PDA

View Full Version : LINCOLN BEDROOM STILL FOR RENT


mburbank
Mar 10th, 2004, 11:34 AM
Bush Fund-Raisers Among Overnight Guests

By SHARON THEIMER, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - President Bush opened the White House and Camp David to dozens of overnight guests last year, including foreign dignitaries, family friends and at least nine of his biggest campaign fund-raisers, documents show.


In all, Bush and first lady Laura Bush have invited at least 270 people to stay at the White House and at least the same number to overnight at the Camp David retreat since moving to Washington in January 2001, according to lists the White House provided The Associated Press.

Some guests spent a night in the Lincoln Bedroom, historic quarters that gained new fame in the Clinton administration amid allegations that Democrats rewarded major donors like Hollywood heavyweights Steven Spielberg and Barbra Streisand with accommodations there.

That scandal and Bush's criticism of it is one of the reasons the White House identifies guests. In a debate with Vice President Al Gore (news - web sites) in October 2000, Bush said: "I believe they've moved that sign, `The buck stops here,' from the Oval Office desk to `The buck stops here' on the Lincoln Bedroom. And that's not good for the country."

Los Angeles attorney Donald Etra stayed at the Bush White House several times and at Camp David once. Etra, a Yale classmate of President Bush, said he and his wife were invited as friends, not because they each gave Bush $1,000 in 2000.

"Friendship comes first, donations come second," Etra said.

Describing a stay in the Lincoln Bedroom, he said it was almost impossible to sleep.

"It is so unbelievably exciting and unbelievable that you are staying in the White House," he said. "One hesitates to put a coffee cup down on the coffee table because there's an original copy of the Emancipation Proclamation under glass."

Bush's overnight guest roster is virtually free of celebrities — pro golfer Ben Crenshaw is the biggest name — but not of campaign supporters.

At least nine of Bush's biggest fund-raisers appear on the latest list of White House overnight guests, covering June 2002 through December 2003, and-or on the Camp David list, which covers last year. They include:

_Mercer Reynolds, an Ohio financier, former Bush partner in the Texas Rangers baseball team and former ambassador to Switzerland. Reynolds is leading Bush's campaign fund-raising effort. He was a guest at the White House and the Camp David retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains.

_Brad Freeman, a venture capitalist who is leading Bush's California fund-raising effort, has raised at least $200,000 for his re-election campaign and is also a major Republican Party fund-raiser. Freeman stayed at the White House.

_Roland Betts, who raised at least $100,000 for Bush in 2000, was a Bush fraternity brother at Yale and a Texas Rangers partner. Betts stayed at the White House and Camp David.

_William DeWitt, a Bush partner in the oil business and Texas Rangers who has raised at least $200,000 for Bush's re-election effort, stayed at the White House.

_James Francis, who headed the Bush campaign's 2000 team of $100,000-and-up volunteer fund-raisers and was a Bush appointee in Texas when Bush was governor. Francis was a White House guest.

_Joseph O'Neill, an oilman and childhood friend who introduced Bush to Laura Bush and raised at least $100,000 for each of Bush's presidential campaigns, stayed at the White House.

_Colorado Gov. Bill Owens and New York Gov. George Pataki, who each raised at least $200,000 for Bush's re-election campaign, were White House guests.



_James Langdon, who raised at least $100,000 for Bush, is a Washington attorney specializing in international oil and gas transactions. Langdon, whose clients include the Russian oil company Lukoil, is a member of Bush's foreign intelligence advisory board and served on Bush's 2000 presidential transition team on energy policy.

Ronnie Raygun
Mar 10th, 2004, 07:04 PM
It's not for rent.

These are people that Bush knows the vast majority being family and friends.

No strangers like there were when Clinton was in office.

Yes, Clinton is still shit.

El Blanco
Mar 11th, 2004, 09:37 AM
Were any of them from countries that have ICBMs pointed at us and somehow mysteriously aquired some of our missile tech shortly after? No?

mburbank
Mar 11th, 2004, 12:05 PM
Yes, Clinton is still shit. A civillian shit. Bush is presidential shit.

Streisand and Spielbergh, repellent as they may be, are friends of Clintons. Friends who gave him lots of money, a time honored way to make friends with shit politicians. W's friends have been gifving this already rich man buckets of money ever since his first failed business venture. And they still do. And now they get to sleep in Lincolns bed for it. It was bad before. It's still bad.

ItalianStereotype
Mar 11th, 2004, 12:50 PM
just a thought: if Clinton is civilian shit now, why do people still speak ill of Reagan?

mburbank
Mar 11th, 2004, 01:04 PM
Reagan is also a civillian shit. And people still speak ill of Clinton.

ItalianStereotype
Mar 11th, 2004, 01:07 PM
I understand that. my point was that many of the people who say that Clinton is a civilian now and should be left alone are still highly critical of Reagan, policies and character.


in other words, people should either stop being hypocritical or they should concede that former administrations are fair game.