U.S.
INSIDE:
Bill Bennett's Firm Friends
That funny noise you hear in Washington is the sound of Republican mouths clamping shut after the selection of former drug czar William Bennett as chairman of the Republican National Committee. When Bennett's name was first floated, many Republican leaders howled privately about Bennett's late conversion to the party (he was a Democrat until 1986) and his dearth of political expertise. Once President Bush named his man, however, the bashers suddenly became boosters. One prominent, now silent opponent, according to White House sources: Republican pollster Robert Teeter, a close Bush adviser. Teeter denies any outcry. "It's not true," he says. "Bill and I have been friends a long time."
Top Stories on Time.com
Most Popular
-
Most Read
- Why Do the Mentally Ill Die Younger?
- Odetta: Soul Stirrer, 1930-2008
- Why the Big Three Should Fly Corporate Jets
- The Auto Bailout May Wind Up on Obama's Plate
- What's Really at Stake in Georgia's Senate Runoff
- Getting Paid for Your A's
- Oil-Price Drop Forces Big Energy to Retreat
- The Pope's Christmas Gift: A Tough Line on Church Doctrine
- Detroit Bailout Fueling Trade Tensions with Europe
- Five Reasons for Hope in Iraq
-
Most Emailed
- Why Do the Mentally Ill Die Younger?
- Rhee Tackles Classroom Challenge
- The Pope's Christmas Gift: A Tough Line on Church Doctrine
- Why the Big Three Should Fly Corporate Jets
- Getting Paid for Your A's
- Odetta: Soul Stirrer, 1930-2008
- Bush's Last Days: The Lamest Duck
- Microfinance Still Hums, Despite Global Financial Crisis
- Oil-Price Drop Forces Big Energy to Retreat
- Were the Mumbai Terrorists Fueled by Coke?
Get the Latest News from Time.com
Sign up to get the latest news and headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Quotes of the Day »
ALEC GREVEN, the 9-year-old author of How to Talk to Girls, dispensing dating advice
U.S.
INSIDE:
Mixx





RSS