19.12.2012 Views

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Chapter -XII- Chairman <strong>George</strong> in Watergate<br />

In November, 1972, <strong>Bush</strong>'s "most influential patron," Richard Nixon [fn 1], won reelection<br />

to the White House for a second term in a landslide victory over the McGovern-<br />

Shriver Democratic ticket. Nixon's election victory had proceeded in spite of the arrest of<br />

five White House-linked burglars in the offices of the Democratic National Committee at<br />

the Watergate building in Washington early on June 17 of the same year. This was the<br />

beginning of the infamous Watergate scandal, which would overshadow and ultimately<br />

terminate Nixon's second term in 1974. After the election, <strong>Bush</strong> received a telephone call<br />

informing him that Nixon wanted to talk to him at the Camp David retreat in the Catoctin<br />

Mountains of Maryland. <strong>Bush</strong> had been looking to Washington for the inevitable<br />

personnel changes that would be made in preparation for Nixon's second term. <strong>Bush</strong> tells<br />

us that he was aware of Nixon's plan to reorganize his cabinet around the idea of a "super<br />

cabinet" of top-level, inner cabinet ministers or "super secretaries" who would work<br />

closely with the White House while relegating the day-to-day functioning of their<br />

executive departments to sub-cabinet deputies. One of the big winners under this plan<br />

was scheduled to be <strong>George</strong> Shultz, the former Labor Secretary who was now, after the<br />

departure of Connally, supposed to become Super Secretary of the Treasury. Shultz was a<br />

Bechtel executive who went on to be Reagan's second Secretary of State after Al Haig.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> and Shultz were future members of the Bohemian Club of San Francisco and of the<br />

Bohemian Grove summer gathering. Shultz was a Princeton graduate who was reputed to<br />

have a tiger, the school's symbol, tatooed on his rump. <strong>Bush</strong> says he received a call from<br />

Nixon's top domestic aide, John Ehrlichman (along with Haldemann a partner in the<br />

"Chinese wall" around Nixon maintained by the White House palace guard). Ehrlichman<br />

told <strong>Bush</strong> that <strong>George</strong> Shultz wanted to see him before he went on to meet with Nixon at<br />

Camp David. As it turned out, Shultz wanted to offer <strong>Bush</strong> the post of undersecretary of<br />

the Treasury, which would amount to de facto administrative control over the department<br />

while Shultz concentrated on his projected super secretary policy functions. <strong>Bush</strong> says he<br />

thanked Shultz for his "flattering" offer, took it under consideration, and then pressed on<br />

to Camp David. [fn 2] At Camp David, <strong>Bush</strong> says that Nixon talked to him in the<br />

following terms: "<strong>George</strong>, I know that Shultz has talked to you about the Treasury job,<br />

and if that's what you'd like, that's fine with me. However, the job I really want you to do,<br />

the place I really need you, is over at the National Committee running things. This is an<br />

important time for the Republican Party, <strong>George</strong>. We have a chance to build a new

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!