Word: postcampaign
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...John Buckley, Bob Dole's communications director. He and Dole never met after the Republican Convention. When Dole approached an office and saw Buckley there, he headed in another direction. Why? "Too many leaks," says one of Dole's senior advisers. "Dole's no dummy." Buckley complicated his postcampaign life as well. Through an intermediary, he urged Dole to especially go after the New York Times during his bash-the-liberal-media phase. Sources say Buckley was peeved at Times coverage and sought revenge. But he wants his role kept secret, since he is worried that the paper will...
...financial disclosure form he filed in 1981 among the sources from which he received more than $5,000 (he did identify the foundation, which paid him $14,085). An associate says Meese, for simplicity's sake, ignored the "proliferation of names" among the many campaign and postcampaign organizations, but he did include both payments in $59,940 listed as "income from law and consulting practice." Generally, all the payments from the transition funds would be legal so long as the recipients reported them to the Internal Revenue Service and paid taxes on them...
...been taken in by the ultra-left-wing McGovern liberals in the U.S. Senate." In fact, Morgan was among the most conservative Democrats in the Senate. East's ads charged that Morgan had voted "to scrap the B-1 bomber." Morgan, in a 39-page postcampaign rebuttal to the East ads, said he had voted twice for the B1, voting against only the last-ditch effort to build five prototypes as a bailout for the manufacturer...
...Eisenhower's 13-day vacation at the Augusta National Golf Club drew to a close last week, Mamie Eisenhower measured the results with a wifely eye. By week's end she knew that Ike was soaring out of a case of real postcampaign fatigue. He had taken on a deep new tan and recovered his old bounce. The veins that stood out on his forehead and hands during the last days of the campaign were no longer visible. And, most convincing to any wife, Ike remembered Mamie's birthday (her 56th) with a pink wool robe...
Post-Campaign Funds. The audit showed that at least $13,000 of the surplus in the 1948 campaign fund came from postcampaign contributions, made after Stevenson was elected governor. Among these was one anonymous item of $5,000. entered exactly a week after the election. Many businessmen who sell supplies to the state were on the contributors' list, e.g., Stuyvesant Peabody Jr., president of the Peabody Coal Co., whose firm sells thousands of dollars worth of coal to the state. He gave...
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