George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography

(Ann) #1

Chapter –XXII


Bush Takes The Presidency


Oderint dum metuant


(Let them hate me, provided that they fear me.)


Accius, "Atreus" (c. 125 BC), attributed by Suetonius to Caligula.


George Bush's quest for the summit of American political power was so sustained and so
unrelenting that it is impossible to assign the beginning of his campaign for president to
any specific date. It is more accurate to report that his entire tenure as vice president was
consumed by the renovation and expansion of his personal and family network for the
purpose of seizing the presidency at some point in the future. During this phase, Bush
was far more concerned with organizational and machine-building matters than with
ideology or public relations. For most of the 1980's, it was convenient for Bush to
cultivate the public profile of a faithful and even obsequious deputy to Reagan, while
using the office of the vice president to build a national-electoral and international-
overt/covert power cartel.


This arrangement worked very well for Bush, since it gave the Bush camarilla
considerable power in the inner councils of the second Reagan administration. But as the
1987-1988 period approached. it also became clear that Bush's public toadying to the
Reagan mystique had been so exaggerated as to give rise to his notorious "wimp"
problem. Bush could easily have refuted these charges by citing the long series of brutal
and bloody covert and semi-covert interventions he had directed in his role as boss of the
Special Situation Group, but he judged this impolitic.


Bush started with the knowledge that he was a weak candidate. Reagan had embodied the
popular ideology in such a flawless way as to remind everyone of their favorite uncle;
whatever the crimes of his administration, whatever the decline of their living standards,
the masses could not hate him; this was why Reagan was such an ideal facade for regime
that kept getting nastier. Reagan also had an ideological following of people who would
support him almost without regard to what he did: Reagan was the beneficiary of the
fully justified ideological backlash against the Democrats and Carter, against the
Rockefeller-Ford liberal Republicans.

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