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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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To be very candid about it, it seems to me that the President has put you in a very awkward<br />

position. <strong>The</strong> need here is really to save the CIA. I do not need to recite what the Agency has gone<br />

through. It has been a very rough period. And it seems to me that the judgment of the President in<br />

this matter is at best imposing a terrible burden on the CIA and on you. It raises a problem here of<br />

nominating someone, who is a potential candidate, for service of less than a year. This is what<br />

really troubles me because I have the highest regard and personal respect for your ability and<br />

above all, your integrity. Mr. Chairman, it seems to me that the President should assure this<br />

committee that he will not ask Ambassador <strong>Bush</strong> to be on the ticket.<br />

Jackson, a former chairman of the Democratic national Committee, had turned down an<br />

offer from Nixon to be Secretary of Defense, and had cited his party post as a reason for<br />

declining. While <strong>George</strong> squirmed, Jackson kept repeating his litany that "Ambassador<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> is in an awkward position." <strong>Bush</strong> asked for the opportunity to reply, saying that he<br />

would make it "brief and strong." He began citing James Schlesinger serving a few<br />

months at the CIA before going on to the Pentagon, a lamentable comparison all around.<br />

With <strong>Bush</strong> red-faced and whining, knowing that the day was going very badly indeed,<br />

Stennis tried to put him out of his misery by ending the session. But even this was not<br />

vouchsafed to poor, tormented <strong>George</strong>. He still had to endure Senator Leahy explaining<br />

why he, too, would vote against the <strong>Bush</strong> nomination.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> whined in reply "Senator, I know you have arrived at your conclusion honestly and<br />

I would only say I think it is unfortunate that you can say I have the character and I have<br />

the integrity, the perception, but that the way it is looked at by somebody else overrides<br />

that." A candidate for the CIA was in mortal peril, but a public wimp was born.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had been savaged in the hearings, and his nomination was now in grave danger of<br />

being rejected by the committee, and then by the full Senate. Later in the afternoon of<br />

November 16, a damage control party met at the White House to assess the situation for<br />

Ford. [fn 18] According to Patrick O'Donnell of Ford's Congressional Relations Office,<br />

the most <strong>Bush</strong> could hope for was a bare majority of 9 out of 16 votes on the Stennis<br />

committee. This represented the committee Republicans, plus Stennis, Harry Byrd of<br />

Virginia, and Stuart Symington. But that was paper thin, thought O'Donnell: "This gives<br />

is a bare majority and will, of course, lead to an active floor fight which will bring the<br />

rank and file Democrats together in a vote which will embarrass the President and badly<br />

tarnish, if not destroy, one of his brightest stars." O'Donnell was much concerned that<br />

Jackson had "called for the President to pulicly remove <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> from the vice<br />

presidential race." Senator Cannon had not attended the hearings, and was hard to judge.<br />

Senator McIntyre obviously had serious reservations, and Culver, Leahy, and Gary Hart<br />

were all sure to vote no. A possible additional Democratic vote for <strong>Bush</strong> was that of Sam<br />

Nunn of Georgia, whom O'Donnell described as "also very hesitant but strongly respects<br />

<strong>George</strong> and has stated that a favorable vote would only be because of the personal<br />

relationship." O'Donnell urge Ford to call both Cannon and Nunn.<br />

LBJ had observed that Ford was so dull that he was incapable of walking and chewing<br />

gum at the same time. But now even Ford knew he was facing the shipwreck of one of<br />

his most politically sensitive nominations, important in his efforts to dissociate himself<br />

from the intelligence community mayhem of the recent past.

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