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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>The</strong> next day <strong>Bush</strong> was at it again, announcing that he was re- opening an investigation<br />

into alleged courses in political sabotage and dirty tricks taught by the GOP to college<br />

Republicans in weekend seminars during 1971 and 1972. <strong>Bush</strong> pledged to "get to the<br />

bottom" of charges that the College Republican National Committee, with 1000 campus<br />

clubs and 100,000 members listed had provided instruction in dirty tricks. ""I'm a little<br />

less relaxed and more concerned than when you first brought it to our attention," <strong>Bush</strong><br />

told journalists. [fn 43]<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had clearly distanced himself from the fate of the Nixon White House. By the time<br />

Spiro Agnew resigned as vice president on October 10, 1973, <strong>Bush</strong> was in a position to<br />

praise Agnew for his "great personal courage" while endorsing the resignation as "in the<br />

best interest of the country." [fn 44]<br />

Later the same month came Nixon's Saturday night massacre, the firing of Special<br />

Prosecutor Cox and the resignation of Attorney General Elliot Richardson and his deputy,<br />

William Ruckelshaus. To placate public opinion, Nixon agreed to obey a court order<br />

compelling him to hand over his White House tapes. <strong>Bush</strong> had said that Nixon was<br />

suffering from a "confidence crisis" about the tapes, but now commented that what Nixon<br />

had done "will have a soothing effect. Clearly it will help politically...Hopefully, his<br />

move will cool the emotions and permit the President to deal with matters of enormous<br />

domestic and international concern." [fn 45] Later, in November, <strong>Bush</strong> bowed out of a<br />

possible candidacy in the 1974 Texas gubernatorial race. Speculation was that "the<br />

specter of Watergate" would have been used against him, but <strong>Bush</strong> preferred<br />

sanctimonious explanations. "Very candidly," he said, being governor of Texas has<br />

enormous appeal to me, but our political system is under fire and I have an overriding<br />

sense of responsibility that compels me to remain in my present job." <strong>Bush</strong> said that<br />

Watergate was "really almost...nonexistent" as in issue in the Texas race. "Corruption and<br />

clean government didn't show up very high at all," he concluded. [fn 46]<br />

By the spring of 1974, the impending doom of the Nixon regime was the cue for <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

characteristic reedy whining. In May of 1974, after a meeting of the Republican<br />

Congressional leadership with Nixon, <strong>Bush</strong> told his friend Congressman Barber Conable<br />

that he was considering resigning from the RNC. Conable did not urge him to stay on. A<br />

few days later, John Rhodes, who had replaced Gerald Ford as House Minority Leader<br />

when Ford was tapped by Nixon for the vice presidency, told a meeting of House<br />

Republicans that <strong>Bush</strong> was getting ready to resign, and if he did so, it would be<br />

impossible for the White House to "get anybody of stature to take his place." [fn 47]<br />

But even in the midst of the final collapse, <strong>Bush</strong> still made occasional ingratiating<br />

gestures to Nixon. Nixon pathetically recounts how <strong>Bush</strong> made him an encouraging offer<br />

in July, 1974, about a month before the end: "<strong>The</strong>re were other signs of the sort that<br />

political pros might be expected to appreciate: NC Chairman <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> called the<br />

White House to say that he would like to have me appear on a fund-raising telethon." [fn<br />

48] This is what <strong>Bush</strong> was telling Nixon. But during this same period, Father John<br />

McLaughlin of the Nixon staff asked <strong>Bush</strong> for RNC lists of GOP diehards across the

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