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- - - - - - - - - - - - By Alicia Montgomery June 20, 2000 | George W. Bush may have joined the Air National Guard to stay out of the line of fire during the Vietnam War, but his record there continues to get him into hot water in the campaign. The Times of London reports that the Guard grounded Bush after he failed to get his annual medical exam, which included a urine test and extensive questions about drug use. In August 1972, when Bush was scheduled for the exam, he was working in Alabama on a political campaign. Bush didn't have to face drug screening when he entered the service in 1968, but drug-related incidents in Vietnam led the Air Force to change its policy in 1972. The Times report comes several weeks after the Boston Globe ran an article revealing holes in Bush's service record. The Texas governor's campaign staff continues to deny any wrongdoing on Bush's part, however, and says that the skipped medical exam was an innocent oversight. "As he was not flying, there was no reason for him to take the flight exam," said Bush spokesman Dan Bartlett. "And he was not aware of any changes that required a drug test."
Bush's border-town blues Democrats, eager to challenge Bush's support in the Hispanic community, have seized upon the story. Several Latin American Democratic officials made a tag-team attack on Bush in a party press release. "Because of Bush's negligence and inaction, schoolchildren in the colonias live in perpetual poverty," said Democratic National Committee general co-chairwoman Rep. Loretta Sanchez of California. "Hispanics across the country should be weary about what Bush calls 'Un Nuevo Dia' (A New Day). With this failed record as a model, I would hate to see what this 'new day' would look like for our community."
Gore called for poll chasing But that charge is untrue, according to Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne. Though Gore's constant reinventions make him an easy target for copycat charges, the vice president's plan concentrates help on the people who need it, Dionne points out, lowering or phasing out benefits for those in upper income brackets. In contrast, Dionne asserts, Bush's proposal disproportionately benefits the wealthy, a symptom of Bush's true ideological bent. "Here is the great underreported fact about the 2000 campaign," Dionne writes. "Bush is far more conservative than his sunny and compassionate speeches would suggest."
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salon.com | June 20, 2000 - - - - - - - - - - - -
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