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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Republicans, might be willing to listen to additional charges made by Buckley against<br />

Bellino. Dash says he "smelled the ugly odor of blackmail on the part of somebody and I<br />

did not like it." Later Senators Talmadge and Inouye filed a report completely<br />

exonerating Bellino, while Gurney conceded that there was no direct evidence against<br />

Bellino, but that there was some conflicting testimony that ought to be noted. Dash sums<br />

up that in late November, 1973, "the matter ended with little fanfare and almost no<br />

newspaper comment. <strong>The</strong> reputation of a public official with many years' service as a<br />

dedicated and incorruptible investigator had been deeply wounded and tarnished, and<br />

Bellino would retire from federal service believing-rightly-that he had not been given the<br />

fullest opportunity he deserved to clear his good name."<br />

Another <strong>Bush</strong> concern during the summer of 1973 was his desire to liquidate the CREEP,<br />

not out of moralistic motives, but because of his desire to seize the CREEP's $4 millon<br />

plus cash surplus. During the middle of 1973, some of this money had already been used<br />

to pay the legal fees of Watergate conspirators, as in the case of Maurice Stans. [fn 40]<br />

During August, <strong>Bush</strong> went into an offensive of sanctimonious moralizing. <strong>Bush</strong> appears<br />

to have concluded that Nixon was doomed, and that it was imperative to distance himself<br />

and his operation from Nixon's impending downfall. On the NBC Today Show, <strong>Bush</strong><br />

objected to John D. Ehrlichman's defense before the Ervin committee of the campaign<br />

practice of probing the sex and drinking habits of political opponents. "Crawling around<br />

in the gutter to find some weakness of a man, I don't think we need that," said <strong>Bush</strong>. "I<br />

think opponent research is valid. I think if an opponent is thought to have done something<br />

horrendous or thought to be unfit to serve, research is valid. But the idea of just kind of<br />

digging up dirt with the purpose of blackmail or embarrassing somebody so he'd lose, I<br />

don't think that is a legitimate purpoose," postured <strong>Bush</strong>. By this time Ehrlichman, who<br />

had hired retired cops to dig up such dirt, had been thrown to the wolves. [fn 41]<br />

A couple of days later <strong>Bush</strong> delivered a speech to the American Bar Association on "<strong>The</strong><br />

Role and Responsibility of the Political Candidate." His theme was that restoring public<br />

trust in the political system would require candidates who would set a higher moral tone<br />

for their campaigns. "A candidate is responsible for organizing his campaign well--that<br />

is, picking people whom he trusts, picking the right people." This was an oblique but<br />

clear attack on Nixon, who had clearly picked the wrong people in addition to whatever<br />

else he did. <strong>Bush</strong> was for stricter rules, but even more for "old-fashioned conscience" as<br />

the best way to keep politics clean. He again criticized the approach which set out to "get<br />

dirt" on political adversaries-- again a swipe at Nixon's notorious "enemies' list"<br />

practices. <strong>Bush</strong> said that there were "gray areas in determining what was in good taste."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> has never been noted for his sense of self-irony, and it appears that he was not<br />

aware of his own punning reference to L. Patrick Gray, the acting FBI Director who had<br />

"deep-sixed" Howard Hunt's incriminating records and who had then been left by<br />

Ehrlichman to "hang there" and to "twist slowly, slowly in the wind." <strong>Bush</strong> actually<br />

commented that Ehrlichman's comments on Gray had been in questionable taste. At this<br />

conference, <strong>Bush</strong> rubbed shoulders with Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter. [fn 42]

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