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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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of 20 votes out of 1,336 cast, and Maine was really his home state, but the Brown<br />

Brothers, Harriman networks at the New York Times delivered a frontpage lead story<br />

with a subhead that read "<strong>Bush</strong> gaining stature as '80 contender."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s biggest lift of the 1980 campaign came when he won a plurality in the January 21<br />

Iowa caucuses, narrowly besting Reagan, who had not put any effort into the state. At this<br />

point the Brown Brothers, Harriman/Skull and Bones media operation went into high<br />

gear. That same night Walter Cronkite told viewers: "<strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> has apparently done<br />

what he hoped to do, coming out of the pack as the principal challenger to front-runner<br />

Ronald Reagan."<br />

In the interval between January 21 and the New Hampshire primary of February 26, the<br />

Eastern Liberal Establishment labored mightily to put <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> into power as<br />

president that same year. <strong>The</strong> press hype in favor of <strong>Bush</strong> was overwhelming.<br />

Newsweek's cover featured a happy and smiling <strong>Bush</strong> talking with his supporters:<br />

"BUSH BREAKS OUT OF THE PACK," went the headline. Smaller picutres showed a<br />

scowling Senator Baker and a decidedly un-telegenic Reagan grimacing before a<br />

microphone. <strong>The</strong> Newsweek reporters played up <strong>Bush</strong>'s plan to redo the Carter script<br />

from 1976, and went on to assert that <strong>Bush</strong>'s triumph in Iowa "raised the serious<br />

possibility that he could accomplish on the Republican side this year what Carter did in<br />

1976--parlay a well-tuned personal appetite for on-the-ground campaigning into a Long<br />

March to his party's Presidential nomination." So wrote the magazine controlled by the<br />

family money of <strong>Bush</strong>'s old business associate Eugene Meyer, and <strong>Bush</strong> was<br />

appreciative; doubly so for the reference to his old friend Mao.<br />

Time, which had been founded by Henry Luce of Skull and Bones, showed a huge,<br />

grinning <strong>Bush</strong> and a smaller, very cross Reagan, headlined: "BUSH SOARS." <strong>The</strong><br />

leading polls, always doctored by the intelligence agencies and other interests, showed a<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> boom: Lou Harris found that whereas Reagan had led <strong>Bush</strong> into Iowa by 32-6<br />

nationwide, <strong>Bush</strong> had pulled even with Reagan at 27-27 within 24 hours after the Iowa<br />

result had become known.<br />

Savvy Republican operatives were reported to be flocking to the <strong>Bush</strong> bandwagon. Even<br />

seasoned observers stuck their necks out; Witcover and Germond wrote in their column<br />

of February 22 that "a rough consensus is taking shape among moderate Republican<br />

politicians that <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> may achieve a commanding position within the next three<br />

weeks in the contest for the Republican nomination. And those with unresolved<br />

reservations about <strong>Bush</strong> are beginning to wonder privately if it is even possible to keep<br />

an alternative politically alive for the late primaries."<br />

Robert Healy of the Boston Globe stuck his neck out even further for the neo-Harrimanite<br />

cause with a forecast that "even though he is still called leading candidate in some places,<br />

Reagan does not look like he'll be on the Presidential stage much longer." It was even<br />

possible, Healy gushed that <strong>Bush</strong> "will go through 1980...without losing an important<br />

Presidential primary." William Safire of the New York Times claimed that his contacts<br />

with Republican insiders across the country had yielded "a growing suspicion that

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