Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 Source: U.S. News and World Report (US) Copyright: 1999 U.S. News & World Report Contact: 1050 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20007-3871 Fax: (202) 955-2685 Feedback: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/usinfo/infomain.htm Website: http://www.usnews.com/ Forum: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/forum.htm Author: Kenneth T. Walsh GEORGE W. STUMBLES ON THE DRUG ISSUE Did He Or Didn't He? This time, it was Texas Gov. George W. Bush's turn to squint uncomfortably into the cameras, force a smile, and try to quell a growing media feeding frenzy. The subject: the long-standing rumor that he had used cocaine, a charge he repeatedly insisted he would never discuss because it would only encourage the "politics of personal destruction." Yet this time, Bush gave a strangely illuminating reply. He indicated that if he ever used illegal substances, it was more than a quarter century ago, when he was a heavy-drinking, 20-something party animal enjoying la vida loca in Texas. "I made some mistakes years ago, but I learned from my mistakes," he told a news conference in Baton Rouge, La. In Akron, Ohio, he added: "I have learned from the mistakes I may or may not have made, and I'd like to share some wisdom with you, and that is: 'Don't do drugs.' " The source. It all started with Bush's response to a reporter's question about security procedures at the White House. The Republican candidate said he would insist on drug-related background checks for all White House staffers, and he declared that he could pass such a test himself. This, he and his staff confirmed, meant that he was denying drug use since 1974, when he was 28. (Technically, he was making the point that he had always complied with the standard his father imposed at the White House starting in 1989: being drug free for 15 years; Bush served his dad as an informal adviser until President Bush lost in 1992.) Friends say that, in private, the governor never admits to having used cocaine or other controlled substances like marijuana. But some confidants infer that he did so because he never actually denies it. And he gives the impression of being ashamed of whatever it was he did. Early last week, just before the storm hit, Bush told longtime friend Doug Wead, a former adviser to his father, that a new round of cocaine accusations were being circulated by his political foes, who claimed that he had used the drug very recently. It clearly bothered him, but he still didn't want to dignify the whispers with a response. "Do you think presidential candidates should offer a litany of everything they ever did wrong in their lives?" Bush asked Wead. "Even years ago? Do you want your kids coming up to you and saying, 'Daddy, the president did it. Why can't I?' " Aides say that as the media scrutiny intensified, Bush saw an opportunity to reveal that unspecified bad conduct happened many years ago, when he was "young and irresponsible," and to, in effect, appeal for a quarter-century statute of limitations. Some of his allies say addressing the drug question was a mistake because it gave the rumors new life. His critics say he comes off as a hypocrite, akin to President Clinton when he claimed he smoked marijuana but didn't inhale. But his closest advisers say that while he may have been briefly thrown off balance, Bush succeeded in arguing his case: that whatever skeletons remain in his closet were put there a generation ago96and the public will forgive and forget. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake