George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography

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who had condemned the District Court in Dallas when his client, Jack Ruby, was given
the death sentence for having slain Lee Harvey Oswald the previous November.


In public, LBJ was for Yarborough, although he could not wholly pass over the frictions
between the two. Speaking at Stonewall after the Democratic national convention, LBJ
had commented: "You have heard and you have read that Sen. Yarborough and I have
had differences at times. I have read a good deal more about them than I was ever aware
of. But I do want to say this, that I don't think that Texas has had a senator during my
lifetime whose record I am more familiar with than Sen. Yarborough's. And I don't think
Texas has had a senator that voted for the people more than Sen. Yarborough has voted
for them. And no member of the US Senate has stood up and fought for me or fought for
the people more since I became President than Ralph Yarborough." For his part, Bush
years later quoted a Time Magazine analysis of the 1964 senate race which concluded
that "if Lyndon would stay out of it, Republican Bush would have a chance. But Johnson
is not about to stay out of it, which makes Bush the underdog." [fn 26]


Yarborough for his part had referred to LBJ as a "power-mad Texas politician," and had
called on President Kennedy to keep LBJ out of Texas politics. Yarborough's attacks on
Connally were even more explicit and colorful: he accused Connally of acting like a
"viceroy, and we got rid of those in Texas when Mexico took over from Spain."
According to Yarborough, "Texas had not had a progressive governor since Jimmy
Alfred," who had held office in 1935-39. Bush took pains to spell out that this was an
attack on Democrats W. Lee O'Daniel, Coke Stevenson, Buford H. Jester, Allan Shivers,
Price Daniel, and John Connally.


Yarborough also criticized the right-wing oligarchs of the Dallas area for having
transformed that city from a Democratic town to a "citadel of reaction." For Yarborough,
the Fort Worth Star-Telegram was "worse than Pravda."


Yarborough's strategy in the November election centered on identifying Bush with
Goldwater in the minds of voters, since the Arizona Republican's warlike rhetoric was
now dragging him down to certain defeat. Yarborough's first instict had been to run a
substantive campaign, stressing issues and his own legislative accomplishments.
Yarborough in 1988 told Bush biographer Fitzhugh Green: "When I started my campaign
for re-election I was touting my record of six years in the senate. But my speech advisors
said, all you have to do is quote Bush, who had already called himself 100 per cent for
Goldwater and the Vietnam war. So that's what I did, and it worked very well." [fn 27]


Campaigning in Port Arthur on Oct. 30, a part of the state where his labor support loomed
large, Yarborough repeatedly attacked Bush as "more extreme than Barry Goldwater."
According to Yarborough, even after Barry Goldwater had repudiated the support of the
John Birch Society, Bush said that he "welcomed support of the Birch Society and
embraced it." "Let's you elect a senator from Texas, and not the Connecticut investment
bankers with their $2,500,000," Yarborough urged the voters. [fn 28]

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