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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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<strong>Bush</strong>'s special treatment during the 1970 campaign was a subject of acute resentment,<br />

especially among senate Republicans Ford needed to keep on board. Back in 1970,<br />

Senator Mark Hatfield of Oregon had demanded to know why John Tower had given<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> nearly twice as much money as any other Senate Republican. Senator Tower had<br />

tried to deny favoritism, but Hatfield and Edward Brooke of Massachusetts had not been<br />

placated. Now there was the threat that if <strong>Bush</strong> had to go through lengthy confirmation<br />

hearings in the Congress, the entire Townhouse affair might be dredged up once again.<br />

According to some accounts, there were as many as 18 Republican senators who had<br />

gotten money from Townhouse, but whose names had not been divulged. [fn 11] Any<br />

attempt to force <strong>Bush</strong> through as vice president might lead to the fingering of these<br />

senators, and perhaps others, mightily antagonizing those who had figured they were<br />

getting off with a whole coat. Ripping off the scabs of Watergate wounds in this way<br />

conflicted withe Ford's "healing time" strategy, which was designed to put an hermetic lid<br />

on the festering mass of Watergate. <strong>Bush</strong> was too dangerous to Ford. <strong>Bush</strong> could not be<br />

chosen. .<br />

Because he was so redolent of Nixonian sleaze, <strong>Bush</strong>'s maximum exertions for the vice<br />

presidency were a failure. Ford announced his choice of Nelson Rockefeller on August<br />

20, 1974. It was nevertheless astounding that <strong>Bush</strong> had come so close. He was defeated<br />

for the moment, but he had established a claim on the office of the vice presidency that he<br />

would not relinquish. Despite his hollow, arrogant ambition and total incompetence for<br />

the office, he would automnatically be considered for the vice presidency in 1976 and<br />

then again in 1980. For <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was an aristocrat of senatorial rank, although denied<br />

the senate, and his conduct betrayed the conviction that he was owed not just a place at<br />

the public trough, but the accolade of national political office.<br />

NOTES:<br />

1. Washington Post, August 16, 1974.<br />

2. Washington Post, August 9, 1974.<br />

3. Washington Post, August 16, 1974.<br />

4. Gerald R. Ford Library, Robert T. Hartman Files, Box 21.<br />

5. Gerald R. Ford Library, Robert T. Hartmann Files, Box 19.<br />

6. Philip Buchen Files, Box 63.<br />

7. Robert T. Hartman Files, Box 21.<br />

8. Robert T. Hartmann Files, Boxes 19 and 20.<br />

9. Robert T. Hartmann Files, Box 21.

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