[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1994, Book II)]
[August 24, 1994]
[Pages 1500-1503]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Interview With Gene Burns of WOR Radio, New York City
August 24, 1994

    The President. Glad to be here, Gene.

    Mr. Burns. Do you feel like Daniel in the mouth of the lion's den? 
You and talk radio these days seem to have this running battle.

    The President. We were talking before we went on the air; I really 
have always enjoyed talk radio and I've done a lot of it, particularly 
when I was Governor, and in my campaign I did a lot. I find that there's 
a certain immediacy to it that I like. I like the interviews and I like 
people being able to call in a question.

Accomplishments and Goals

    Mr. Burns. George Stephanopoulos was here earlier, and he says in 
his view--and I assume he mirrors your own--your accomplishments in your 
first almost 2 years as President have not gotten through the screen of 
the media to the American people. Do you feel any sense of isolation 
here in terms of what you like, you've told us, that sort of one-on-one 
relationship with constituents?
    The President. Oh, yes. I think part of it is the nature of the 
Presidency and the whole security bubble that's around the President. 
Part of it is the demanding nature of the job and the fact that 
Washington, DC, and its inner workings are a long way from the average 
life of most Americans. And part of it is the way news is reported 
today. News basically tends to be--a lot of studies have shown that the 
way news is reported tends to be more negative and more editorial, more 
commentary rather than what's going on.
    A lot of the research shows that the American people are surprised 
to find out that in 1993, for example, I had more success in getting a 
very big program through Congress, with the economic program and NAFTA 
and family leave, the Brady bill, than any President since the end of 
World War II except President Eisenhower's first year and President 
Johnson's second year.
    So we're doing well here, I think, in moving forward in an extremely 
contentious environment. And I just have to find ways to communicate 
better with the American people not only what we're doing wrong--the 
press will tell them that--but also what we're doing right and where 
we're going.
    Mr. Burns. From your side of the table, what's the nature of that 
contentious environment? I know that you, yourself, have pointed to a 
deep cynicism on the part of the American

[[Page 1501]]

people. You feel in some respects the media drives that cynicism. But 
there does seem to be a sense of social disconnect. I mean, Jefferson 
said, Americans have the power; from time to time they give it to folks 
like yourself to exercise for them. And the first amendment ends with, 
``and they'll always have a direct route for the redress of 
grievances.'' A lot of Americans don't think they have that direct 
route.
    The President. I agree with that. I was reading this morning, 
interestingly enough, James Madison's ``Federalist Papers.'' And he was 
arguing why a republican form of government, meaning representative form 
of government, was better for big countries, that you had to elect 
representatives and then they'd do what they thought was right. Then 
they'd report back, be held accountable, and be elected or defeated by 
the voters.
    I think today there is so much--there's a lot of information about 
what we're doing up here, but I don't think there's a lot of basic 
understanding that we impart. And I think that voters know that too many 
decisions get made here on the basis of organized interest which may or 
may not be the same as the public interest.
    And I think that at a time of real change, when people are uncertain 
about where we're going, it's just easy for negative impulses, for 
fears, for cynicism to overcome hopes in looking toward the future.
    I also believe, and many astute people in the press have pointed 
this out lately, that voters themselves feel a certain ambivalence. That 
is, they want us to do things up here. I got elected to take action, to 
deal with the economy, to deal with crime, to deal with the breakdown of 
family, to promote welfare reform, to deal with the health care crisis. 
But people still basically are very skeptical about the Government's 
ability to do it. So we want, in a way, a Government that is more active 
but basically that is active in empowering the private sector to do 
things, rather than active in doing things directly. I think that's 
where the voters are.
    And a lot of times that explains the apparently contradictory 
feelings people have about what we're doing here, that they want us to 
be active and address the problems but they don't necessarily trust the 
Government to do it. Or as we say at home, a lot of people think 
Government would mess up a one-car parade. [Laughter]
    Mr. Burns. You're a student of history. Do you think that's because 
Camelot was illusory in the last analysis, that it's a mythical thing 
and that people are disappointed with both the Congress and various 
holders of your office? Is that the problem?
    The President. Oh, only partly. I think, first of all, the American 
people have always, always had a deep-seated skepticism about government 
generally and especially their National Government. I think that we've 
also been told for years that government was bad. And I think that we 
need a clearer definition; this is partly my job. I've got to do a 
better job of telling the American people in very clear terms, often 
through a fog of people, you know, disagreeing with me or with my 
characterization of it--I've got to do a better job of saying, okay, 
look, here is what we can do, here are our problems, here are our 
opportunities, here's what the National Government should do and here's 
what we cannot do, here's the partnership we have to have. That's what I 
called my new Democratic philosophy when I ran in 1992.
    I share what I think is the feeling of a majority of our fellow 
citizens, that the government should be limited in many ways and that 
government should do those things which it is required to do but no more 
than it is required to do.
    Mr. Burns. I mean, that's an excellent point. The Wall Street 
Journal reports this morning that Al From of the Democratic leadership 
conference just sent you a big memo, five or six pages long. I'm not 
trying to invade your private correspondence, but one of the things they 
say he said to you was, rightly or wrongly, you have become too 
identified with liberal causes on Capitol Hill and therefore don't 
appear to some of the people who supported you initially as this 
centrist Democrat, which you said you were.
    The President. I think that's right. And I think some of that may be 
my fault in terms of characterization. But if you look at what we've 
actually done, if you look at the economic program that I've put in 
place, it's bringing the deficit down for 3 years in a row, it's 
reducing the Federal Government by 272,000--certainly not a traditional 
liberal thing to do--to the smallest Federal Government we've had since 
Kennedy was President. We're taking all the savings and putting it into 
the fight against crime, which is basically money to people at the 
grassroots local level. We're addressing the issues like welfare reform 
partly with tax cuts for working fam-


[[Page 1502]]

ilies with lower incomes and tougher child support enforcement--not 
traditional liberal programs.
    I think what happened was, more than anything else, the health care 
program has been characterized as a big Government program, even though 
it took what, at the time I proposed it, was the moderate course, which 
is not having a Government-financed health care program but simply 
having a program in which the Government requires everybody to buy 
private insurance and then gives tax breaks or discounts to people who 
can't afford it on their own. That was the moderate proposal when we 
started. And every time we've sought to compromise, the other guys have 
always moved kind of further and further to the right.
    But I think that the health care debate more than anything else--
we've had $140 million now spent in lobbying and advertising on health 
care by organized interests, the largest amount in American history, far 
more than was spent by the candidates in the Presidential campaign last 
time.
    When that happened, I think that that--I have been portrayed as sort 
of the apostle of big Government. Actually, that is not an accurate 
portrayal. I'm about reinventing Government. I'm trying to bring the 
Federal Government down. My Republican predecessors never attempted to 
do anything as ambitious as reducing the Federal Government to its 
smallest size in 30 years. I have fought for things that Democrats often 
don't fight for, including all these trade agreements to expand trade. I 
have fought to put the Government in partnership with our business 
interests overseas. Yesterday, just to give you a little example, we 
announced that for the first time in over 20 years, farmers in the 
Pacific Northwest will be able to sell their apples in Japan. For the 
first time ever, farmers in California are selling rice in Japan. These 
are the things that I have worked on.
    But there are some things that I believe--and this is worth 
debating--that the Government has to do. And when we have to do 
something, it should be as limited and efficient as possible. But there 
are some things that if we don't do it, it won't get done.
    Mr. Burns. Well, Mr. President, on the lobbying money, John Connally 
spent $10 million because he wanted to be President of the United 
States, and it was all wasted money, as we both know.
    The President. He got one delegate----
    Mr. Burns. He got one delegate----
    The President. ----from my home State. I know her.
    Mr. Burns. Well, there you are.
    The President. I know her well.
    Mr. Burns. That's a pretty high delegate, you know. So all of this 
money being spent by the special interests on health care, which has to 
be conceded has been spent, is not going to get a warm reception unless 
there is a general fear of the growth of Government in the first place.
    The President. I think that's right. I agree with that. I think--one 
of the things that Al From said to me with the Democratic Leadership 
Council--not in this memo, but I think it captures in one sentence the 
dilemma I face as President in trying to move into a post-cold-war world 
and take this country into the 21st century with a strategy for growth 
and opportunity, where the Government is not either just sitting on the 
sidelines or trying to solve problems but is being a partner with the 
American people--he said we are basically back in 1965 in what we want 
Government to do, but we're about in 1980 in what we trust Government to 
do, that is, the year President Reagan was elected.
    So people have high aspirations for what they wish us to do, but 
they don't trust us to do much. And they're afraid we'll mess it up. So 
it's easy to derail almost any initiative by saying, well, this thing is 
wrong with it or that or the other thing. We are a people of--a 
democratic government requires some flexibility and compromise and 
people working together. And somehow, we've got to find a way to 
recreate that spirit. Now, it happened on the NAFTA debate, and it 
happened last week on crime in the House. It was wonderful to see these 
Democrats and Republicans sitting down together, cutting unnecessary 
spending, redirecting the programs, making sure we only told the 
American people we were going to spend what we could, in fact, spend 
from reducing the size of the Federal Government. That's what we need 
more of, that sort of thing.

Anticrime Legislation

    Mr. Burns. George Stephanopoulos answered this question. I guess 
this is a test as to whether he's really reflecting what you believe as 
President of the United States. Why not break out

[[Page 1503]]

the component parts of the crime bill? You and I both know that many of 
those components would fly through the Congress with no opposition--more 
police, more prisons. You might even win the assault weapons ban issue. 
Why doggedly say it's all or nothing?
    The President. Well, for one thing, I'm not sure that it would all 
pass. There is an answer to that. The first answer is, the House adopted 
them separately and together. The Senate, 95 to 4, before this issue got 
politicized, voted for a crime bill that is very much like the crime 
bill now before it that is so far not being permitted to come to a 
vote--95 to 4. They voted for a bill that had prevention, punishment, 
prisons, police----

Note: The President spoke at 4:18 p.m. from Room 459 of the Old 
Executive Office Building. The broadcast of this interview was 
terminated by the station's scheduled 4:30 newscast.