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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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coalition in the next four years, and you're the one who can do it." [ fn 3] But this was not<br />

the job that <strong>George</strong> really wanted. He wanted to be promoted, but he wanted to continue<br />

in the personal retinue of Henry Kissinger. "At first <strong>Bush</strong> tried to persuade the President<br />

to give him, instead, the number-two job at the State Department, as deputy to Secretary<br />

Henry Kissinger. Foreign affairs was his top priority, he said. Nixon was cool to this idea,<br />

and <strong>Bush</strong> capitulated." [fn 4] According to <strong>Bush</strong>'s own account, he asked Nixon for some<br />

time to ponder the offer of the RNC chairmanship. Among those who <strong>Bush</strong> said he<br />

consulted on whether or not to accept was Rogers C.B. Morton, the former Congressman<br />

whom Nixon had made Secretary of Commerce. Morton suggested that if <strong>Bush</strong> wanted to<br />

accept, he insist that he continue as a member of the Nixon cabinet, where, it should be<br />

recalled, he had been sitting since he was named to the UN. Pennsylvania Senator Hugh<br />

Scott, one of the Republican Congressional leaders, also advised <strong>Bush</strong> to demand to<br />

continue on in the cabinet: "Insist on it," <strong>Bush</strong> recalls him saying. <strong>Bush</strong> also consulted<br />

Barbara. <strong>The</strong> story goes that Bar had demanded that <strong>George</strong> pledge that the one job he<br />

would never take was the RNC post. But now he wanted to take precisely that post,<br />

which appeared to be a political graveyard, <strong>George</strong> explained his wimpish obedience to<br />

Nixon: "Boy, you can't turn a President down." [fn 5] <strong>Bush</strong> then told Ehrlichman that he<br />

would accept provided he could stay on in the cabinet. Nixon approved this condition,<br />

and the era of Chairman <strong>George</strong> had begun.<br />

Of course, making the chairman of the Republican Party an ex- officio member of the<br />

president's cabinet seems to imply something resembling a one-party state. But <strong>George</strong><br />

was not deterred by such difficulties.<br />

While he was at the UN, <strong>Bush</strong> had kept his eyes open for the next post on the way up his<br />

personal cursus honorum. In November of 1971 there was a boomlet for <strong>Bush</strong> among<br />

Texas Republican leaders who were looking for a candidate to run for governor. [fn 6]<br />

Nixon's choice of <strong>Bush</strong> to head the RNC was announced on December 11, 1972. <strong>The</strong><br />

outgoing RNC Chariman was Senator Bob Dole of Kansas, an asset of the grain cartel<br />

but, in that period, not totally devoid of human qualities. According to press reports,<br />

Nixon palace guard heavies like Haldeman and Charles W. Colson, later a central<br />

Watergate figure, were not happy with Dole because he would not take orders from the<br />

White House. Dole also tended to function as a conduit for grass roots complaints and<br />

resistance to White House directives from the GOP rank and file. In the context of the<br />

1972 campaign, "White House" means specifically Clark MacGregor's Committee to Re-<br />

Elect the President (CREEP), one of the collective protagonists of the Watergate scandal.<br />

[fn 7] Dole was considered remarkable for his "irreverence" for Nixon: "he joked about<br />

the Watergate issue, about the White House staff and about the management of the<br />

Republican convention with its `spontaneous demonstrations that will last precisely ten<br />

minutes.'" [ fn 8] <strong>Bush</strong>'s own account of how he got the RNC post ignores Dole, who was<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s most serious rival for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination. According to<br />

Dole's version, he conferred with Nixon about the RNC post on November 28, and told<br />

the president that he would have to quit the RNC in 1973 in order to get ready to run for<br />

re-election in 1974. According to Dole, it was he who recommended <strong>Bush</strong> to Nixon. Dole<br />

even said that he had gone to New York to convince <strong>Bush</strong> to accept the post. Dole sought<br />

to remove any implication that he had been fired by Nixon, and contradicted "speculation

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