Trivial Pursuits: Clinton's record - Bill Clinton
National Review, Nov 20, 2000 by Ramesh Ponnuru
Bill Clinton is in the process of proving that a presidential legacy is like individual happiness or national greatness: something achieved mostly as a byproduct of activities undertaken for other ends, rather than as part of a self-conscious design. His is a negative proof. Never has a president mused as much, or as openly, about his place in history as our Solipsist-in-Chief has. But rarely has it been harder to determine what that place should be.
Part of the difficulty, as liberal columnist E. J. Dionne Jr. has pointed out, is that almost anything one could say about Clinton's presidency is true-and so is its opposite. Did he move the country right or left? Yes. Strengthen the Democrats or weaken them? Both. Was he the perfect president for the times, or a historical accident? A case could be made either way. He was larger than life, and so, so small.
We'll have a better picture of his presidency in a few years' time, after we will have seen what further fruits his policies will bear and how his successor will govern. If, say, China were to nuke Los Angeles next year, the defects of Clinton's foreign and defense policies would presumably get more space in the encyclopedia entry on him. But we can essay some judgments right now.
Clinton's economic record, it has to be said, is pretty good. Not, to be sure, as good as the conventional wisdom would have it: A recovery from the brief recession of the early 1990s was already underway when Clinton was elected, and his tax increase of 1993 was followed by a few years of subpar growth. But Clinton deserves credit for promoting free trade, allowing Alan Greenspan to vanquish inflation, and acceding to Republican demands for a reduction in the capital-gains tax. The combination of these policies more than compensated for the tax hike. Hillary Rodham Clinton should take a bow, too. Her rigidity doomed the administration's health-care plan and thus was a boon for the economy.
Clinton's biggest contribution to the economy was not to do much to screw it up. This is not the faint praise it sounds like: It is a boast that could not be made by most recent presidents, including Republicans Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and George Bush.
Moreover, the positive aspects of Clinton's economic record are likely to endure. The inflationist wing of the Democratic party, strong as recently as a decade ago, hardly exists any more. In the late 1980s, leading Democratic intellectuals wanted the government to direct economic development and to channel subsidies to prominent industries. They were itching for a trade war with our major allies. Nobody serious believes any of that any more. Clinton consolidated a Reaganite consensus on these issues, just as President Eisenhower ratified FDR's New Deal.
Clinton moved right on moral and cultural issues, too, though this truth has sometimes been obscured by his trysts. Previous Democrats had suffered for their liberal attitudes on work and welfare, sex and family, race, crime, and religion. But Clinton declared that abortion should be rare. He decried illegitimacy. He signed a Republican bill ending the federal welfare entitlement. He even funded abstinence- education programs. Michael Dukakis had fairly radiated an aggressive secularism; Clinton's rhetoric was steeped in religion, and sometimes delivered from the pulpits of black churches.
In some respects, the country became more socially conservative under Clinton. Rates of abortion, illegitimacy, divorce, and teen sexual activity all began to decline. But social liberalism comes in bourgeois and antibourgeois varieties, and the former-the liberalism of niceness and tolerance-also made strides. Public acceptance of homosexuality grew, probably helped along by the president's association with gay lobbies. But this is yet another feature of the Clinton years that cannot simply be described as a shift to the left or right. Gays and lesbians have spent the Clinton years trying to join the army, to marry, and to lead Boy Scout troops. They have sought, in other words, to be integrated into society's most conservative institutions; to lead the sort of square lives that most heterosexuals long ago grew tired of. It is because of such shifts that after three decades of culture wars, a measure of peace has broken out. (Granted, conservatives cannot be wholly pleased by the terms of this peace.)
America's racial politics are relatively placid as well. To the extent Clinton deserves credit for the good economy, he also deserves credit for the reduction in both black unemployment and racial tensions that that economy has produced. On the other side of the ledger must be set Clinton's occasional race-baiting, as when he accuses Republicans of having a policy of holding up black and Hispanic judicial nominees. And while it may be argued that Clinton ended divisive political arguments over immigration and racial preferences, his policies may be storing up racial trouble for the future.
Clinton ended, at least temporarily, a final set of battles: those over the role of the federal government, which, it is now clear, will neither expand dramatically nor shrink at all. Welfare reform helped to relegitimize the federal government. Clinton was also shrewd to expand tax credits for the working poor. Previous Democrats ran into trouble by taxing other Democrats; by taking them off the tax rolls, Clinton was able to tax Republicans for the benefit of Democrats. As a result, it's been much harder to cut tax rates.
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