As a contributing editor to Vanity Fair since
1984, Sheehy has written character studies of dozens of national
and world figures, including George Bush, Al Gore, Bill and Hillary
Clinton, Bob and Elizabeth Dole, Mikhail Gorbachev, Margaret Thatcher,
Saddam Hussein, Anwar Sadat, Newt Gingrich, and Gary Hart.

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Date: September 12, 2000
Show: MSNBC News with Brian Williams
Q: You spend a lot of time following George W. Bush
and one of the more interesting notes is the notion that he wants
to be President to pad his resume. Explain that.
GS: This is amazing to me. With all of his colleagues,
business associates and friends they came to the same conclusion
that the only passion that George Bush has ever had was to be baseball
commissioner. When he was a boy he wanted to be KL, the first baseball
commission. When he was approached by Republican party leaders in
1992 to run for Governor against Ann Richards he resisted, he stalled
for a year until Faye Vincent - the recently ousted baseball commissioner
- the reason was, he waiting to be named baseball commissioner and
he said,"I'd rather be commissioner than governor." And
when he finally realized that Bud Selig, then the Milwaukee Brewers
owner was going to keep the job, he said, "Okay, I guess I'll
run for governor." His friend from childhood said, "I still
think he dreams of being commissioner and this running for president
is just a resume enhancer for getting that job."
copyright (c) 2000 by G. Merritt Corporation
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