[EMAIL PROTECTED] (William J. Foristal) writes:
HI Sue,
The thing that will finally end Starr's witch hunt is the thing that
started it all, with respect to Starr being appointed. That is the
political machinations of the right wing conspiracy group. These are the
same people that jumped all over Starr when he dared to try to resign and
go to Pepperdine. And the same people who directed him to jump on the
Lewinsky case when that occurred.
Now that the Jones case is dismissed and even Newt Gingrich is praising
Clinton for his courage, I think we'll see a quick wrap up and a report
going to Congress where the committee will conclude that no further
action is required. For political reasons they may offer a meaningless
censure of the president.
And after all of this dims in the memory of people historians will mark
Clinton down as one of the finest presidents in the 20th century and the
man who led the economy out of the Reagan/Bush dark ages and into the
sunlight of a Dow Jones index that breaks the 10,000 mark.
Bill
On Sat, 04 Apr 1998 17:16:55 -0800 Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
writes:
>Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
>NEW YORK, April 4 (UPI) _ A poll finds 57 percent of Americans say
>independent counsel
>Kenneth Starr should end the investigation of President Clinton's
>alleged affair with Monica
>Lewinsky.
>
>The Newsweek poll finds 55 percent say they would be satisfied with an
>apology, or no action at
>all, if there is strong evidence that Clinton lied about his
>relationship with the former White House
>intern. Forty percent say he should be removed from office.
>
>Thirty-seven percent of respondents say there has been a pattern of
>improper sexual behavior by
>Bill Clinton as president and governor of Arkansas, while 25 percent
>believe there have only been a
>few episodes, and 22 percent say there has been no improper sexual
>behavior.
>
>Clinton's approval rating remains high, at 66 percent, with 51 percent
>saying the charges against the
>president have had little effect on them. Twenty-five percent think
>less
>of Clinton as a person but not
>as a president and leader. Twenty-two percent think less of him as
>president and leader of the
>country.
>
>Seventy percent say the charges have diminished the Clinton presidency
>in history.
>
>The poll is based on telephone interviews with 755 adults conducted on
>April 2 and 3. The sampling
>error is plus or minus four percentage points.
>--
>Two rules in life:
>
>1. Don't tell people everything you know.
>2.
>
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>
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