Word: perotisms
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...Information Age economy could well be the defining issue of the next generation. Pat Buchanan's candidacy raises the possibility of a party realignment that would unite those who hold a dim view of the new world (like the supporters of Buchanan, Ross Perot, Jesse Jackson and Ralph Nader) against forward-looking optimists like Bill Clinton and Jack Kemp. Far-fetched? Perhaps, but when Pat Buchanan's economics are to the "left" of Ted Kennedy's, American politics is ripe for a change...
...Forbes too virulently. The core of his support comes not so much from flat taxers and supply siders but rather from a growing army of weakly aligned Republicans and independents who dislike politics and the political parties and see in Forbes the fresh, unrehearsed and unretouched reincarnation of Ross Perot. No one in the Republican Party wants another multimillionaire to break off from the G.O.P. and run a third-party campaign at the angry middle in the fall. That would guarantee Bill Clinton another four years...
...there was another, even darker scenario brewing. "Ross Perot is just waiting to say 'They crushed Steve Forbes, so I guess I have to run as an independent,'" said Kristol. "Forbes may turn out to be the warm-up for Perot, and that is bad news for Republicans." So Forbes has to be handled with care. But so does Buchanan; no one wants a revolt on the right--and a third-party bid on that flank--either...
...binges are hardly new. H. Ross Perot, lately a presidential aspirant, first sold stock in Electronic Data Systems, his data-processing company, in 1968 for $16.50 a share; it soared the same day to $38, which amounted to a previously unheard-of 271 times the company's annual earnings per share. (Companies traded on the New York Stock Exchange typically trade at about 16 times their earnings per share.) But never before have so many new issues rocketed to such high prices on the basis of hope rather than proven results. Take Netscape, for example. While the company managed...
George Stephanopoulos, President Clinton's senior policy adviser, gave the keynote address. He then participated on a panel which included Clayton Mulford, a former aide to H. Ross Perot, and Joseph Malone '78, the Massachusetts state treasurer, both of whom gave speeches of their own last night...