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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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of Representatives, each one flaunted a record as a World War II airman. In fact, all<br />

Bentsen needed to do for the rest of the race was to appear plausible and polite, and let<br />

the overwhelming Democratic advantage in registered voters, especially in the yellowdog<br />

Democrat rural areas, do his work for him. This Bentsen posture was punctuated<br />

from time to time by appeals to conservatives who thought that <strong>Bush</strong> was too liberal for<br />

their tastes.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> hoped for a time that his slick television packaging could save him. His man Harry<br />

Treleaven was once more brought in. <strong>Bush</strong> paid more than half a million dollars, a tidy<br />

sum at that time, to Glenn Advertising for a series of Kennedyesque "natural look"<br />

campaign spots. Soon <strong>Bush</strong> was cavorting on the tube in all of his arid vapidity, jogging<br />

across the street, trotting down the steps, bounding around Washington and playing touch<br />

football, always filled with youth, vigor, action, and thryoxin. <strong>The</strong> Plain Folks praised<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> as "Just fantastic" in these spots. Suffering the voters to come unto him, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

responded to all comers that he "understands," with the shot fading out before he could<br />

say what it was he understood or what he might propose to do. [fn 32] "Sure, it's tough to<br />

be up against the machine, the big boys," said the Skull and Bones candidate in these<br />

spots; <strong>Bush</strong> actually had more money to spend than even the well-heeled Bentsen. <strong>The</strong><br />

unifying slogan for imparting the proper spin to <strong>Bush</strong> was "He can do more." "He can do<br />

more" had problems that were evident even to some of the 1970 <strong>Bush</strong>men: "A few in the<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> camp questioned that general approach because once advertising programs are set<br />

into motion they are extremely difficult to change and there was the concern that if Nixon<br />

should be unpopular at campaign's end, the theme line would become, 'He can do more<br />

for Nixon,' with obvious downsides. [fn 33] Although Bentsen's spots were said to give<br />

him "all the animation of a cadaver," he was more substantive than <strong>Bush</strong>, and he was<br />

moving ahead.<br />

Were there issues that could help <strong>George</strong>? His ads put his opposition to school busing to<br />

achieve racial balance at the top of the list, but this wedge-monerging got him nowhere.<br />

Because of his servility to Nixon, <strong>Bush</strong> had to support the buzz-word of a "guaranteed<br />

annual income," which was the label under which Nixon was marketing the workfare<br />

slave labor program already described, but to many in Texas that sounded like a new<br />

give-away, and Bentsen was quick to take advantage. <strong>Bush</strong> bragged that he had been one<br />

of the original sponsors of the bill that had just semi-privatized the US Post Office<br />

Department as the Postal Service. <strong>Bush</strong> came on as a "fiscal conservative," but this also<br />

was of little help against Bentsen.<br />

In an interview on women's issues, <strong>Bush</strong> first joked that there really was no consensus<br />

among women -- "the concept of a women's movement is unreal--you can't get two<br />

women to agree on anything." On abortion he commented: "I realize this is a politically<br />

sensitive area. But I believe in a woman's right to chose. It should be an individual<br />

matter. I think ultimately it will be a constitutional question. I don't favor a federal<br />

abortion law as such." After 1980, for those who choose to believe him, this changed to<br />

strong opposition to abortion.

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