Word: gramm
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...stand and fought for votes on every major issue of the past half-century, even some supporters say they don't know what he stands for. It is a politician's worst nightmare: Dole's own internal polls show that voters know what Pat Buchanan believes in, what Phil Gramm would fight for. A senior adviser to the Dole campaign was brutal in his private assessment: "If you ask Dole today, 'What's your message?' he'll say, 'Tenth Amendment, family values, preserve, protect and defend.' He's got the mantra down--it just doesn't mean anything...
With Gingrich too in the wings, the Dole campaign is running scared. "It's the job of the front runner to be disciplined and put the nervousness aside and stay on message," goads Charlie Black, Phil Gramm's general chairman. "But they're panicked and they're overreacting to a lot of things." A peek inside the vast, well-oiled Dole operation shows signs of fear and frustration. Campaign sources say that Dole booted his top field organizer, Jill Hanson, off his campaign plane and narrowed her portfolio in the wake of the disastrous tie with Phil Gramm last August...
That is especially devastating given the resources that Dole, like his opponents Gramm and Lamar Alexander, has been pouring into the Sunshine State in advance of the coming straw poll. Of all promiscuous primary rituals, these polls can do the most to torture front runners: because no real convention delegates are at stake, they are mainly useful for candidates to test the local party organizations. The straw polls only make news when the front runner stumbles--which can include winning by a smaller margin than expected...
...trade, as on immigration, Buchanan yields to no presidential contender in the extremity of his policy. Not only did he vocally oppose NAFTA and the creation of the World Trade Organization (unlike Dole, Gramm and Clinton), now that these agreements have passed, he won't let bygones be bygones. He wants to dismantle both pacts and erect new trade barriers: a 10% tariff on Japanese goods, a 20% tariff on Chinese goods and a "social tariff" of unknown size on goods from Mexico and other developing nations...
...second one-fifth--and the third, and the fourth, and the fifth. The potential appeal of a sharply redistributive income tax is unknown, but this simple math suggests it's bigger than before and getting bigger. And that is President Clinton's issue to claim--not Buchanan's, not Gramm's, not Dole...