Lance introduced himself to
Jimmy Carter at the 1966 annual meeting of the Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission. He aided Carter in campaigning in the northwest part of Georgia for Governor that year. Carter did not qualify for the general election, but after running again and winning in 1970, he invited Lance to become
State Highway Director. and Defense Secretary
Harold Brown Lance was an adviser to Carter during his successful
1976 presidential campaign. After Carter's victory over President
Gerald Ford, Lance was named Director of the
Office of Management and the Budget (OMB). According to former OMB officials, it was well known in the department that Bert Lance and President Carter prayed together every morning. Within six months, questions were raised by the press and
Congress about mismanagement and corruption when Lance was
chairman of the board of Calhoun First National Bank of Georgia.
William Safire's article written during this time, ''Carter's Broken Lance'', earned a
Pulitzer Prize in 1978. It was an embarrassment for Carter's administration, particularly as it took place soon after President Nixon's
Watergate scandal and President Ford's
pardon of Nixon just before he could be tried for any crimes. To ensure there was no hint of similar impropriety in the Carter administration, Lance resigned his position. Later, after a well-publicized trial in 1980, a jury acquitted Lance on nine charges, and did not decide two others. In 1981, Lance returned to the Calhoun First National Bank as chairman; he left in 1986. He then made something of a political comeback in 1982 when he was elected Chairman of the
Georgia Democratic Party. In 1984,
Walter Mondale – who was the Democratic candidate for U.S. President at the time – sought to name Lance chairman of the
Democratic National Committee, but was forced to withdraw his name after opposition from Democratic party members. Lance's appointment as general manager of the 1984 campaign lasted only a few weeks. Lance was an advisor to
Jesse Jackson during Jackson's 1988 presidential campaign. == "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" ==