The Man From Russell: One Moment Archiver

    • News

In his first run for Senate in 1968, Bob Dole had no trouble winning. He crushed Gov. William Avery in the Republican primary with 68% of the vote and in the general election he beat Democrat William I. Robinson with 60%.

It probably didn’t hurt that Tonight Show regular and Kansas City jazz singer Marilyn Maye sang his campaign jingle, a far cry from the Bob-O-Links in Russell. But Dole’s reelection in 1974 with Congressman Bill Roy from Topeka was a political knife fight.

In 1971 President Richard Nixon appointed Dole Republican National Committee chairman. Then there was Watergate, and in the ’74 campaign Democrats wanted to know what Dole knew about the break in. It would dog him the entire campaign. Especially when the national columnist Jack Anderson reported on June 1st that the Dole campaign hired famous Nixon, and later Trump, dirty trickster Roger Stone.

In a statement five days later, the Dole campaign accused Roy of leaking the Stone hiring to Anderson. He said Anderson and a group of liberal writers were engaged in a number of dirty tricks aimed at Senator Dole. Stone was fired.

The polls showed Dole trailing Roy. But it was the Kansas State Fair debate that changed Dole’s fortunes in politics forever. The debate was supposed to focus exclusively on agriculture. But with just a few minutes left, Dole accused Roy, an obstetrician and lawyer, of favoring abortion on demand.

Roy said no such a thing in the debate but the accusation stuck and Dole, barely, was reelected.

In his first run for Senate in 1968, Bob Dole had no trouble winning. He crushed Gov. William Avery in the Republican primary with 68% of the vote and in the general election he beat Democrat William I. Robinson with 60%.

It probably didn’t hurt that Tonight Show regular and Kansas City jazz singer Marilyn Maye sang his campaign jingle, a far cry from the Bob-O-Links in Russell. But Dole’s reelection in 1974 with Congressman Bill Roy from Topeka was a political knife fight.

In 1971 President Richard Nixon appointed Dole Republican National Committee chairman. Then there was Watergate, and in the ’74 campaign Democrats wanted to know what Dole knew about the break in. It would dog him the entire campaign. Especially when the national columnist Jack Anderson reported on June 1st that the Dole campaign hired famous Nixon, and later Trump, dirty trickster Roger Stone.

In a statement five days later, the Dole campaign accused Roy of leaking the Stone hiring to Anderson. He said Anderson and a group of liberal writers were engaged in a number of dirty tricks aimed at Senator Dole. Stone was fired.

The polls showed Dole trailing Roy. But it was the Kansas State Fair debate that changed Dole’s fortunes in politics forever. The debate was supposed to focus exclusively on agriculture. But with just a few minutes left, Dole accused Roy, an obstetrician and lawyer, of favoring abortion on demand.

Roy said no such a thing in the debate but the accusation stuck and Dole, barely, was reelected.

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