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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Before announcing his bid for the senate, <strong>Bush</strong> decided to take out what would appear in<br />

retrospect to be a very important insurance policy for his future political career. On April<br />

22, <strong>Bush</strong>, with the support of Republican state chairman Peter O'Donnell, filed a suit in<br />

federal court calling for the reapportionment of the Congressional districts in the Houston<br />

area. <strong>The</strong> suit argued that the urban voters of Harris County were being partially<br />

disenfranchised by a system that favored rural voters and demanded as a remedy that a<br />

new Congressional district be drawn in the area. "This is not a partisan matter,"<br />

commented the civic-minded <strong>Bush</strong>. "This is something of concern to all Harris County<br />

citizens." <strong>Bush</strong> would later win this suit, and that would lead to a court-ordered<br />

redistricting which would create the Seventh Congressional District, primarily out of<br />

those precincts which <strong>Bush</strong> had managed to carry in the 1964 Senate race. Was this the<br />

invisible hand of Skull and Bones? This would also mean that there would be no<br />

entrenched incumbent, no incumbent of any kind, in that Seventh District when <strong>Bush</strong> got<br />

around to making his bid there in 1966. But for now, this was all still in the future.<br />

On September 10, 1963 <strong>Bush</strong> announced his campaign for the US Senate. He was fully<br />

endorsed by the state Republican organization and its chairman, Peter O'Donnell, who<br />

according to some accounts had encouraged <strong>Bush</strong> to run. By December 5 <strong>Bush</strong> had<br />

further announced that he was planning to step down as Harris County chairman and<br />

devote himself to full-time state-wide campaigning starting early in 1964. At this point,<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s foremost strategic concern appears to have been money--big money. On October<br />

19, the Houston Chronicle carried his comment that ousting Yarborough would require<br />

nearly $2 million "if you want to do it right." Much of this would go to the Brown and<br />

Snyder advertising agency in Houston for television and billboards. In 1963, this was a<br />

considerable sum, but <strong>Bush</strong>'s crony C. Fred Chambers, also an oilman, was committed to<br />

raising it. During these years Chambers appears to have been one of <strong>Bush</strong>'s closest<br />

friends, and he received the ultimate apotheosis of having one of the <strong>Bush</strong> family dogs<br />

named in his honor. [fn 14]<br />

It is impossible to establish in retrospect how much <strong>Bush</strong> spent in this campaign. State<br />

campaign finance filings do exist, but they are fragmentary and grossly underestimate the<br />

money that was actually committed.<br />

In terms of the tradeoffs of the campaign, <strong>Bush</strong> and his handlers were confronted with the<br />

following configuration: there were three competitors for the Republican senatorial<br />

nomination. <strong>The</strong> most formidable competition came from Jack Cox, the Houston oilman<br />

who had run for governor against Connally in 1962, and whose statewide recognition was<br />

much higher than <strong>Bush</strong>'s. Cox would position himself to the right of <strong>Bush</strong> and who would<br />

receive the endorsement of General Edwin Walker, who had been forced to resign his<br />

infantry command in Germany because of his radical speeches to the troops. A former<br />

Democrat, Cox was reported to have financial backing from the Hunts of Dallas. Cox<br />

campaigned against medicare, federal aid to education, the war on poverty, and the loss<br />

of US sovereignty to the UN.<br />

Competing with Cox was Dr. Milton Davis, a thoracic surgeon from Dallas who was<br />

expected to be the weakest candidate but whose positions were perhaps the most

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