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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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On July 28, 1952, as the election approached, Connecticut's senior U.S. Senator, James<br />

O'Brien McMahon, died at the age of 48.*<br />

This was extremely convenient for Prescott. He got the Republican nomination for U.S.<br />

Senator at a special delegated meeting, with backing by the Yale-dominated state party<br />

leadership. Now he would run in a special election for the suddenly vacant Senate seat.<br />

He could expect to be swept into office, since he would be on the same electoral ticket as<br />

the popular war hero, General Ike. By a technicality, he would instantly become<br />

Connecticut's senior Senator, with extra power in Congress. And the next regularly<br />

scheduled senatorial race would be in 1956 (when McMahon's term would have ended),<br />

so Prescott could run again in that presidential election year--once again on Ike's<br />

coattails!<br />

With this arrangement, things worked out very smoothly. In Eisenhower's 1952 election<br />

victory, Ike won Connecticut by a margin of 129,507 votes out of 1,092,471. Prescott<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> came in last among the statewide Republicans, but managed to win by 30,373 out<br />

of 1,088,799 votes case, his margin nearly 100,000 behind Eisenhower. He took the<br />

traditionally Republican towns.<br />

In Eisenhower's 1956 reelection, Ike won Connecticut by 303,036 out of 1,114,954 votes,<br />

the largest presidential margin in Connecticut's history. Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> managed to win<br />

again, by 129,544 votes out of 1,085,206--his margin this time 290,082 smaller than<br />

Eisenhower's.@s1@s3<br />

In January 1963, when this electoral strategy had been played out and his second term<br />

expired, Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> retired from government and returned to Brown Brothers<br />

Harriman.<br />

<strong>The</strong> 1952 Eisenhower victory made John Foster Dulles Secretary of State, and his brother<br />

Allen Dulles head of the CIA. <strong>The</strong> reigning Dulles brothers were the `` Republican ''<br />

replacements for their client and business partner, `` Democrat '' Averell Harriman.<br />

Occasional public posturings aside, their strategic commitments were identical to his.<br />

Undoubtedly the most important work accomplished by Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> in the new regime<br />

was on the golf links, where he was Ike's favorite partner.<br />

Toward the ``National Security State''<br />

Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> was a most elusive, secretive Senator. By diligent research, his views on<br />

some issues may be traced: He was opposed to the development of public power projects<br />

like the Tennessee Valley Authority; he opposed the constitutional amendment<br />

introduced by Ohio Senator John W. Bricker, which would have required congressional<br />

approval of international agreements by the executive branch.<br />

But Prescott <strong>Bush</strong> was essentially a covert operative in Washington.

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