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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>The</strong> enterprise in which we now find <strong>Bush</strong> engaged, the creation of a Republican Party in<br />

the southern states during the 1960's, (including the so-called post-1961 "two-party<br />

Texas") has proven to be an historical catastrophe. In order to create a Republican Party<br />

in the south, it was first necessary to smash the old FDR New Deal constitutent coalition<br />

of labor, the cities, farmers, blacks, and the Solid South. As <strong>Bush</strong> complains in his<br />

campaign autobiography:<br />

"<strong>The</strong> state was solidly Democratic, and the allegiance of Texans to the 'party of our<br />

fathers' became even stronger during the lean years of the Depression. <strong>The</strong> Democratic<br />

campaign line in the 1930's was that the 'Hoover Republicans' were responsible for<br />

unemployment and farm foreclosures; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Democratic Party<br />

were said to be the only friends the people had." [fn 1]<br />

But as far as <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was concerned, all this was of no consequence:<br />

"Philosophically, I was a Republican...." [fn 2] After <strong>Bush</strong> had declared his candidacy for<br />

Yarborough's seat, the veteran political writers at the state capital in Austin shook their<br />

heads: <strong>Bush</strong> had "two crosses to bear - running as a Republican and not a native Texan."<br />

[fn 3]<br />

<strong>The</strong> method that the southern Republicans devised to breach this solid front was the one<br />

theorized years later by Lee Atwater, the manager of <strong>Bush</strong>'s 1988 Presidential campaign.<br />

This was the technique of the "wedge issues," so called precisely because they were<br />

chosen to split up the old New Deal coalition using the chisels of ideology. <strong>The</strong> wedge<br />

issues are also known as the "hot-button social issues," and the most explosive among<br />

them has always tended to be race. <strong>The</strong> Republicans could win in the south by portraying<br />

the Democratic Party has pro-black. Atwater had learned to be a cunning and vicious<br />

practitioner of the "wedge issue" method in the school of Strom Thurmond of South<br />

Carolina after the latter had switched over to the Republicans in the sixties. Racial<br />

invective, anti-union demagogy, jingoistic chauvinism, the smearing of opponents for<br />

their alleged fealty to "special interests"-- none of this began in the Baker-Atwater effort<br />

of 1968. <strong>The</strong>se were the stock in trade of the southern strategy, and these were all<br />

Leitmotivs of <strong>Bush</strong>'s 1964 effort against Yarborough.<br />

From the vantage point of the police state conditions of the early 1990's, we can discern a<br />

further implication of the southern Republican project of which <strong>Bush</strong> was in several<br />

moments of the 1960's a leading operative. As the southern GOP emerged out of the play<br />

of gang and counter-gang between McGovernite left liberal investment bankers and<br />

Nixon-Reagan right liberal investment bankers (and <strong>Bush</strong> has been both), it made<br />

possible that Southern Strategy which elected Nixon in 1968 and which has given the<br />

Republicans a virtual lock on the electoral college ever since. <strong>The</strong> Watergate-Carter<br />

anomaly of 1976 confirms rather than alters this overall picture.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Southern Strategy that <strong>Bush</strong> turns out to have been serving in the sixties was not<br />

called to the attention of the public until somewhat after the 1964 election in which<br />

Goldwater had garnered electoral votes exclusively in the south. As William Rusher<br />

wrote in the National Review: "<strong>The</strong> Democrats had for years begun each race with an

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