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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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that I went to the mountaintop to be pushed off," for "that was not the case." What was<br />

clear was that Nixon and retainers had chosen a replacement for Dole whom they<br />

expected to be more obedient to the commands of the White House palace guard. <strong>Bush</strong><br />

assumed his new post in January, 1973, in the midst of the trial of the Watergate burglars.<br />

He sought at once to convey the image of a pragmatic technocrat on the lookout for<br />

Republican candidates who could win, rather than an ideologue. "<strong>The</strong>re's kind of a<br />

narrow line between standing for nothing and imposing one's views," <strong>Bush</strong> told the press.<br />

He stressed that the RNC would have a lot of money to spend for recruiting candidates,<br />

and that he would personally control this money. "<strong>The</strong> White House is simply not going<br />

to control the budget," said <strong>Bush</strong>. "I believe in the importance of this job and I have<br />

confidence I can do it," he added. "I couldn't do it if I were some reluctant dragon being<br />

dragged away from a three-wine luncheon." [fn 9] <strong>Bush</strong> appointed Tom Lias as his<br />

principal political assistant. Harry Dent, the former chief counsel to Nixon, was named<br />

the chief counsel to the GOP. Dent had been one of the ideologues of the party's southern<br />

strategy. D.K. "Pat" Wilson became the party finance chairman, and Rep. William Steiger<br />

of Wisconsin became the leader of a special committee that was supposed to broaden the<br />

electoral base of the party. Steiger was immediately attacked by the right-wing Human<br />

Events magazine as "very much a part of the defeated liberal reform movement" in the<br />

party. [fn 10] Richard Thaxton was the RNC patronage director. John Lofton, the editor<br />

of the GOP weekly journal called Monday, was eased out, and went to join Howard<br />

Phillips in the task of liquidating the Office of Economic Opportunity. Janet J. Johnston<br />

of California became the RNC co- chair. <strong>Bush</strong> inaugurated his new post with a pledge<br />

that the Republican Party, from President Nixon on down, would do "everything we<br />

possibly can" to make sure that the GOP was not involved in political dirty tricks in the<br />

future. "I don't think it is good for politics in this country and I am sure I am reflecting<br />

the President's views on that as head of the party," intoned <strong>Bush</strong> in an appearance on<br />

"Issues and Answers." [fn 11] Whether or not <strong>Bush</strong> lived up to that pledge during his<br />

months at the RNC, and indeed during his later political career, will be sufficiently<br />

answered during the following pages. But now Chairman <strong>George</strong>, sitting in Nixon's<br />

cabinet with such men as John Mitchell, his eyes fixed on Henry Kissinger as his<br />

lodestar, is about to set sail on the turbulent seas of the Watergate typhoon. Before we<br />

accompany him, we must briefly review the complex of events lumped together under the<br />

heading of "Watergate," so that we may then situate <strong>Bush</strong>'s remarkable and bizarre<br />

behavior between January 1973 and August of 1974, when Nixon's fall became the<br />

occasion for yet another <strong>Bush</strong> attempt to seize the vice presidency. By the beginning of<br />

the 1990's, it has become something of a commonplace to refer to the complex of events<br />

surrounding the fall of Nixon as a coup d'etat. [fn 12] It was to be sure a coup d'etat, but<br />

one whose organizers and beneficiaries most commentators and historians are reluctant to<br />

name, much less to confront. Broadly speaking, Watergate was a coup d'etat which was<br />

instrumental in laying the basis for the specific new type of authoritarian-totalitarian<br />

regime which now rules the United States. <strong>The</strong> purpose of the coup was to rearrange the<br />

dominant institutions of the US government so as to enhance their ability to carry out<br />

policies agreeable to the increasingly urgent dictates of the British-dominated Morgan-<br />

Rockefeller-Mellon-Harriman financier faction. <strong>The</strong> immediate beneficiaries of the coup<br />

have been that class of bureaucratic, technocratic administrators who have held the<br />

highest public offices, exercising power in many cases almost without interruption, since

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