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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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ultimately accepted, and the reduction in the depletion allowance thus accomplished was<br />

calculated to have increased the tax bill of the domestic US oil and gas companies by the<br />

trifling sum of $175 million per year. <strong>The</strong> issue had been defused, and the cartel could<br />

resume its normal operations, thanks in part to the stewardship of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

By the time of the House Ways and Means Committe vote of July, 1969, referenced<br />

above, the New York Times was already touting <strong>Bush</strong> as a likely Senate candidate, and<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> was indeed to be a candidate for the Senate from Texas in 1970. In <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

campaign autobiography, he attempts to portray his decision to run for the Senate a<br />

second time as a decision assisted by former President Lyndon B. Johnson. That, we<br />

should say, is already bad enough. But in reality, the decisive encouragement, funds, and<br />

the promise of future advancement that moved <strong>Bush</strong> to attempt the leap into the Senate<br />

once again came from one Richard Milhous Nixon, and the money involved came from<br />

the circles of Nixon's CREEP.<br />

Nixon, it will be recalled, had campaigned for <strong>Bush</strong> in 1964 and 1966, and would do so<br />

also in 1970. During these years, <strong>Bush</strong>'s positions came to be almost perfectly alligned<br />

with the the line of the Imperial Presidency. And, thanks in large part to the workings of<br />

his father's Brown Brothers, Harriman networks--Prescott had been a fixture in in<br />

Eisenhower White House where Nixon worked, and in the Senate over which Nixon from<br />

time to time presided-- <strong>Bush</strong> became a Nixon ally and crony. <strong>Bush</strong>'s Nixon connection,<br />

which pro-<strong>Bush</strong> propaganda tends to minimze, was in fact the key to <strong>Bush</strong>'s career<br />

choices in the late 1960's and early 1970's.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s intimate relations with Tricky Dick are best illustrated in <strong>Bush</strong>'s close brush with<br />

the 1968 GOP vice-presidential nomination at the Miami convention of that year.<br />

Richard Nixon came into Miami ahead of New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller and<br />

California Governor Ronald Reagan in the delegate count, but just before the convention<br />

Reagan, encouraged by his growing support, announced that he was switching from being<br />

a favorite son of California to the status of an all-out candidate for the presidential<br />

nomination. Reagan attempted to convince many conservative southern delegations to<br />

switch from Nixon to himself, since he was the purer ideological conservative and better<br />

loved in the south than the new (or old) Tricky Dick. Nixon's defense of his southern<br />

delegate base was spearheaded by South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond, who kept<br />

the vast majority of the delegates in line, sometimes with the help of the unit rule.<br />

"Thurmond's point of reasoning with Southern delegates was that Nixon was the best<br />

conservative they could get and still win, and that he had obtained assurances from Nixon<br />

that no vice-presidential candidate intolerable to the South would be selected," wrote one<br />

observer of the Miami convention. [fn 20] With the southern conservatives guaranteed a<br />

veto power over the second spot on the ticket, Thurmond's efforts were successful; a<br />

leader of the Louisiana caucas was heard to remark: "It breaks my heart that we can't get<br />

behind a fine man like Governor Reagan, but Mr. Nixon is deserving of our choice, and<br />

he must receive it."

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