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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Finally it came to a roll call and <strong>Bush</strong> passed by a vote of 64-27, with Lowell Weicker of<br />

Connecticut voting present. Those voting against <strong>Bush</strong> were: Abourezk, Biden, Bumpers,<br />

Church, Clark, Cranston, Culver, Durkin, Ford, Gary Hart, Philip Hart, Haskell, Helms<br />

[the lone GOP opponent], Huddleston, Inouye, Johnston, Kennedy, Leahy, Magnuson,<br />

McIntyre, Metcalf, Mondale, Morgan, Nelson, Proxmire, Stone, and Williams. Church's<br />

staff felt they had failed lamentably, having gotten only liberal Democrats and the single<br />

Republican vote of Jesse Helms. [fn 23.<br />

It was the day after <strong>Bush</strong>'s confirmation that the House Rules committee voted 9 to 7 to<br />

block the publication of the Pike Committee report. <strong>The</strong> issue then went to the full House<br />

on January 29, which voted, 146 to 124, that the Pike Committee must submit its report<br />

to censorship by the White House and thus by the CIA. At almost the same time, Senator<br />

Howard Baker joined Tower and Goldwater in opposing the principal final<br />

recommendation of the Church Committee, such as it was, the establishment of a<br />

permanent intelligence oversight committee.<br />

Pike found that the attempt to censor his report had made "a complete travesty of the<br />

whole doctrine of separation of powers." In the view of a staffer of the Church<br />

committee, "all within two days, the House Intelligence Committee had ground to a halt,<br />

and the Senate Intelligence Committee had split asunder over the centerpiece of its<br />

recommendations. <strong>The</strong> White House must have rejoiced; the Welch death and leaks from<br />

the Pike committee report had produced, at last, a backlash against the congressional<br />

investigations." [fn 24]<br />

Riding the crest of that wave of backlash was <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. <strong>The</strong> constellation of events<br />

around his confirmation prefigures the wretched state of Congress today: a rubber stamp<br />

parliament in a totalitarian state, incapable of overriding even one of <strong>Bush</strong>'s 22 vetoes.<br />

On Friday, January 30, Ford and <strong>Bush</strong> were joined at the CIA auditorium for <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

swearing in ceremony before a large gathering of agency employees. Colby was also<br />

there: some said he had been fired primarily because Kissinger thought that he was<br />

divulging too much to the Congressional committees, but Kissinger later told Colby that<br />

the latter's stratagems had been correct. Colby opened the ceremony with a few brief<br />

words: "Mr. President, and Mr. <strong>Bush</strong>, I have the great honor to present you to an<br />

organization of dedicated professionals. Despite the turmoil and tumult of the last year,<br />

they continue to produce the best intelligence in the world." This was met by a burst of<br />

applause. [fn 25] Ford's line was: "We cannot improve this agency by destroying it."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> promised to make "CIA an instrument of peace and an object of pride for all our<br />

people." <strong>Bush</strong> went on to say: "I will not turn my back from the past. We've learned a lot<br />

about what an intelligence agency must do to maintain the confidence of the people in an<br />

open society. But the emphasis will now be on the future. I'm determined to protect those<br />

things that must be kept secret. And I am more determined to protect those unselfish and<br />

patriotic people who with total dedication serve their country, often putting thjeir lives on<br />

the line, only to have some people bent on destroying this agency expose their names." A<br />

number of senators were invited, with Stennis, Thurmond, Tower, Goldwater, Baker and

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