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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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of committee organization, all tax bills had to originate in the Ways and Means<br />

Committee. In addition to the national importance of such a committee assignment, Ways<br />

and Means oversaw the legislation impacting such vital Texas and district concerns as oil<br />

and gas depletion allowances, and the like.<br />

Later writers have marvelled at <strong>Bush</strong>'s achievement in getting a seat on Ways and Means.<br />

For John R. Knaggs, this reflected "the great potential national Republicans held for<br />

<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>." <strong>The</strong> Houston Chronicle, which had supported Briscoe in the election,<br />

found that with this appointment "the GOP was able to point up to the state one benefit of<br />

a two-party system." [fn 8]<br />

In this case, unlike so many others, we are able to establish how the invisible hand of<br />

Skull and Bones actually worked to procure <strong>Bush</strong> this important political plum. This is<br />

due to the indiscretion of the man who was chairman of Ways and Means for many years,<br />

Democratic Congressman Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas. Mills was hounded out of office<br />

because of an alcoholism problem, and later found work as an attorney for a tax law firm.<br />

Asked about the <strong>Bush</strong> appointment to the committee he controlled back in 1967, Mills<br />

said: "I put him on. I got a phone call from his father telling me how much it mattered to<br />

him. I told him I was a Democrat and the Republicans had to decide; and he said the<br />

Republicans would do it if I just asked Jerry Ford." Mills said that he had asked Ford and<br />

John W. Byrnes of Wisconsin, who was the ranking Republican on Ways and Means, and<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> was in, thanks once again to Daddy Warbucks, Prescott <strong>Bush</strong>. [fn 9]<br />

Wilbur Mills may have let himself in for a lot of trouble in later years by not always<br />

treating <strong>George</strong> with due respect. Because of <strong>Bush</strong>'s obsession with birth control for the<br />

lower orders, Mills gave <strong>Bush</strong> the nickname "Rubbers," which stuck with him during his<br />

years in Congress. [fn 10] Poppy <strong>Bush</strong> was not amused. One day Mills might ponder in<br />

retrospect, as so many others have, on <strong>Bush</strong>'s vindictiveness.<br />

On one occasion Mills prolonged the questioning of Walter Reuther of the UAW, who<br />

was appearing as a witess in hearings before the committee, to let <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> get a few<br />

questions in and look good for the home-town press. Mills' career in public life was<br />

destroyed during the Ford Presidency when he was found cavorting drunk in public with<br />

the dancer Fanny Foxe. This came in an era when the Church and Pike committees of<br />

Congress had been pounding the CIA, and when <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was about to take over as<br />

CIA Director. <strong>The</strong> fall of Wilbur Mills, together with the Koreagate scandal of alleged<br />

Congressional influence peddling, appeared at the time as retaliation designed to knock<br />

the Congress on the defensive.<br />

<strong>George</strong> and Barbara claim to have bought a home on Hillbrook Lane in northwest<br />

Washington sight unseen over the telephone from Sen. Milward Simpson of Wyoming,<br />

the father of Sen. Al Simpson, the current GOP minority whip. Later the family moved to<br />

Palisade Lane.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s Congressional office in the Longworth Building was run by administrative<br />

assistant Rose Zamaria, with Pete Roussel acting as the Congressman's presse secretary,

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