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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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government. <strong>The</strong> individual laboring man is being forgotten by the Walter Reuthers and<br />

Ralph Yarboroughs, and it's up to the business community to protect our country's<br />

valuable labor resources from exploitation by these left -wing labor leaders," said <strong>Bush</strong>,<br />

who might just as well have suggested that the fox be allowed to guard the chicken coop.<br />

East Texas was an area of unusually high racial tension, and <strong>Bush</strong> spent most of his time<br />

there attacking the civil rights bill. But the alliance between Yarborough and big labor<br />

was one of his favorite themes. <strong>The</strong> standard pitch went something like this, as before the<br />

Austin businessmen. Yarborough, he would start off saying "more nearly represents the<br />

state of Michigan than he does Texas." This, as we will see, was partly an attempted,<br />

lame rebuttal of Yarborough's charge that <strong>Bush</strong> was a northeastern carpetbagger. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

would then continue: "One of the main reasons Yarborough represents Texas so badly is<br />

that he's spending most of his time representing labor interests in Detroit. His voting<br />

record makes men like Walter Reuther and James Hoffa very happy. This man has voted<br />

for every special interest bill, for every big spending measure that's come to his<br />

attention."<br />

During this period Camco, an oilfield equipment company of which <strong>Bush</strong> was a director,<br />

was embroiled in some bitter labor disputes. <strong>The</strong> regional office of the National Labor<br />

Relations Board sought a federal injunction against Camco in order to force the firm to<br />

re-hire four union organizers who had been illegally fired. Officials of the Machinists'<br />

Union, which was trying to organize Camco, also accused <strong>Bush</strong> of being complicit in<br />

what they said was Camco's illegal failure to carry out a 1962 NLRB order directing<br />

Camco to re-hire eleven workers fired because they had attended a union meeting. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

answered that he was not going to be intimidated by labor. "As everybody knows, the<br />

union bosses are all-out for Sen. Ralph Yarborough, " countered <strong>Bush</strong>, and he had been<br />

too busy with Zapata to pay attention to Camco anyway. [fn 20] According to Roy Evans,<br />

the Secretary-Treasurer of the Texas AFL-CIO, <strong>Bush</strong> was "a member of the dinosaur<br />

wing of the Republican Party." Evans called <strong>Bush</strong> "the Houston throwback," and<br />

maintained that <strong>Bush</strong> had "lost touch with anyone in Texas except the radicals of the<br />

right."<br />

Back in February, Yarborough had remarked in his typical populist vein that his<br />

legislative approach was to "put the jam on the lower shelf so the little man can get his<br />

hand in." This scandalized <strong>Bush</strong>, who countered on February 27 that "it's a cynical<br />

attitude and one that tends to set the so-called little man apart from the rest of his<br />

countrymen." For <strong>Bush</strong>, the jam would always remain under lock and key, except for the<br />

chosen few of Wall Street. A few days later, on March 5, <strong>Bush</strong> elaborated that he was<br />

"opposed to special interest legislation because it tends to hyphenate Americans. I don't<br />

think we can afford to have veteran-Americans, Negro-Americans, Latin-Americans and<br />

labor-Americans these days." Here is <strong>Bush</strong> as political philosopher, maintaining that the<br />

power of the authoritarian state must confront its citizens in a wholly atomized form, not<br />

organized into interest groups capable of defending themselves.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> was especially irate about Yarborough's Cold War GI Bill, which he branded the<br />

senator's "pet project." "Fortunately," said <strong>Bush</strong>, "he has been unable to cram his Cold

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