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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>The</strong> Democrat in question was Frank Briscoe, a former district attorney. According to the<br />

Texas Observer, "Frank Briscoe was one of the most vicious prosecutors in Houston's<br />

history. He actually maintained a 'ten most wanted convictions list' by which he kept the<br />

public advised of how much luck he had getting convictions against his chosen<br />

defendants then being held in custody. Now, as a candidate for Congress, Briscoe is<br />

running red-eyed for the right-wing in Houston. He is anti-Democratic,; anti-civil rights;<br />

anti-foreign aid; anti-war on poverty. <strong>The</strong> fact that he calls himself a Democrat is utterly<br />

irrelevant." By contrast, from the point of view of the Texas Observer, "His opponent,<br />

<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, is a conservative man. He favors the war in Vietnam; he was for<br />

Goldwater, although probably reluctantly; he is nobody's firebrand. Yet <strong>Bush</strong> is simply<br />

civilized in race relations, and he is now openly rejecting the support of the John Birch<br />

Society. This is one case where electing a Republican to Congress would help preserve<br />

the two-party balance of the country and at the same time spare Texas the<br />

embarrassment" of having somebody like Briscoe go to Washington. [fn 5] <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

ideological face-lifting was working. "I want conservatism to be sensitive and dynamic,<br />

not scared and reactionary," <strong>Bush</strong> told the Wall Street Journal.<br />

Briscoe appears in retrospect as a candidate made to order for <strong>Bush</strong>'s new moderate<br />

profile, and there are indications that is just what he was. Sources in Houston recall that<br />

in 1966 there was another Democratic candidate for the new Congressional seat, a<br />

moderate and attractive Democrat named Wildenthal. <strong>The</strong>se sources say that <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

backers provided large-scale financial support for Briscoe in the Democratic primary<br />

campaign, with the result that Wildenthal lost out to Briscoe, setting up the race that <strong>Bush</strong><br />

found to his advantage. A designer district was not enough for <strong>George</strong>; he also required a<br />

designer opponent if he was to prevail-- a fact which may be relevant to the final<br />

evaulation of what happened in 1988.<br />

One of the key points of differentiation between <strong>Bush</strong> and Briscoe was on race. <strong>The</strong><br />

district had about 15% black population, but making some inroads here among registered<br />

Democrats would be of decisive importance for the GOP side. <strong>Bush</strong> made sure that he<br />

was seen sponsoring a black baseball team, and talked a lot about his work for the United<br />

Negro College Fund when he had been at Yale. He told the press that "black power"<br />

agitators were not a problem among the more responsible blacks in Houston "I think the<br />

day is past," <strong>Bush</strong> noted, "when we can afford to have a lily white district. I will not<br />

attempt to appeal to the white backlash. I am in step with the 1960's." <strong>Bush</strong> even took up<br />

a position in the Office of Economic Opportunity anti-povety apparatus in the city. He<br />

supported Project Head Start. By contrast, Briscoe "accused" <strong>Bush</strong> of courting black<br />

support, and reminded <strong>Bush</strong> that other Texas Congressmen had been voting against civil<br />

rights legislation when it came up in Congress. Briscoe had antagonized parts of the<br />

black community by his relentless pursuit of the death penalty in cases involving black<br />

capital defendants. According to the New York Times, "Negro leaders have mounted a<br />

quiet campaign to get Negroes to vote for [<strong>Bush</strong>]."<br />

Briscoe's campaign ads stressed that he was a right-winger and a Texan, and accused<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> of being "the darling of the Lindsey [sic]- Javits crowd," endorsed by labor unions,<br />

liberal professors, liberal Republicans and liberal syndicated columnists. Briscoe was

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