Unappreciative.

AuthorKnoll, Erwin
PositionBill Clinton's broken promises - Editorial

Once again this month we've turned over much of our Letters space to correspondence dealing with The Progressive's appraisal of Bill Clinton's performance as President of the United States. And once again some readers take us to task for failing to appreciate and applaud Clinton's achievements. They ask why we keep picking on the President, why we don't seem to understand that he's a great deal better than George Bush and Ronald Reagan, why we don't recognize our responsibility to support him, endorse his program, and do what we can to help him get reelected in 1996.

Since this month's Comment section - as well as much of the rest of the magazine - is again unsupportive (to put it mildly) of Bill Clinton and his works, I want to assure those readers who urge us to refrain from what they call Clinton-bashing that yes, we do read your mail and think about it. And if we don't embrace your analysis, it's because we find it utterly unpersuasive.

Why do we keep picking on Bill Clinton? Because he's the only President we've got. That's why we picked on George Bush and Ronald Reagan, on Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford, on Richard Nixon and Lyndon Johnson, when each of them occupied the White House. In an era - it didn't start with Ronald Reagan - when the U.S. Government has engaged in bloody imperial adventures abroad while practicing malign neglect of its own people's needs at home, we see no reason to act as cheerleaders for whatever President happens to be in office, be he Democrat or Republican.

Don't we understand that Clinton is better than Bush and Reagan? Of course we do. He's better especially in his rhetoric, which sometimes expresses genuine concern for human beings in a way that could never have been coaxed from his predecessors' speech writers. And he is better in a few - but only a few - of his appointments; others have been no better, and in some cases worse.

We concur with those readers who remind us that Clinton did, after all, raise such issues as health-care reform and gay and lesbian rights to the forefront of national consciousness. But we're constrained to point out to our critics that having raised those issues, Clinton reversed field and went into headlong retreat, so it is likely that the final result of his efforts will be regression rather than progress.

Even on those few accomplishments for which the President deserves unqualified applause, nagging questions instantly arise. For example, he recently lifted the twenty-year...

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