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28.08.04, 22:27
Ex-Lawmaker Says He Helped Bush With Guard
By BOBBY ROSS JR
DALLAS (AP) - Former Texas House Speaker Ben Barnes said he is ``more ashamed
at myself than I've ever been'' because he helped President Bush and the sons
of other wealthy families get into the Texas National Guard so they could
avoid serving in Vietnam.
``I got a young man named George W. Bush into the National Guard ... and I'm
not necessarily proud of that, but I did it,'' Barnes, a Democrat, said in a
video clip recorded May 27 before a group of John Kerry supporters in Austin.
Barnes, who was House speaker when Bush entered the Guard, later became
lieutenant governor.
The video was posted June 25 on the Web site www.austin4kerry.org, but didn't
get much attention until Friday, when Jim Moore, an Austin-based author of
books critical of Bush, sent out e-mails calling attention to it just days
before the GOP National Convention starts in New York.
Bush joined the National Guard in 1968, at the height of the Vietnam War, and
served until 1973. He has said he received no special treatment.
Barnes said he became ashamed after walking through the Vietnam Memorial and
looking at the names of the dead.
``I became more ashamed of myself than I've ever been because it was the worst
thing I did - help a lot of wealthy supporters and a lot of people who had
family names of importance get in the National Guard,'' he said. ``I'm very
sorry of that and I'm very ashamed of it and I apologize to the voters of
Texas for that.''
Barnes told The Associated Press in a brief telephone interview Saturday that
the video ``just speaks for itself.'' He declined to answer specific questions
about what role he had in helping Bush, but he said he may have more to say
next week.
Both Bush and his father, the former president, have said they did not ask for
help in finding the Guard opening.
``It is no surprise that a partisan Democrat is making these statements,''
Bush spokeswoman Claire Buchan told the Houston Chronicle. ``This was
addressed five years ago, and there's nothing new.''
Five years ago, Barnes found himself at the center of questions about Bush's
Vietnam-era service when the then-Texas governor emerged as the Republican
presidential front-runner.
At that time, Barnes' lawyer issued a statement saying Barnes had been
contacted by the now-deceased Sidney Adger, a Houston oilman and friend of
Bush's father, who was then a congressman. Adger asked Barnes to recommend
Bush for a pilot position with the Air National Guard and he did, that
statement said.
``Neither Congressman Bush nor any other member of the Bush family asked
Barnes' help,'' according to the 1999 statement.
08/28/04 13:48