Presidential Victory Committee

The Presidential Victory Committee was an "independent expenditure" (I.E.) project of conservative activist Floyd G. Brown in the run up to the 1992 presidential election. In November 1988, Brown was the creator of the related Citizens United.

In 1992, the Committee was headed by David N. Bossie, its executive director.

Americans for Bush
"Four years ago [in 1988], these conservative ideologues called themselves 'Americans for Bush'; this time they're the 'Presidential Victory Committee'," Michael Kramer wrote April 20, 1992, in TIME Magazine.

Citizens United for a Bush Agenda
A version of the Committee project Citizens for Bush&mdash;George H.W. Bush&mdash;currently exists as Citizens United for the Bush Agenda, a project of Citizens United.

Related SourceWatch articles

 * 2007 Conservative Victory Committee
 * Michael Boos
 * soft money
 * The Presidential Coalition

External articles

 * Black Max, "This Far and No Further. A Timeline of Events Surrounding the Radical Right's Attempt to Subvert American Democracy," IraqTimeline.com for 1992. See April 1992.
 * Eric Engberg, "Campaign '92 / Presidential Victory Committee / Clinton," CBS Evening News, July 13, 1992 (Television News Archive).
 * Eric Engberg, "Campaign '92 / Democratic National Convention / Presidential Victory Committee / Bush / Brown / Drug Problem," CBS Evening News, July 14, 1992.
 * Laurence I. Barrett, "Baby Huey on the ATTACK," TIME Magazine, July 20, 1992.
 * Joe Conason, "Why was it OK to write about George H.W. Bush's alleged affairs in 1992, while bashing Drudge's scandal-mongering today? Because the right still uses sex rumors to smear Democrats while protecting its own adulterers," Salon, February 17, 2004.