-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/19990821/pl/bush_republicans_2.html
<A
HREF="http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/19990821/pl/bush_republicans_2.html">Som
e Republicans Urge Bush To Tell More On Drugs</A>
-----
Saturday August 21 1:52 AM ET
Some Republicans Urge Bush To Tell More On Drugs

Full Coverage
Presidential Election 2000

By Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - George W. Bush sought to ride out the first storm
of his front-running drive for the White House Friday as fellow
Republicans offered him conflicting advice on whether he needs to say
definitively if he ever used illegal drugs.

``He needs to come clean,'' said Oregon Republican Chairman Perry
Atkinson. ``The longer he delays a direct answer the longer this will
haunt him.''

Connecticut Republican Chairman Chris DePino disagreed, saying, ``He has
already said enough'' in admitting he made mistakes but declaring he has
not used illicit narcotics since at least 1974, the year he turned 28.

Bush, 53, the governor of Texas and son of former President George W.
Bush, stuck to his story Friday as he campaigned in Akron, Ohio, and
waited to see if his strategy will succeed or fail.

``I made some mistakes,'' Bush said, repeating what has become his new
daily mantra. But if elected president, he vowed, ``I will bring dignity
and honor to the office.''

Bush has refused to deny using illegal drugs, saying personal missteps
he may have made long ago are not pertinent to his White House quest.

But in the past two days, he suddenly altered his stance by saying he
had not used illegal drugs for at least 25 years.

The abrupt shift came after he was asked if he could meet current
standards for those seeking federal jobs, which require no illegal drug
use in the last seven years.

Bush answered that question affirmatively in an interview published
Wednesday in The Dallas Morning News. Thursday, he said his drug-free
days extend back to at least 1974.

A number of Republicans, some privately and others publicly, have said
Bush has suffered self-inflicted wounds from the resulting controversy.

``He should have said he met the federal requirement (drug free for the
last seven years) and then left it at that,'' said one party official.
``He has opened himself up.''

Sen. Orrin Hatch, a Utah Republican who entered the White House campaign
last month, saying he wanted to be available if Bush stumbled, said Bush
stumbled on this one.

``I think the Bush campaign has mishandled this question,'' Hatch told
CNN. He said Bush should say whether he used drugs and move on.

Thursday, the Bush campaign sent ``talking points'' about the flare up
to supporters. ``The message basically was this is all rumor,'' an aide
said Friday.

Bush has accused the camps of presidential rivals of spreading the
rumor, an accusation that other campaigns deny.

Bush is the only presidential candidate who has refused to answer
whether he has ever used illegal drugs. He says his answer that he has
not used illegal drugs for at least 25 years should suffice.

Matt Smith, a spokesman for Republican candidate Gary Bauer, disagreed,
saying, ``The American people and the press, not the candidates,
determine the statue of limitations on issues of character or committing
a felony.''

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, while campaigning for the Republican
presidential nomination in San Francisco Thursday, said, ``the governor
is entitled to privacy'' but ``it is the media and the American people
who decide what questions should be asked and what questions should be
answered.''

Former Vice President Dan Quayle said Friday he accepted Bush's answer
to the drug question and suggested that his Republican presidential
rival be given a break.

``I know a little something about media frenzies,'' Quayle said in a
statement. ``I think this one should stop.''

Cliff May, communications director for the Republican National
Committee, said, ``There is not a shred of evidence that he has done
anything wrong.''

May charged that Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota
triggered the ``media frenzy'' by telling reporters on Aug. 14 that the
drug question is ``a legitimate question.''

``Journalist should track down rumors and see if they are true or not,
not just repeat them and ask people to deny them,'' May said.

Louisiana Republican Chairman Mike Francis said Friday he would not
offer any advice to Bush on the drug question, other than, ``Voters will
decide if he needs to say more.''
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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