Word: romers
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Part of the job of being Democratic party chairman is sticking up for the boss. And in the matter of Monica Lewinsky, Colorado Governor Roy Romer, who also heads the Democratic National Committee, has protested that it was wrong to judge the President before the evidence was in. But with Washington fascinated by sex and lies, everybody had better be braced for videotape. Last week Romer, 69, learned that a story scheduled for the current issue of Insight, a conservative weekly, would report that he had been caught on camera three years ago in some more than cordial embraces with...
...Secretary of Defense William Cohen visited Mr. King's neighborhood and waffled with Larry about the Iraq staredown. It was a beautiful day in the neighborhood when the next visitor, Democratic National Committee head Roy Romer, said that the contribution business is better than ever. Oh -- and he believes the President. Larry wrapped it up with the usual suspects: morality mogul Bill Bennett, Bob Squier (playing the Democrat) and Ed Rollins. Can you say b-o-r-i-n-g? Sure...
...Democratic Party ran up a legal bill of some $11 million keeping the Republicans (and Bob Woodward) at bay, DNC chairman Roy Romer said Tuesday. He accused the GOP of dragging the investigations out just to drain their rival's coffers for the '98 election drive. But Republicans aren't making apologies. "Expensive attorneys are not needed by those willing to cooperate and tell the truth," said Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., chairman of the House investigation...
...lawyers are friends," says a retired judge. The Ramseys' legal team is headed by Hal Haddon--and if Hunter is a midsize fish in Colorado Democratic politics, Haddon is a whale. He was a close adviser to former Senator Gary Hart and a strong ally of Governor Roy Romer...
...woes, the D.N.C. may soon see changes at the top. Colorado Governor Roy Romer, its other co-chairman, has declared he will decide by June whether to quit the D.N.C. to run for the Senate. He says he is excited by his party job, but colleagues report that he is frustrated at spotty cooperation from the White House. Several senior Democrats say Clinton would like Romer to quit anyway because "he apologizes too much" for the fund-raising scandals. A Senate race, however bruising, may not look like such...