occurred other times in the past. Unless
someone was deemed “essential,” no government worker would pick up a phone or
receive visitors at offices. This had immediate consequences, as Social
Security checks weren’t mailed and national parks and landmarks couldn’t be
toured.
(This threw a bit of a monkey wrench for my own
plans for vacation in San Antonio that month. Although I was pleased that the
Alamo—operated by the “Daughters of the Texas Revolution” rather than the
federal government—would remain open, several of the San Antonio Missions
founded in the Spanish colonial period were unavailable for touring.)
When the dust cleared, the party discovered that the
American public blamed them, not the Democrats, for the disarray and
disruption.
Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who had held the threat of a shutdown like a cudgel
over the President’s head since the spring, was forced to back down. His
capitulation damaged the GOP leadership in two ways.
First was the impact on Gingrich, who, as a
bumptious back-bencher five years before, had helped trash a budget deal that
many in the administration of George H.W. Bush were sure he had agreed to. That
act of perfidy might have made him persona non grata with the Bush White House,
but it had surely raised his stock among restless party members.
His prestige with the incoming GOP “Class of ’95”
Congress was enormous: his political action committee had fed them favorite buzzwords like (e.g., "sick," "pathetic," "cheat," "corrupt," "radical," "traitor"--you get the idea), returning the GOP to power on Capitol Hill for the first time in 40
years. His “Contract With America” not only provided these candidates with a
coherent national platform, but also invited comparison, as a blueprint for legislative governing, with the “American
System” proposed in the 19th century by Henry Clay, another Speaker
with ambitions for higher office.
All of this was catnip to Gingrich, who thought of
himself as a conservative revolutionary. "A president who knows how to use
the media is in fact President of the World,'' he had told Bush’s surprised OMB
Director, Richard Darman, back in 1990. That arrogance came out again as he
posed for Time Magazine’s KING OF THE HILL cover story in January 1995.
The 1995 government shutdown demonstrated that, when
it came to undermining established leaders, he was not quite the Newt Guevara he
saw in the mirror. He made three mistakes:
e
2) He guessed that Clinton would roll over without a fight, not understanding that the President was far better politically attuned to what the public wanted in this instance than he was; and,
2) He guessed that Clinton would roll over without a fight, not understanding that the President was far better politically attuned to what the public wanted in this instance than he was; and,
3) He
complained that, on a 25-hour plane flight aboard Air Force One for the funeral
of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, Clinton had not talked to him about a
possible solution to the shutdown—sparking a famous New York Daily News front-page cartoon of the Speaker in diapers, wailing, with the headline, “CRY BABY: NEWT'S TANTRUM: He
closed down the government because Clinton made him sit at back of plane.” The
image made Gingrich a national laughingstock.
While he survived in his post for another three
years after his disastrous shutdown miscalculation, Gingrich was forced to bank
on residual credit from the party rank and file for returning them to power. In the meantime, he
made Clinton—who had been forced to argue to a skeptical White House press
corps after the midterms that as President he remained “relevant”—look like a
giant killer, boosting his reelection campaign the following year. Gingrich’s
own aspirations for the Oval Office were checked—as it happened, we now see,
permanently.
The second way that the shutdown damaged the Republicans was the immediate fallout for the Presidential hopes of Robert Dole. In vain did the Senate Majority Leader argue privately with Gingrich and the
House leaders that a prolonged shutdown was not a desirable “endgame.” Before
long, the Democratic Party was assailing the presumptive GOP nominee in
devastating “Dole-Gingrich Monster” ads.
In the shutdown battle, the President employed the
political version of Muhammad Ali’s “rope-a-dope” strategy against George
Foreman in Zaire two decades before. Declining poll numbers had left Clinton
metaphorically against the ropes. The GOP, like Foreman against Ali, believed
that there was no way he could endure the full pressure of a government at a
standstill, not to mention their own constant threats and unconcealed contempt (House
Majority Leader Richard Armey and Senator Don Nickels simply didn’t want to
deal with Clinton in meetings at the White House, press secretary Mike McCurry
recalled in Michael Tariff’s oral biography of the President, A Complicated Man).
Clinton’s endurance of the GOP’s game of budget
chicken marked the beginning of the turnaround in his fortunes. That, and an
opportune lift from the economy, proved decisive in his triumph over Dole the
following November.
(Clinton being Clinton, though, he squandered the advantage
given him by the Capitol Hill Republicans. With paid staff sidelined during the
shutdown, only volunteer interns could man White House phones and staff functions.
On the second day of the November shutdown, one of them. Monica Lewinsky, flashed her thong at
the President. To his dying day, Clinton will rue that he reacted positively to
the sight.)
Capitol Hill Republicans learned nothing from their
1995 shutdown debacle. Two years ago, they shut down the government again, for
16 days, over Obamacare. This year, the Department of Homeland Security was
almost forced to close because the GOP wanted to have it out with Obama over
his immigration policies.
Now, the Senator who infuriated the GOP
establishment—in much the same way that Gingrich did in the 1990s—with his grandstanding
in the 2013 budget standoff has been rising in the GOP Presidential polls. But
it wasn’t until I saw an exhibit over a week ago on Bob Hope and political
satire at the Library of Congress that I saw a character similar to Ted Cruz. It was the vicious wildcat Simple
J. Malarkey of Walt Kelly’s midcentury comic strip “Pogo.”
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