Author Topic: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run  (Read 6957 times)

Dos Equis

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Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« on: December 29, 2008, 04:10:12 PM »
Another Bush in D.C.? 

Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run

Saturday, December 27, 2008 12:22 PM

By: Dave Eberhart 

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has been busy testing the waters since Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., announced this month that he won’t seek reelection in 2010.

According to Politico, sources indicate the president’s brother hasn’t yet made a final decision, but Republican Party leaders are giving him a thumbs-up. And President Bush has already said his brother would make an “awesome” candidate and senator.

"Everything indicates that he's in," said David Johnson, a Republican strategist and the CEO of Strategic Vision. "You're not making calls and laying the ground work for fundraising unless you're clearing the field for your candidacy."

Even with his brother’s low, low popularity ratings, GOP leaders are of the mind that the Bush family name won’t be a hindrance if he decides to enter the race.

"Quite the opposite, actually," said one source close to Jeb Bush. "What he's found is that everyone is encouraging him to run. It's actually been a little overwhelming," according to the Politico report.

Indeed, the possibility of another Bush entering a crucial national race seemed to excite both politicians and veteran observers in Bush’s home state of Florida over the weekend. Until rising stars like Sarah Palin or Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal are better tested, Bush could bring some much-needed gravitas to Republican circles, according to several observers.

Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida and an expert on Florida politics, said Bush's phone calls around the state are "a good sign" that he could be jumping in the race, something that she says is "music to the ears of Florida Republicans."

"Nothing could have come at a better time," MacManus told Politico. "Republicans here in Florida were so down after the election. The mere mention of Jeb's potential Senate run has put Republicans in a much more festive holiday mood."

In the Orlando Sentinel on Sunday, Fla. State Rep. Dean Cannon, who is slated to be the speaker of the state house in 2010, wasted no time in throwing his support to Bush.

“As Floridians ask who would best succeed Martinez in the Senate, I believe that the best and most logical successor is Jeb Bush — not because he has proven that he can win, but because he has proven that he can lead,” Cannon, of Winter Park, Florida, wrote.

”Bush led, not only on issues that were popular, but on issues that were so difficult and so full of political thorns that a generation of politicians before him chose to simply ignore them in the hopes that they would go away or resolve themselves.”

Although there was some speculation that a veteran business leader and former chief executive of his state might hesitate at being just one voice among 100 in the Senate, most seem to think that Bush’s sense of public service would outweigh his ego.

Mark Silva, a veteran Florida politics reporter, wrote in the Chicago Tribune’s Swamp politics blog: “For anyone who has known Jeb Bush a long time, the thought of him even thinking of the Senate came as a surprise — he is the chief executive's chief executive, not the go-along, get-along sort of compromiser that life in a legislature requires. Yet anyone who has known him also knows that he takes his politics, and more importantly, public policy, seriously. He sees a certain void in his party at the moment: An absence of someone in Washington with a pulpit to advance the opposition's cause in a reasoned and methodical manner.”

Another source added, "I think he was a little surprised by the magnitude of support. It was so broad and so deep."

Bush left the governor's office two years ago with high approval ratings, was praised for his hands-on role in handling several destructive hurricanes and has held on to his popularity as a private citizen.

"The support is there," a source said. "Fundraisers are calling him. The money will be there."

But Jeb Bush might face some formidable competition from Gov. Charlie Crist, who is also among those eyeing the empty Senate seat. So is Republican Bill McCollum, the Florida attorney general and former congressman.

Among the Democrats, Alex Sink, the state's chief financial officer, and Reps. Allen Boyd and Ron Klein are also considering a Senate run.

http://www.newsmax.com/insidecover/Jeb_Bush_senate_run/2008/12/27/165626.html
 

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2008, 04:16:31 PM »
Bush vs. Crist would be an awesome race!

andreisdaman

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #2 on: December 29, 2008, 04:26:33 PM »
He should run..he's a much smarter version of his brrother..and well'respected

windsor88

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #3 on: December 29, 2008, 05:18:23 PM »
Quote
A source inside the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation told Insider magazine that Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has ordered the shredding of documents and public records, a clear violation of Florida law.

The department has oversight and approval of state gaming licensees, slot machines, dog and horse tracks, and jai-alai games.

The source, who asked to remain anonymous, said the governor also has brought in personnel from Texas to replace key members of his staff in Tallahassee. The Texans are overseeing the destruction of state documents, according to the source.

A source in the FBI confirmed that public records are being destroyed on orders of Jeb Bush. The source said the governor may have taken that action in response to the continuing criminal probe of Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff and the federal investigation of the 2001 gangland murder in Miami of Gus Boulis, owner of the Sun Cruz casino boat.

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #4 on: January 06, 2009, 04:52:04 PM »
Someone told me the other day there should be a law banning the Bush, Clinton, and Kennedy families from running for president.   :)

Jeb Bush not running for Senate
Posted: 05:40 PM ET

From CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

(CNN) — Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, President Bush's younger brother, has decided he will not seek Florida's open senate seat in 2010, setting off what's sure to be a wide-open and hotly contested battle to replace Republican Sen. Mel Martinez.

In a statement released Tuesday, the younger Bush said the time isn't right him to return to public life.

“While the opportunity to serve my state and country during these turbulent and dynamic times is compelling, now is not the right time to return to elected office," Bush said in the statement. “In the coming months and years, I hope to play a constructive role in the future of the Republican Party, advocating ideas and policies that solve the pressing problems of our day.

Bush was elected governor of Florida in 1998 and 2002 and was considered a leading contender for the seat set to be vacated by Martinez. His presence in the race would have added immediate star power to a contest Democrats are likely to make their top target in 2010.

But the former governor, who has largely remained out of the spotlight over the past two years, would likely have been hindered by his close association with the unpopular outgoing president, whose approval ratings continue to hove around 30 percent nationally and even lower in Florida.

But Jeb Bush left office in 2007 with approval ratings well over 60 percent, a sign he would likely have been insulated in the state from his brother's unpopularity, and among Florida Republican's best hopes for retaining the seat.

Since exiting the governor's office, Bush has served on the board of Tenet Healthcare Corporation. He also joined the now-defunct investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2007 as an adviser to its private equity business.

According to published reports, Democrats view Alex Sink, the state's chief financial officer, as the candidate best positioned to run for the seat. Before Martinez's announcement, Sink suggested she was uninterested in the run, but it's likely she now may reconsider.

Democrats are also considering Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a high-profile supporter of Sen. Hillary Clinton's presidential bid, though Schultz's congressional spokesman said it is unlikely she will run. Other Democrats mentioned include Reps. Kendrick Meek and Allen Boyd.

On the Republican side, Reps. Vern Buchanan and Connie Mack are said to be interested, as well as several GOP state officials.

“I think it will mean a very bloody primary for us and possibly for the Democrats. His candidacy would have cleared the field for Republicans. I cannot imagine the craziness,” a Florida GOP strategist told CNN Political Editor Mark Preston.

The strategist said that several Republicans could now jump in the race including U.S. Rep. Connie Mack, state Senate President Jeff Atwater and former state House Speaker Marco Rubio.

The GOP strategist noted that Democrats might also see a primary because Bush “had the ability to knock the Democrats out,” who might have taken a pass.

Should Sen. Mel Martinez retire from the Senate early, it would avoid a Republican primary fight because Republican Gov. Charlie Crist would make the appointment and give that appointee the power of incumbency.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2009/01/06/jeb-bush-not-running-for-senate/#more-34511

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #5 on: January 06, 2009, 05:03:17 PM »
2010 is too soon.  If Jeb loses in FL in 2010, his career is over.  If he wins, it'd be close.  FL is one seriously BROKE state right now.  Shit is tough here.  Bush won in 00 and 04 here... and Obama cleaned mccains clock here. 

Essentially, the 2008 vote was the anti-Bush vote.  Jeb would be wise to sit it out and jump in the 2016 Presidential race after doing his own "An Inconvenient Truth" project ala Al Gore.  Dems were BEGGING Gore to run in 08.

If you live in FL, you know what I mean.  People are BROKE here.  It's not even funny.  Tourism and construction were our 2 main employers, and they are both shot.  And in 2 years, yeah, it's gonna be worse.  The anti-Bush sentiment will still be there.  (and if you say it's not here now, check the 2008 Presidential vote here :(

andreisdaman

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Re: Jeb Bush Signals He's Poised to Run
« Reply #6 on: January 06, 2009, 07:31:38 PM »
2010 is too soon.  If Jeb loses in FL in 2010, his career is over.  If he wins, it'd be close.  FL is one seriously BROKE state right now.  Shit is tough here.  Bush won in 00 and 04 here... and Obama cleaned Obama's clock here. 

Essentially, the 2008 vote was the anti-Bush vote.  Jeb would be wise to sit it out and jump in the 2016 Presidential race after doing his own "An Inconvenient Truth" project ala Al Gore.  Dems were BEGGING Gore to run in 08.

If you live in FL, you know what I mean.  People are BROKE here.  It's not even funny.  Tourism and construction were our 2 main employers, and they are both shot.  And in 2 years, yeah, it's gonna be worse.  The anti-Bush sentiment will still be there.  (and if you say it's not here now, check the 2008 Presidential vote here :(