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There will be no recount on this one: President-elect
George W. Bush today was named Time magazine’s Person of the Year.
As in this year’s razor-thin presidential election, the Texas governor received the nod over Vice President Al Gore. Bush’s victory, obviously, did not come easy. After 35 days of legal wrangling, a U.S. Supreme Court decision ended the Florida recount to lift Bush into the White House. In an interview with the magazine, Bush said he viewed the close election as a positive for his administration. “It gives us a chance to show we can rise above a divided house, that there are some issues ... that are more important than that which has divided the house,” the 54-year-old Bush said. Time’s first cover honoree was Charles Lindbergh in 1927; last year’s winner was Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos. President Clinton was twice named as an honoree — first after his election in 1992, and again with special prosecutor Kenneth Starr in 1998 after the Monica Lewinsky scandal. |
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