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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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One issue that helped Bentsen was "inflationary recession," also called stagflation. "I<br />

think [the President] should use the moral persuasion of the White House to help keep<br />

wages and prices within reason, instead of following policies which have put nearly 2<br />

million Americans out of jobs without stopping inflation," said Bentsen. <strong>Bush</strong> was stuck<br />

with parrotting the lines of the 1970 model Nixon, which was about ready for a closeout.<br />

Could Nixon and Agnew help <strong>Bush</strong>? Agnew's message fell flat in Texas, since he knew it<br />

was too dangerous to try to get to the right of Bentsen and attack him from there. Instead,<br />

Agnew went through the follwing contortion: a vote for Bentsen, Agnew told audiences<br />

in Lubbock and Amarillo, "is a vote to keep William Fulbright chairman of the Senate<br />

Foreign Relations Committee," and that was not what "Texans want at all." Agnew tried<br />

to put Bentsen in the same boat with "radical liberals" like Yarborough, Fulbright,<br />

McGovern, and Kennedy. Bentsen invited Agnew to move on to Arkansas and fight it out<br />

with Fulbright, and that was that.<br />

Could Nixon himself help <strong>Bush</strong>? Nixon did campaign in the state. Bentsen then told a<br />

group of "Anglo-American" businessmen: Texans want "a man who can stand alone<br />

without being propped up by the White House."<br />

In the end Bentsen defeated <strong>Bush</strong> by a vote of 1,197,726 to <strong>Bush</strong>'s 1,035,794, about 53%<br />

to 47%. <strong>The</strong> official <strong>Bush</strong>man explanation was that there were two proposed amendments<br />

to the Texas constitution on the ballot, one to allow saloons, and one to allow all<br />

undeveloped land to be taxed at the same rate as farmland. According to <strong>Bush</strong>man<br />

apologetics, these two propositions attracted so much interest among "yellow dog" rural<br />

conservatives that 300,000 extra voters came out, and this gave Bentsen his critical<br />

margin of victory. <strong>The</strong>re was also speculation that Nixon and Agnew had attracted so<br />

much attention that more voters had come out, but many of these were Bentsen<br />

supporters. On the night of the election, <strong>Bush</strong> said that he "felt like General Custer. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

asked him why he had lost and he said "<strong>The</strong>re were too many Indians.' All I can say at<br />

this point is that there were too many Democrats," said the fresh two-time loser. Bentsen<br />

suggested that it was time for <strong>Bush</strong> to be appointed to a high position in the government.<br />

[fn 34]<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s other consolation was a telgram dated November 5, 1970:<br />

FROM PERSONAL EXPERIENCE I KNOW THE DISAPPOINTMENT THAT YOU AND<br />

YOUR FAMILY MUST FEEL AT THIS TIME. I AM SURE, HOWEVER, THAT YOU WILL<br />

NOT ALLOW THIS DEFEAT TO DISCOURAGE YOU IN YOUR EFFORTS TO CONTINUE<br />

TO PROVIDE LEADERSHIP FOR OUR PARTY AND THE NATION.<br />

RICHARD NIXON<br />

This was Nixon's euphemistic way of reassuring <strong>Bush</strong> that they still had a deal. [fn 35]

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