5 Things to Know About Jeb Bush's Campaign for President
Get up to speed while you wait for his official announcement to begin.

This afternoon in Miami, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush will surprise no one by officially announcing he's running for president. Yesterday he released this video as a preview of what's to come.
Here are five things to know about the Republican's impending campaign:
1. His goal is to convince voters he's more ready to lead—and get things done—than any of his competitors. In a field that includes a number of young candidates, Bush is hoping his experience will set him apart. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio were both elected in 2010, meaning that on the day the next president is sworn in, they'll have been in the Senate for just six years each. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz joined that body two years later. Wisconsin's Scott Walker and Ohio's John Kasich are just beginning their second terms as governor (though Kasich had a long career in the U.S. House of Representatives before that). Carly Fiorina and Ben Carson have never held elected office.
There are a couple of GOP hopefuls who have more executive experience than Jeb: Rick Perry held the top spot in Texas for a little over 14 years and is the longest-serving governor of the Lone Star State, while Mike Huckabee was governor of Arkansas for more than a decade. But both men have sought the Republican nomination and failed to secure it before. Bush—the brother and son of two former presidents—will spend the next year trying to convince voters that he's singularly prepared to govern from the Oval Office.
2. He'll have to turn his positions on education and immigration into assets instead of liabilities. Bush has a twofold albatross around his neck: his outspoken support for comprehensive immigration reform that would allow most people who are here illegally to stay, and his outspoken support for the Common Core education standards that have become a punching bag for many on the right. But on the latter point, Bush is also a vocal proponent of school choice—extremely popular among Republicans—who implemented one of the first voucher programs in the country while he was governor of Florida. And he made it clear in his January speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference that he doesn't plan on running from his support for higher education standards that ensure kids in different parts of the country are learning the same general things.
Bush famously called illegal immigration an "act of love" and supports a path to legal status, both of which have earned him ire among conservatives. But Bush, who is himself married to a Mexican immigrant, is not backing off that position. Some think this will severely hurt his chances of winning the GOP nomination, but others have noted that Republicans need to find a way to do better among Hispanic voters if they are to have any chance of taking back the White House. Bush, who has said he would be willing to "lose the primary to win the general," seems to be playing the long game on this issue—and hoping he can persuade the GOP base to play it with him.
3. He already had a campaign shake-up this year, though he doesn't want you to view it that way. Last week, Bush tapped Danny Diaz of FP1 Strategies to head up his campaign. This surprised a lot of observers, as a different strategist, David Kochel, "was believed to have been penciled in for the role when he was hired this year," according to Reuters.
Bush has downplayed the change, saying that a national race is "a pretty overwhelming challenge and so I decided to kind of split up the duties." Kochel will remain involved as chief strategist for the campaign. Still, the change has made some Bush supporters nervous.
4. The exploratory phase of his campaign has included a few stumbles. Bush was expected by many to scare the competition out of the race with staggering fund-raising numbers and an ability to parlay his family's connections into a sophisticated campaign machine. It hasn't quite worked out that way. The Washington Post reported last week that it now seems unlikely his PAC will meet its $100 million goal. What's more, Bush's shaky series of answers about whether he would have invaded Iraq in 2003, as George W. Bush did, raised eyebrows and led to whispering that he and those around him might not be ready for the spotlight after all.
Bush initially said that "I would have, and so would have Hillary Clinton, just to remind everybody, and so would almost everybody that was confronted with the intelligence they got." He later backtracked, saying he misunderstood that the question was asking whether, with the benefit of hindsight, he still thought it was the right decision. Although the firestorm has passed, it left some onlookers wondering why he wasn't ready for an obvious question about the most controversial decision of his brother's presidency.
5. His position in the polls right now tells us almost nothing. Bush shot to the front of most polling the moment he made it known he was thinking about running for president last year. Much of the pre-coverage of his campaign launch has mentioned that his position has since slipped—and that's true, but it tells us very little about how likely he is to capture the Republican nomination in the end. Primary surveys—especially this far out from the first contests—are reliably unreliable.
To understand what I mean, one need only look back four years. Four different candidates took turns beating the eventual nominee, Mitt Romney, in the polls in 2011. As I wrote in the July issue of Reason, anyone trying to judge the relative chances of the various candidates based on national primary polls conducted before voting began would have been hopelessly lost. The truth is that the landscape is far more likely to change dramatically between now and spring 2016 than it is to look then exactly like it does right now. Speeches will be made. Ads will be broadcast. Records will be dissected. Scandals will be unearthed. And the conventional wisdom will evolve accordingly. The fact that someone is (or isn't) getting the most hypothetical votes today means very little.
Consider yourself warned.
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Enough with American political dynasties already!
Nah. What we really need is a Bush-Clinton marriage to unite the dynasties in a spirit of bipartisanship.
Chelsea already has a husband.
I think I'm going to vomit.
Less fat Chris Christie-type RINO. No thanks.
Well, he is less corrupt than Hillary Clinton. You know, I bet he could win the Democratic nomination. Is it too late to switch?
To Hell with it.
Clinton/Cthulhu '16!
Maybe Cthulhu will moderate her hawkishness.
Cthulhu is likeable enough.
More so than Hillary for sure
"Is it too late to switch?"
As long as he publicizes the switch well beforehand and we're not surprised with any side-by-side photos showing he was deceiving us all along. Say with a picture of him playing golf at a country club next to a picture of him holding a latte at a feminist poetry reading.
Is he less corrupt? We're talking about the Bush family here...
NONONONONONONONONONONONONONONONO.
I assume his next campaign shakeup will be whoever approved the font on his official logo.
That explains Stephanie's choice of Alt-Text.
...all of them boring.
Let's spice it up: fuck, marry, ummmm throw away - Jeb, Hillary, Epi's mom?
Is death an option?
Whose?
And if he does this one simply trick, he can win the White House. And you won't believe what happens next!
6. He is one of the dumbest on the Right running for President.
OTOH, he is smarter than Elizabeth Warren.
My beagle-sheltie mix has better economic thinking than her.
Yes. Most dogs have grasped the concept of not biting the hand that feeds them.
So true, so true....
Low bar.
Um, apparently you haven't seen Perry, Santorum, or Huckabee
Um, apparently you haven't seen Perry, Santorum, or Huckabee
Santorum's smart. He's just too frothy.
JEB!
I can't decide if his logo is the name of the musical smash hit of the summer or a poster for a brand new sitcom premiering this fall on ABC Family.
They've already done That's My Bush!.
Big Lots???
It's a retread of his FL governor campaign logo.
"My Bush is awesome!"....or is that Shrilary's slogan? I'm so confused.
7. He is by far the most boring candidate running for President.
I know one thing - I won't be voting for him.
But... that's not fair! You're not giving him a fair chance! Hillary isn't the only one running for POTUS this time, you know? Jeb's running too!
Jeb's running too!
Who is this "Jeb" of whom you speak?
Clampet. Or is that Jed?
I'd prefer Jethro.
"My core beliefs start with the premise that the most vulnerable in our society should be in the front of the line and not the back". What line was he talking about? Cotton candy at the fair, or the gas chambers?
Or the Fed window for some of that free money.
Obamaphones!
But does he have a charitable foundation?
One thing to know about Jeb's campaign:
I don't give a rat baggin tea fuckers arse.
"left some onlookers wondering why he wasn't ready for an obvious question about the most controversial decision of his brother's presidency."
I think it is more indicative that he was more than ready...coached out the wazoo for this question, and when it was asked, he shot back with the prepared answer without listening carefully to how the question was worded. Happened to Gerald Ford, as I recall, regarding the Captive Nations. Ford, unlike Bush, doubled-down on his flub rather than admit "I meant to say...."
8. Jeb! = John Ellis BUSH!
the premise that the most vulnerable in our society should be in the front of the line and not the back
What the fuck is that even supposed to mean?
Proof positive that nothing about "compassionate conservatism" makes a lick of sense.
What the fuck is that even supposed to mean?
If you find yourself charging an enemy machine gun nest.....well....you know the rest.
I think it has something to do with the most attractive sex-trafficking victims.
O'l Jeb is known as "the smart one".
Finished your crappy rock and roll book yet? You've obviously been spending a bunch of time on in these last few days.
Neil's the smart one. He never got involved with politics.
Well , if some asshole is going to be prez, might be worth having bush just to see if we can hit peak derp. I sure as shit won't vote for him, but I will enjoy the social media implosion.
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I hear a lot of people talking about how Bush is going to be the eventual nominee and almost nobody saying they're even remotely interested in voting for him.
For a guy with his name recognition and family ties, that he's basically just another guy in the pack says he's probably one of the first people out of the race.
You would think. But, I learned a long time ago to never underestimate the stupidity of voters.
It's the Bush's turn, right? Now which one do I vote for? Dang, this is so complicated.
In this case, name recognition is a negative.
"Jeb!" Reminds me of "Lamar!"
Is it Lamar Alexander, or Alexander Lamar?
Either way, a cringe-inducing puke that sets the standards for RINO nothingness.
The suspense is killing me.
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Guys,
I've noticed a dirth of rand paul hagiography lately. What's up with that, Reason eds.?
The thing I'm looking forward to--oh, around May of 2016 I suspect-- is the plaintive assurances that no matter what crusty and bloody warts Rubio/Bush/Walker have *anything* is better than the hideous SheBeast. You all better start coming up for excuses for them (I.e. Hey my candidate supports a trillion dollar defense budget, but at least he doesn't have saggy boobs) pretty soon.
Eh, Walker doesn't seem too bad. How's that for a ringing endorsement?
american socialist|6.16.15 @ 7:45AM|#
"Guys,"
Shitbag,
Why don't you find an (R) website to troll?
6. His name is Bush.
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