John Sears, Strategist for Nixon and Reagan, Dies at 79

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John Sears, Strategist for Nixon and Reagan, Dies at 79

John P. Sears, a Republican political strategist who labored for Richard M. Nixon and Ronald Reagan and was fired by each, died on Thursday in Miam


John P. Sears, a Republican political strategist who labored for Richard M. Nixon and Ronald Reagan and was fired by each, died on Thursday in Miami. He was 79.

His son, James, confirmed the loss of life. He stated Mr. Sears had a coronary heart assault.

Often referred to within the information media as a modern-day Machiavelli or Rasputin, Mr. Sears was solely 28 in 1968 when he served as deputy director of area operations for Nixon and helped him safe the Republican presidential nomination. He then labored briefly as deputy counsel within the White Home.

However he was perceived as overly formidable and never deferential sufficient to the Nixon crowd; the administration even had his telephone tapped. Inside a yr, he was fired.

The firing was really a blessing: It eliminated Mr. Sears from the Watergate scandal, which led to Nixon’s resignation as president.

But the Schweiker strike earned Mr. Sears high marks for boldness and creativity.

“He was a master strategist,” Mark Shields, a Democratic political commentator who sometimes appeared on television talk shows with Mr. Sears, said in a phone interview on Friday. “But he didn’t suffer fools, and that was his ultimate undoing.”

Mr. Sears helped run Reagan’s successful bid for the nomination in 1980. But he was fired during the New Hampshire primary just before the returns came in showing that Reagan had crushed George H.W. Bush.

Mr. Sears had run afoul of Reagan’s California team, including Reagan’s wife, Nancy, who found him overly controlling and viewed him as preventing Reagan from being himself. Reagan even told the presidential historian Theodore H. White, “There was a feeling that I was just kind of a spokesman for John Sears.”

At a news conference after he was fired, Mr. Sears, whom The Washington Post called “the spurned Machiavelli of Republican politics,” described the Reagan campaign as torn by internal rivalries. He also said that the candidate was unprepared on the issues.

“He got tagged as the guy who wouldn’t let Reagan be Reagan,” James Sears said in a phone interview. “He was accused of diluting the message to appeal to the middle.”

Even though he was fired, Mr. Sears said he still supported Reagan for president.

“I’m supposed to have a reputation as a coldblooded politician,” he said at the news conference. “But I’ve been in this business 15 years, and I can tell you, this particular election is more important than any I’ve seen before.”

Reagan went on to win the election in November in a 44-state landslide, ousting President Jimmy Carter, a Democrat.

“He was never crosswise with Democrats just because they were Democrats,” James Sears said. He was a pragmatist and a strategist, he said, not an ideologue. “He just wanted to win.”

After his clerkship, Mr. Sears joined Nixon’s Manhattan law firm, Nixon, Mudge, Rose, Alexander, Guthrie & Mitchell. After he was fired from the Nixon White House, he returned to private practice, joining the Washington law firm Gadsby Hannah, where he worked from 1970 to 1976.

He left politics after the 1980 Reagan campaign, though he went on to serve as a political analyst on NBC’s “Today” show and elsewhere.

He joined with a Democratic lawyer, Philip Baskin, to form the law firm Baskin and Sears. Mr. Sears left in the mid-1980s after critics made an issue of his having represented South Africa’s apartheid government.

He later started his own small firm. Representing the tobacco companies, he helped facilitate the settlement between the tobacco industry and the states. Many state attorneys general had to be convinced that the settlement was good for their states (and wouldn’t hurt their careers).

“John was always wise beyond his years and beyond his peers,” Mr. Shields said. “He was good company, he could make you laugh, and he always made you think.”



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