I News digest Nation readies to meet new president-elect WASHINGTON—America, meet your new president. Bill Clinton wants to ban assault weapons. He wants to guarantee fam ily leave from jobs. He will push fora national examination system to mea sure the progress of students and schools. He wants to guarantee a woman’s right to abortion. Executive or ders signed by iGcorgc Bush and Ronald Reagan arc up for review. Bills they vetoed are be ing resurrected. An activist govern ment is stirring after 12 years of Re publican attempts to restrain Washington’s power. The economy was issue No. 1, and thecenterpicceofClinton’scampaign was a stimulus program built around a $20-bil I ion-a-ycar spending plan for highways and bridges to create jobs. Longer term, he’ll seek investment tax credits for new plants and equip ment, and a capital gains lax cut for new business. He wants to raise taxes on Ameri cans with household incomes over $200,000, and cut taxes for middle and lower-income workers. Beyond Clinton’s highly publicized promises on the economy and health insurance arc numerous other un equivocal positions that lay a blue print for his administration. He is pledged to sign the Brady Bill requiring a waiting period for hand gun purchases. He wants to ban off shore oil drilling where rigs arc not already in place. He wants a law to prohibit companies from hiring per manent replacements for strikers. Clinton says homosexuals should not be excluded from the military. The number of American troops in Europe would be Cut to 75,(MM) to 100,(MM) under Clinton, rather than the 150,(MM) ceiling set by President Bush. Clinton says allies should shoul der more of the burden. He wants a system under which states would automatically register people to vote when they apply for drivers’licenses. Hc,iswilling_lospcnd AD Perot backers pick up pieces, plan DALLAS — Some of Ross Pcrol’s campaign aides said Wednesday lhal the 19 million Americans who voted for him could form a third political party if President elect Clinton fails to revive the economy and cut the deficit. “The basis for a third party is there if the group wishes to pursue lhal as an ultimate end. 1 think it’s worth a lot of consider ation,” said Orson Swindle,executive director of Perot’s volunteer organi zation, United We Stand, America. Experts on third parlies and even some Perot associates said the success of Clinton’s presidency would deter mine whether United We Stand would be a potent political force. The organization will remain ac tive to promote thcTcxas billionaire’s proposals for deficit reduction and economic revival, Swindle said. The group might even form a po litical action committee to contribute to congressional candidates, aides said, even though Perot constantly denounced these committees during the campaign as the tool of special interests. Neither Sw indle nor other aides could specify how Perot would work to keep his issues before the Ameri can public or whether he would con sidcr running again in 1996. “We’ve got so many bridges tc cross before we get there,” Swindle told the campaign’s final briefing foi reporters. Still, “Ross Perot has got s great following. Somebody believes in him enough to invest in a few bumper stickers.” $8.25 billion on ihc atom-smashing superconducting super collider projects. He says he’ll repeal most Bush policies on abortion. Clinton wants to put 100,000 new police officers on the streets through a national police corps and other means. He supports the death penally. He wants to limit carbon dioxide emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2000 to reverse global warming. For cars, he wants to phase in a 40-mpg auto fuel efficiency standard by the turn of the century. He would set national water-pollution runofl stan dards. He iscommiltcd tocliminating the production and use of all ozone depleting chemicals as soon as pos sible. Clinton happy, tired after hard-won battle Presidcnt-clccl Clinton pledged Wednesday to "spare no effort to re store jobs, growth and incomes” as he contemplated the first Democratic administration in a dozen years. The party’s top leaders in Congress of fered cooperation and a fast start on setting the economy right. President Bush Hew home to a he roes’ welcome at the White House and said he would “cooperate fully” with the man who defeated him. “It’s been a wonderful four years and no body can take that aw ay from us,” the president told supporters. On the morning alter his victory, Clinton look a brief hand-in-hand side walk stroll with his wife, Hillary. “I anfhappy, exhausted, thinking of all the work to be done,” the presi dcnt-to-bc said. Asked his plans for the day, he replied, laughing., “1 am going to be taking a nap.” He also arranged a meeting w ith the leaders of a pre-election transition team. In remarks aimed at business and financial leaders, Clinton said later that "although change is on the hori zon, we understand the need to pursue stability even as we pursue new growth.” To the voters, he said he would “get upevery morning and work hard” on tackling the nation’s economic difficulties. “It will not be easy, but we will spare no effort to restore growth, jobs and income to the American people,” he said. British Prime Minister John Major announced he had sent the 46-year old Clinton a message. “We live in a troubled and often disorderly world and I look forward to working closely with you as you lead the United Slates in pursuit ol our shared goals," he cabled. In the.statement he read to report ers, Clinton reaffirmed the “essential continuity” of American foreign policy, and reminded allies and po tential adversaries alike that the nation’s affairs of state remained in Bush’s hands as long as he was presi dent. - In a government building a few blocks from the While House, work crews installed telephones, spacklcd walls and worked on a security system in preparation for the arrival of the Democratic planners who w ill build the nation’s new government. The newly elected members of the Dcmocratic-controllcd Congress, in cluding 22 more women in the House, 16 more blacks and six more Hispan ics, looked ahead to their terms in office. Four new Democratic w omen were elected to the Senate, including two from California. One of them, Dianne Fcinstcin of California, said voters wanted to see “steady progress being made, that the gridlock is gone’ in Washington. Carol Moseley Braun, D-III., the first black woman elected to the Sen ate, was asked what she thought when she found out she had won.“Praise the Lord,” she said. “I think there will be a very posi tive and cooperative spirit and alti tude," Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell said in an interv iew on ABC s “Good Morning Amcrica."The Maine Democrat noted Clinton had laid out several priorities during his success ful campaign for the White House. “And they arc, of course: economic growth and job creation, health care reform, dealing with the deficit. And we look forward to acting promptly when he proposes legislation early next year.” World listens when American voters talk *-4 * They stopped doing deals on the Manila exchange. They quit arguing at a political congress in Zaire and listened to bulletins from America. In the new Ukraine, they tuned in to see' how an old democracy works. The world’s millions watched the United States remake its political face overnight and pinned a lotof hope Wednesday on a youthful U.S.presi dent-elect. JY oulh is progress,” con cluded Ukraine’s prime minister, Leonid Kuchma. Bill Clinton, 46, could have gotten a morning-after preview ofthc kind of global headaches that await him: While worn-out Democrats slept late in Little Rock, U.S. envoys were tak ing steps in Geneva to slap punitive tariffs on European farm goods. In Asia, where traders on the Phil ippine exchange put down their order - 44 The revitalization of the American economy is important not only for the United States alone but also for Japan and for the whole world. — Watanabe Japanese foreign minister -•• - sheets to watch U.S. returns on televi sion, stocks rose. In Europe, stock indexes held steady and the dollar’s value was mixed. “The revitalization of the Ameri can economy is important not only for the United States alone but also for Japan and for the whole world,” Japa nese foreign minister Michio Watanabc said. GcrmanChancellor Helmut Kohls congratulatory message struck a more down-to-earth tone, reminding Clinton of major tasks ahead: “Our hopes for a more peaceful world and for the carrying out of human rights, democracy and a market economy ^ w everywhere in Europe still have not been fulfilled.” Russia’s President Boris Yeltsin vowed to work toward “strengthening the relations of friendship and part nership between our countries.” European Community and U.S. negotiators deadlocked in talks to lib eral izc world trade. The result: Wednesday’s moves by the Bush ad ministration to impose tariffs on se lected European farm products. The Europeans would be sure to strike back. The congratulatory message Jacques Dclors, the Community’s top executive, sent to Clinton had the sound of an appeal. “Together we can bear more fruit than separately,” he told the president-elect. China also is concerned about Clinton trade policies. He favors with drawing favorable trade status from Beijing’s “frcc-markcl Communists” to pressure them to liberalize their politics. A Hong Kong newspaper that often speaks for Beijing said such “interference” would “elicit a strong Chinese response.” In the African nation of Zaire, delegates at the “national conference,” an opposition-led gathering trying to strip President Mobutu Sese Seko of his autocratic powers, interrupted the proceedings to listen to reports of Clinton’s victory. Opposition news papers predicted they would find a friend in the Arkansan. Hungarian foreign minister Gcza Jeszenszky offered congratulations to Bush, “an active player in the fall of communism. 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