As packaged by Bush's handlers, it was throughly racist without being nominally so, like
Nixon's "crime in the streets" shorthand for racist backlash during the 1968 campaign.
Later, Bush would embroider this theme with his demand for the death penalty, his own
Final Solution to the problem of criminals like Willie Horton. These themes fit very well
into the standard Bush campaign event, which was very often Bush appearing before a
local police department to receive their endorsement. Bush's ability to organize these
events in places like Boston, to the great embarrassment of Dukakis, doubtless reflected
strong support from the CIA Office of Security, which was the bureau that kept in contact
with police departments all over the country and, inevitably, infiltrated them.
All of Bush's themes corresponded to wedge issues, the divisive Pavlovian ploys the
southern Republicans had become expert in during their decades of battering and
dismantling the classic Franklin D. Roosevelt coalition of labor, the cities, blacks,
farmers, and intellectuals. They were designed to propitiate the vilest prejudices of a
majority, while offending a minority, and studiously avoiding any real politics or
economics that might be deterimental to the imperatives of Wall Street or the Washington
bureaucracy.
To crown this demagogy, George H.W. Bush of Skull and Bones portrayed Dukakis as an
elitist insider: "Governor Dukakis, his foreign-policy views born in Harvard Yard's
boutique, would cut the muscle of our defense." Bush's frequent litany of "liberal
Massachusetts governor" was shameless in its main purpose of suggesting that Bush
himself was NOT a liberal. Later, in 1990, Barbara Bush would confess that both she and
George "cared about people" and were thus both liberals.
When Bush arrived in New Orleans for the Republican National Convention, he
displayed signs of being unusually race-conscious. The image-mongers had set up a
Reagan-Bush meeting on the airbase taxiway; Reagan was departing the convention after
a long nostalgic-platitudinous farewell the day before. Now he would pass the mantle to
George, with the appropriate camera angles. After a few seconds of small talk with
Reagan, Bush and Bar called over three of their grandchildren, all from the family of
their son Jeb, the Miami GOP party boss, and his Ibero-American wife Columba. "That's
Jebbie's kids from Florida," Bush said, in a voice that was picked up by the airport public
address system. "The little brown ones. Jebbie's the big one in the yellow shirt saying the
pledge of allegiance tonight." "Oh, really," observed Nancy Reagan. Skin color has
always meant a lot to Bush, but he really had been born with a silver foot in his mouth.
[fn 36]
Bush now repaired to the admiral's house at the Belle Chase Naval Air Station where this
scene had played. Bush was accompanied by Baker, Teeter, Fuller, Atwater, Ailes, and
Baker's girl Friday, Margaret Tutwiler. Up to this point Bush's staff had expected him to
generate a little suspense around the convention by withholding the name of his vice
presidential choice until the morning of the last day of the convention, when Bush could
share his momentous secret with the Texas caucus and then tell it to the world.