My speechwriters, Michael Waldman and David Kusnet, must have been tearing their hair out, because as we practiced between one and four in the morning on inauguration day, I was still changing it. It was an impressive list, but it would not be enough to bridge the ideological divide. l and balanced approach the press had taken on other issues, at least since the Republicans won the Congress in 1994. On the twelfth, I was en route to Indonesia for the annual APEC leaders’ meeting, where the eighteen Asian-Pacific
On October 29, a Reuters news article began: “If President George Bush wins reelection, he will owe a major debt of gratitude to a tough-talking Texas billionaire who dislikes him. The implication was that I had been selling overnights in the White House to raise money for the DNC. Then she left me to write my letter. e doors of college are thrown open again to the sons and daughters of stenographers and steelworkers,” “an A