Born on September 18, 1933, in
Salt Lake City, Utah, Bennett was the son of Frances Marion (née Grant) and the U.S. Senator
Wallace Foster Bennett, as well as a grandson of
Heber J. Grant, the seventh
president of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and a great-grandson of
Jedediah M. Grant (Heber J. Grant's father) and
Daniel H. Wells (through Heber J. Grant's wife
Emily H. Wells), early mayors of Salt Lake City and counselors in the
First Presidency of the LDS Church. Bennett attended high school at East High, and he earned his
B.S. from the
University of Utah in 1957 majoring in Political Science. He also served as the
Student Body President at the
University of Utah and was initiated into
Owl and Key. After graduation in 1957, Bennett joined the
Utah Army National Guard and spent six months on active duty. Upon his return, he was commissioned a Chaplain in the Guard and served until 1960. In 1963 he went to Washington as press secretary to a Utah Congressman,
Sherman P. Lloyd, and later as administrative assistant to his father. He became the head of the Governmental Affairs office of the
J. C. Penney Company in 1965 but resigned from Penney's to accept an appointment in the
Nixon Administration, as Director of Congressional Affairs in the
United States Department of Transportation. He held this position through 1969 and 1970, leaving in 1971 to purchase the
Robert Mullen Company, a
Washington, D.C., public-relations company. While at Mullen, Bennett was chair of several dummy committees that funneled corporate donations into Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign Bennett's principal client was the CIA-aligned
Summa Corporation, the holding company of billionaire
Howard Hughes. In 1974, after his CIA ties and those of the Mullen Company had been revealed by the
Watergate scandal. He subsequently became chairman of American Computer Corporation, and then president of the Microsonics Corporation, a public firm listed on
NASDAQ. In 1984, Bennett was named as the CEO of the Franklin International Institute, a startup that produced Franklin Day Planners and grew into
Franklin Quest, which was listed on the
New York Stock Exchange in 1992. After being named Entrepreneur of the Year for the Rocky Mountain Region by
Inc. Magazine, he stepped down as CEO in 1991, prior to his run for the Senate. ==U.S. Senate (1993–2011)==