Author Topic: Another Bush in the White House?  (Read 44400 times)

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #75 on: April 24, 2013, 09:40:00 PM »
Jeb/Rubio.   

33, is that like, the ultimate nighmare GOP ticket for you?

Toss that up against Hilary/some southerner and blah...

Soul Crusher

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #76 on: April 25, 2013, 02:47:49 AM »
Jeb/Rubio.   

33, is that like, the ultimate nighmare GOP ticket for you?

Toss that up against Hilary/some southerner and blah...

Ill stay home.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #77 on: April 25, 2013, 05:45:07 AM »
Ill stay home.

ya say that now... BUT I bet the dem offering would be so shitty that you'd hold your nose and vote for Bush/Approvio.

Romney and mccain were fcking jokes.  I mean, just comic book punch-outs of what senile or wealthy politicians looked like.  Phony as shit.  and half the country were wearing their signs and bumper stickers. 

A repup ticket no matter how bad, is still not as bad as whatever the dem ticket will be.   You'd vote Bush/Rubio over Clinton/Whoever.  I'm sure ya would.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #78 on: April 25, 2013, 05:55:38 AM »
ya say that now... BUT I bet the dem offering would be so shitty that you'd hold your nose and vote for Bush/Approvio.

Romney and mccain were fcking jokes.  I mean, just comic book punch-outs of what senile or wealthy politicians looked like.  Phony as shit.  and half the country were wearing their signs and bumper stickers. 

A repup ticket no matter how bad, is still not as bad as whatever the dem ticket will be.   You'd vote Bush/Rubio over Clinton/Whoever.  I'm sure ya would.


No. I'm done done done.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #79 on: April 25, 2013, 08:19:56 AM »

No. I'm done done done.

in that case, props props props.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #80 on: April 25, 2013, 08:27:40 AM »
in that case, props props props.

No political dynasties.  You would think the democrat slaves would feel the same about hitlery - but they are all into icon worship and are slobbering at the thought of her

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #81 on: April 25, 2013, 09:15:58 AM »
No political dynasties.  You would think the democrat slaves would feel the same about hitlery - but they are all into icon worship and are slobbering at the thought of her

a lot of republicans voted for her in 2008 because a drug arrest pundit told them to.   

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #82 on: April 25, 2013, 12:29:46 PM »
Did you see the Barbara Bush quote today?  She wasn't smiling when she said it.  And his peers will remind him often "his own mother said no more bushes"...

I think today is a big blow to jeb, who has been quietly assembling a team.  His mother doesn't want to put the family thru it again.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #83 on: April 25, 2013, 12:35:17 PM »
Did you see the Barbara Bush quote today?  She wasn't smiling when she said it.  And his peers will remind him often "his own mother said no more bushes"...

I think today is a big blow to jeb, who has been quietly assembling a team.  His mother doesn't want to put the family thru it again.

F the Bush family - the nation shouldnt be put through it again.   


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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #84 on: April 25, 2013, 05:24:00 PM »
I will vote for Hillary or Obama as dictator for life before I waste my vote on that inbred piece of shit.

If I never see, hear or read about a a Bush family politician again- it will be too soon.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #85 on: April 25, 2013, 06:44:36 PM »
I will vote for Hillary or Obama as dictator for life before I waste my vote on that inbred piece of shit.

If I never see, hear or read about a a Bush family politician again- it will be too soon.

no


i would vote for Hillary and then Jeb then Obama

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #86 on: June 26, 2013, 12:10:35 PM »
Jeb Bush: Obama 'Utter and Complete Failure'
Tuesday, 25 Jun 2013
By Bill Hoffmann

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, sounding more and more like a presidential candidate in 2016, tore into President Barack Obama, calling his administration "an utter and complete failure."

Bush was the keynote speaker Tuesday night at the Conservative Party of New York State's 51st Annual Dinner in New York City, where he received the Charles M. Edison Memorial Award, named after inventor Thomas Edison's son, a former New Jersey governor and secretary of the Navy.

Also receiving the Charles M. Edison Award Tuesday night was Christopher Ruddy, the founder and CEO of Newsmax Media Inc. Ruddy called the award "an incredible honor" and also praised Bush for his leadership on a host of issues important for conservatives.

The influential third party founded by the late William F. Buckley Jr., and headed by its current Chairman Michael Long, is considered a major stop for presidential candidates, with every Republican candidate seeking its endorsement. The honoring of Bush will continue to fuel speculation the former Florida governor is running in 2016.

During this remarks, Bush didn’t hint at his presidential plans, but he wasted no time jumping into the political fray, chastising the Republican Party for its lackluster performance in last November's elections and slamming Obama for what he called the poor economic state of the nation.

"President Obama has many gifts, but one thing he doesn't seem to understand is basic economics. He has this almost naive view that America's economy is so strong he can do anything to it and nothing bad will happen," Bush said. "You can nationalize healthcare . . . raise taxes and fees, regulate with abandon . . . $1 trillion deficits annually, demonize small-business owners and successful investors — and in Barack Obama's world, it doesn't even leave a mark."

But Bush said those policies had very definitely left their mark, damaging the financial health and the workforce of the United States.

"More than four years after the end of the 2008 recession we're still several million jobs short of where we were. We are more than $6 trillion further in debt. We have 8 million Americans who have given up looking for work," Bush said. "We've had more than four years to see what Barack Obama knows about economics, and the truth is, with all due respect, he is an utter and complete failure."

Bush blamed the GOP for its disastrous results at the polls last fall, with Obama soundly trouncing Mitt Romney.

"We got beat because our brand is tarnished with an ever-changing America. We may believe in our hearts that we represent the best hope for America, and I believe that in my heart, but unfortunately for us, that's not how most Americans saw it,'' Bush said. "Now you're thinking, How could somebody convince a majority of 125 million voters that they are better off having their own economic decisions and healthcare and religious freedoms and financial choices and everything else in their lives managed by a faraway bureaucracy?

"The answer is simple: We didn't make our case all that well, and they did. This is important because the path we're on today is simply a path of decline . . . It's not that we're seeing the decline of the American dream, we're seeing the decline of American dreamers."

Bush said the next presidential election will determine America's future.

"Will America continue to be the best hope for freedom and opportunity on the face of the earth? Or will it go down the path of diminished expectations?" he asked. "Let's be really blunt. President Obama isn't making good choices. On energy, he waffles. On immigration, he hasn't led. On foreign policy, he doesn't lead, even from behind. On the family, he is captive to the special interests of the left.

"Thankfully, we can reverse the bad choices . . .  as easily as the good ones. That's the work of the Conservative Party."

Bush also called for increased focus on helping immigrants. "Immigration is part of our heritage . . . Immigrants are an economic engine of vitality for our country. They make things happen," he said. "We have to accept the fact that our immigration system is completely broke. It does not work . . . We're not enforcing the laws, we're creating distrust. 

"Comprehensive reform should treat immigration as essential for our success as a nation and that immigration policy must be grounded in the rule of law."

Bush spoke of the importance of New York conservatives in the liberal Empire State. "You've proven that even in a state that doesn't often support conservative candidates, your presence, your involvement, your activity, really makes a difference," Bush said.

Then, in a nod to New York City mayoral candidate Joe Lhota, who was sitting nearby at the gala at the Sheraton in midtown Manhattan, Bush quipped, "Mayor, it's great being with you, too!"

Bush also gave an update on his father, former President George H.W. Bush, who has faced serious health issues and hospitalization.

Editor's Note: Should ObamaCare Be Repealed? Vote in Urgent National Poll

"My dad has recovered from a really bad illness. He was in the ICU . . . I love my dad. He's the greatest man I've ever met. We're incredibly happy he's out of the hospital and doing better each and every day," Bush said. "That's the good news. The bad news is he doesn't have the fawning caregivers of Memorial hospital in Houston, all those beautiful nurses taking care of him. He's got a new caregiver. Her name is Barbara Bush, and she's a lot tougher."

Bush, also the brother of President George W. Bush, was twice elected the governor of Florida, serving from 1999 to 2007. He heads Jeb Bush and Associates, a consulting firm; chairs the Foundation for Excellence in Education and the National Constitution Center; and co-chairs the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.

Although he has made no commitment to seeking the Republican Party's nomination, many political observers see it as his for the asking.

Ruddy also noted in his brief remarks accepting the Edison Award that Bush needs to be considered as the GOP’s choice in 2016 because of his strong, conservative record when he served as Florida’s governor.

"When I think about the Conservative Party, I think about a party that stands for values, and we need more of that, not less of it," Ruddy said.

Ruddy’s Newsmax Media is one of the nation's leading online news media companies and has consistently ranked as one of the country's most trafficked news websites.

The Conservative Party of New York State said in a statement that Bush and Ruddy "are fighting for what's right in the media and in politics and public policy." It added: "Right now liberty is under attack in New York like never before."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/jeb-bush-obama-conservative/2013/06/25/id/511909#ixzz2XLp8t318

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #87 on: June 26, 2013, 09:04:34 PM »
Jeb would do a very good job as president.

Outside of all that bush dynasty talk - I think ANY of us would choose Jeb to be at the table, facing down Putin or G20, over leaders like Obama or Rubio, who are soft soft soft.

Jeb might be a bush, and we know that has baggage, but he's competent.  No training wheels.  Would anyone here prefer a Palin at the table staring down Putin, over a Jeb Bush?  Come on lol...

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #88 on: June 27, 2013, 06:35:05 AM »
Jeb would do a very good job as president.

Outside of all that bush dynasty talk - I think ANY of us would choose Jeb to be at the table, facing down Putin or G20, over leaders like Obama or Rubio, who are soft soft soft.

Yes... Jeb Bush is the man to put on the other side of the table from Putin... LOL.


Jeb might be a bush, and we know that has baggage, but he's competent.  No training wheels.  Would anyone here prefer a Palin at the table staring down Putin, over a Jeb Bush?  Come on lol...

That's a silly question and I refuse to settle for Bush lest I get Palin. I prefer a serious statesman who will put the country and us above all else and not a politician who will put the party and his own ambition above all else.

With that said, I don't think that Jeb Bush is that person. I see no evidence that Jeb Bush is competent or that he needs no training wheels. His tenure in Florida (and the Schiavo debacle) certainly suggest the man needs a refresher on the proper role of Government. To be fair, that can be said for most people in Government, on either side of the aisle.

Beyond that, certainly Jeb Bush is no Sarah Palin. But then again, a parboiled potato is no Sarah Palin either. So that statement doesn't say much. And frankly, if "he's not Palin!" is the bar that the GOP has well, then... the GOP is fucked up.


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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #89 on: June 27, 2013, 06:53:16 AM »
i also prefer a statesman to Jeb.  He's not my 1st or 10th choice.

I'm just saying if he does end up against Christie, Rubio, Bachmann, and a few other obnoxious underprepared examples, he could easily move up and win it.  I mean, newt and cain and trump and palin once led in polls... repubs just support whoever rass/fox news tells them is "hot" this week lol. 

I'm saying he could outlast that sad sack group, and that he would be a safe choice. 

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #91 on: June 27, 2013, 01:06:47 PM »
I haven't looked at him at all, but I don't like the idea of another Bush or Clinton in the White House.  

But given how wide open the field is, he just might be competitive.


FEBRUARY 7, 2011 4:00 A.M.
Bush 2012
Jeb Bush should run now, for at least eight reasons.

John J. Miller has a cover story in the new issue of National Review that’s a compelling portrait of the accomplishments of Jeb Bush. Four years after leaving the Florida governor’s mansion, he remains one of the most impressive Republican politicians in the country, a formidable policy mind with the political chops to drive conservative reforms even out of office. So why isn’t he running for president? Bush told Miller what he’s said to others, too — he won’t run in 2012, but he’ll consider 2016. This is a mistake. Bush should run now for at least eight reasons:

1) It’s a wide-open field for a nomination that’s worth having. Rarely do you get such a convergence of a beatable incumbent president with a wide-open field to challenge him. Obama is slightly below 50 percent in the polls, with a real weakness in the middle of the country, and he’s saddled with a recovery that has yet to produce substantial job growth. Yet there is no true frontrunner in the race to challenge him. It’s hard to imagine an environment better suited for a heavyweight like Jeb to make a run.

2) 2016 is too late I. By 2016, Jeb will have been out of office ten years. No doubt he will have made many contributions to the cause in the interim, but by then his main credential — his governorship and its accomplishments — will seem like yesterday’s news. Right now he has the feel of an elder statesman of the party while his time in office is still fresh.

3) 2016 is too late II. By 2016, a bumper crop of Republican talent will be poised to storm the national stage. Marco Rubio not only will be the hot new thing out of Florida, he’ll be seasoned. Chris Christie will be ready. A host of senators and governors — freshly minted in the 2010 elections, so it’s too soon for them to run now — will be ready to go. Jeb will not be such a predominant figure in such a robust field. The crop of prospective GOP candidates this time reflects the downdraft in Republican fortunes in 2006 and 2008. Jeb would loom all the larger for it.

4) The Bush rehabilitation has begun. George W. Bush is not exactly popular, but two years of Obama have taken the edge off W.-hatred, and he’s risen from the depths of his unpopularity near the end of his presidency. Gallup had a poll in December that had Bush’s approval rating very slightly above President Obama’s. Bush’s book, Decision Points, and the accompanying media tour were successes. In 2008, Jeb’s association with his brother would have been an absolute killer. That’s not true anymore. The controversies that made the Bush years so venomous have faded, and — partly through the miracle of the accelerated news cycle — 2000–2008 already feels somewhat distant.

5) Jeb will still be a Bush in 2016. There’s no doubt that it will always be awkward for Jeb to be the third Bush; it will always have a dynastic feel about it. But that will remain as true in 2016. If Jeb runs in four years, after Obama presumably wins a second term in 2012, he will still be vying to be the third Republican president in a row who’s a Bush. Waiting until 2016 won’t make that fact any less odd.

6) He’s not just another Bush. Jeb is different from his patrician dad and different from his thoroughly Texan brother. As soon as people see him on the national stage, they’ll realize he’s his own person and has to be taken on his own terms.

7) Jeb can unite the party. Jeb probably has a better chance to unite the establishment and Tea Party wings of the GOP than anyone else, certainly a better chance than Sarah Palin or Mitt Romney would seem to have at this juncture. The establishment would presumably flock to Jeb, while he’d have a record of solid conservative accomplishment to sell to the conservative base. Some tea partiers will have zero interest in another Bush, and Jeb will take his lumps on immigration (at NR, we’ll look forward to administering some of them, and trying to change his mind). It’s a very volatile environment, and were he to run, much would obviously depend on how he actually campaigned. But he would stand a good chance of avoiding a damaging division in the party.

8) Waiting is almost always a mistake. It’s an axiom of presidential politics that you have to run when you have the opening, even if it seems “too soon.” This is why Bill Clinton and Barack Obama were elected president and Mario Cuomo never was. Jeb’s opening is now — “too soon” after his brother’s presidency, “too soon” into his life as an ex-governor — and it will probably never quite be there again.

In short, if Jeb feels a call to run for president, it has to be 2012, not 2016.

— Rich Lowry is editor of National Review.

http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/print/259099


Another Bush another False Flag

F.U.B.B.  

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #92 on: November 19, 2013, 03:19:02 PM »
Jeb Bush: 'I Would Put My Record Up Against Anybody'
Tuesday, 19 Nov 2013
By Lisa Barron

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush touted his political credentials in a New York appearance Monday night, calling himself a "practicing" conservative, but would not reveal whether he will seek the Republican presidential nomination in 2016.

"I have not gotten advice and I have not sought it yet. There's a time to make a decision and you shouldn't make it too early," Bush said in a talk at the 92nd Street Y in New York City, reports Politico.

"This is not the time for me. This is the time for me to show a little self-restraint," he added.

After moderator Thane Rosenbaum described him as a "moderate," Bush joked, "You just attacked me by calling me a moderate."

He added later, "Look, I'm a conservative and I'm a practicing one, not a talk-about-it-one . . . I would put my record up against anybody that's in Congress right now."

The two-term former governor pointed to his approach on issues, such as education reform and affirmative action, while in office as examples of his conservative views, according to Politico.

Bush, who was discussing his new book, "Immigration Wars: Forging an American Solution,", also said he thinks the House will pass immigration legislation next year. He insisted that Speaker John Boehner was "totally committed" to the effort, reports BuzzFeed.

"I think there will be bills passed," Bush said. "It won't be one comprehensive bill. I think it will probably be in late spring, where there's a little bit of a window before the election starts in earnest. I hope so, I hope that's the case. I've talked to Speaker Boehner and he's totally committed to this, but he needs to find a way to get enough of the support."

For his part, Bush believes immigration policy should be seen as part of an overall economic strategy, telling the audience, "I think a lot of people view immigration as, by supporting immigrants, you're taking away from me. And I would argue the opposite is the case."

He continued, "If we have this narrow perspective of 'We're not going to grow anymore and the pie is set and that's it, so I'm going to fight for mine,' were doomed. That's it.

"Our country doesn't work well in a static kind of environment. Our country works well when it's dynamic and aspirational."

Immigrants, Bush added, "aren't a drain on that, they're actually a catalytic converter for sustained economic growth."

Bush also praised Florida Sen. Marco Rubio for his role in the immigration debate, saying he "gets a lot of credit for kind of leading parts of the party towards" reform.

At the end of the discussion, Rosenbaum, a Fordham law professor, told Bush that had earned a lot of votes during the night.

"Votes for what?" Bush responded.

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/jeb-bush-record/2013/11/19/id/537469#ixzz2l8WMukTH

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #93 on: November 19, 2013, 06:51:39 PM »
After GW Bush we welcomed Obama, after Obama we might welcome Jeb Bush...   :-\

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #94 on: November 19, 2013, 07:49:49 PM »

Hugo Chavez

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #95 on: November 19, 2013, 07:57:02 PM »
.....

Dos Equis

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #96 on: November 22, 2013, 01:40:37 PM »
Jeb Bush Would Beat Rubio in 2016 Fla. Primary
Friday, 22 Nov 2013
By Courtney Coren

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush would beat Florida Sen. Marco Rubio in a statewide Republican presidential primary if the vote were held today, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Friday.

The survey of 1,646 registered state voters found that Bush would pull 22 percent of the vote to Rubio's 18 percent.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would win the Democratic primary in the state, beating other potential party candidates, drawing 70 percent of the vote. The poll also shows Clinton beating all potential GOP candidates in the Florida general election, even though Bush would give her quite a run.

According to the statewide survey conducted Nov. 12-17, if the vote were held today Clinton would receive 47 percent support to the former governor's 45 percent. She would beat New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie by a margin of 45 percent to 41 percent, and Rubio by 50 percent to 43 percent.

In the poll's hypothetical Republican primary matchup, Bush would also beat Christie, who drew 14 percent support from respondents on the primary question. Other candidates in hypothetical matchups were Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who got 12 percent support, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul with 9 percent.

Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan and Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana were also part of the survey, but drew only 6 percent or less support.

The survey also asked which of the candidates would make a "good" president. Clinton drew 56 percent compared to Bush at 46 percent and Christie with 45 percent. All the others negative scores on that question, with even Rubio, pulling only 39 percent.

"It's no surprise that Hillary Clinton is well thought of by Florida voters," said Quinnipiac assistant polling director Peter Brown. But when asked if she would be a good president, more voters said yes than the poll indicated would actually voter for her.

"Nonetheless, she is neck-and-neck with former Gov. Jeb Bush and has a narrow lead over Chris Christie," Brown said. "Another Florida favorite son, Sen. Marco Rubio, doesn't fare as well."

Florida often is a decisive state in the presidential race, with 29 electoral votes. The state famously put George W. Bush in the White House in 2000, and has picked every president since Bill Clinton won in 1992.

The poll also asked how Florida voters feel about President Barack Obama, with 57 percent of respondents disapproving of how he's doing his job to 40 percent who approve. That figure is up 9 points since June, and generally matches the president's job performance rating across the country.

Floridians also oppose Obamacare 54 percent to 39 percent.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/bush-rubio-clinton-florida/2013/11/22/id/538166#ixzz2lPfIbj4u

Hugo Chavez

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #97 on: November 22, 2013, 03:39:15 PM »

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #98 on: November 22, 2013, 09:45:58 PM »
Jeb Bush Would Beat Rubio in 2016 Fla. Primary
Friday, 22 Nov 2013
By Courtney Coren

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush would beat Florida Sen. Marco Rubio in a statewide Republican presidential primary if the vote were held today, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Friday.

The survey of 1,646 registered state voters found that Bush would pull 22 percent of the vote to Rubio's 18 percent.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would win the Democratic primary in the state, beating other potential party candidates, drawing 70 percent of the vote. The poll also shows Clinton beating all potential GOP candidates in the Florida general election, even though Bush would give her quite a run.

According to the statewide survey conducted Nov. 12-17, if the vote were held today Clinton would receive 47 percent support to the former governor's 45 percent. She would beat New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie by a margin of 45 percent to 41 percent, and Rubio by 50 percent to 43 percent.

In the poll's hypothetical Republican primary matchup, Bush would also beat Christie, who drew 14 percent support from respondents on the primary question. Other candidates in hypothetical matchups were Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who got 12 percent support, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul with 9 percent.

Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan and Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana were also part of the survey, but drew only 6 percent or less support.

The survey also asked which of the candidates would make a "good" president. Clinton drew 56 percent compared to Bush at 46 percent and Christie with 45 percent. All the others negative scores on that question, with even Rubio, pulling only 39 percent.

"It's no surprise that Hillary Clinton is well thought of by Florida voters," said Quinnipiac assistant polling director Peter Brown. But when asked if she would be a good president, more voters said yes than the poll indicated would actually voter for her.

"Nonetheless, she is neck-and-neck with former Gov. Jeb Bush and has a narrow lead over Chris Christie," Brown said. "Another Florida favorite son, Sen. Marco Rubio, doesn't fare as well."

Florida often is a decisive state in the presidential race, with 29 electoral votes. The state famously put George W. Bush in the White House in 2000, and has picked every president since Bill Clinton won in 1992.

The poll also asked how Florida voters feel about President Barack Obama, with 57 percent of respondents disapproving of how he's doing his job to 40 percent who approve. That figure is up 9 points since June, and generally matches the president's job performance rating across the country.

Floridians also oppose Obamacare 54 percent to 39 percent.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/bush-rubio-clinton-florida/2013/11/22/id/538166#ixzz2lPfIbj4u

Rubio doesn't get a lot of respect in Florida...   he won office using tea party momentum, but since then, he's been mccain lapdog & amnesty champion.  "real" tea party members see through his act, and prefer rand or cruz.

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Re: Another Bush in the White House?
« Reply #99 on: January 31, 2014, 08:31:27 AM »
Jeb Bush on 2016 decision: 'Can I do it joyfully?'
Posted by
CNN's Dana Davidsen

(CNN) - If Jeb Bush runs for President, it will be based on two things - his family and whether he can lift America's spirit.

"I don't wake up each day saying, 'what am I going to do today to make this decision?'" the former Florida governor told CNN affiliate WFOR in a suburb of Miami on Wednesday.

But he's not saying no, either – at least now anyway.

"I'm deferring the decision to the right time, which is later this year. And the decision will be based on 'can I do it joyfully' because I think we need to have candidates lift our spirits. It's a pretty pessimistic country right now. And, is it right for my family?" he said while touring a local school.

Bush hasn't denied an interesting running, sparking speculation that he's seriously considering a Republican candidacy.

Bush's mother, former First Lady Barbara Bush, however, seems to have already made up her mind.

She's expressed her opinion publicly in recent weeks that her son shouldn't follow in the footsteps of his brother and her husband and seek the White House.

Mrs. Bush says it's time to let other families have a chance.

"She promised me she wouldn't keep saying this," Jeb Bush said. "But she is 89 years old and if you have elderly parents or grandparents, you know they speak their mind. There is not much stopping between thinking and speaking. I love her."

Jeb Bush has taken his mother's opposition in stride, tweeting after her comments aired on C-SPAN earlier this month: "What date is Mother's Day this year? Asking for a friend."

Mrs. Bush, a family spokesman said, feels her comments have been misinterpreted – that she only means her family feels no sense of entitlement to the White House.

Jeb Bush's brother, George W. Bush, was the 43rd President and his father, George H.W. Bush, was the nation's 41st.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2014/01/29/jeb-bush-on-2016-decision-can-i-do-it-joyfully/?hpt=po_t1