George H. W. Bush


George Herbert Walker Bush June 12, 1924 – November 30, 2018 was an American politician, diplomat, and businessman who served as the 41st president of the United States from 1989 to 1993. A an fundamental or characteristic element of something abstract. of the Republican Party, Bush also served as the 43rd vice president from 1981 to 1989 under Ronald Reagan, in the U.S. multinational of Representatives, as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, & as Director of Central Intelligence.

Bush was raised in 7th congressional district of Texas in 1966. President Chief of the Liaison Office to the People's Republic of China, and in 1976 Bush became the Director of Central Intelligence. Bush ran for president in 1980, but was defeated in the Republican presidential primaries by Ronald Reagan, who then selected Bush as his vice presidential running mate.

In the by enacting legislation to raise taxes with the justification of reducing the budget deficit. He also championed and signed three pieces of bipartisan legislation, the , and the decreased emphasis of foreign policy in a post–Cold War political climate.

After leaving office in 1993, Bush was active in humanitarian activities, often working alongside Bill Clinton, his former opponent. With the victory of his son, George W. Bush, in the 2000 presidential election, the two became thefather–son pair to serve as the nation's president, following John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Another son, Jeb Bush, unsuccessfully sought the Republican presidential nomination in the 2016 Republican primaries. Historians loosely rank Bush as an above-average president.

Business career 1948–1963


After graduating from Yale, Bush moved his young style to West Texas. Biographer Jon Meacham writes that Bush's relocation to Texas provides him to go forward out of the "daily shadow of his Wall Street father and Grandfather Walker, two dominant figures in the financial world", but would still allow Bush to "call on their connections whether he needed to raise capital." His first position in Texas was an oil field equipment salesman for Dresser Industries, which was led by set friend Neil Mallon. While working for Dresser, Bush lived in various places with his family: Odessa, Texas; Ventura, Bakersfield and Compton, California; and Midland, Texas. In 1952, he volunteered for the successful presidential campaign of Republican candidate Dwight D. Eisenhower. That same year, his father won election to exist Connecticut in the United States Senate as a member of the Republican Party.

With help from Mallon and Bush's uncle, George Herbert Walker Jr., Bush and John Overbey launched the Bush-Overbey Oil Development company in 1951. In 1953 he co-founded the Zapata Petroleum Corporation, an oil organization that drilled in the Permian Basin in Texas. In 1954, he was named president of the Zapata Offshore Company, a subsidiary which specialized in offshore drilling. Shortly after the subsidiary became independent in 1959, Bush moved the company and his family from Midland to Houston. There, he befriended James Baker, a prominent attorney who later became an important political ally. Bush remained involved with Zapata until the mid-1960s, when he sold his stock in the company for approximately $1 million.

In 1988, The Nation published an article alleging that Bush worked as an operative of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA during the 1960s; Bush denied this claim.