Jeb Bush offers forward-looking appeal to GOP leadership summit

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Jeb Bush attempted to convince skeptical Republicans in New Hampshire on Friday that he’s not as moderate as he has been depicted because of his stances on immigration and Common Core.

“The funny thing is in Florida, those that are on the left that are really upset that people are calling me something I’m not,” he said while speaking to the First in the Nation Republican Leadership Summit in Nashua. A woman had said she feared Republicans were going to “coronate” him like the Democrats may do with Hillary Clinton.

“It’s kind of amusing,” he said. “The liberals in Florida are angry that people don’t see me as a conservative outside of Florida. Well, my record is a conservative one.”

Bush began his speech by talking about his family, his wife, his life as a businessman, and all his reforms in the Sunshine State from 1998 to 2006. He’s proud to tell anyone and everyone about his record, especially skeptical Republicans.

“I will have to earn it,” he said to those thinking he’s the establishment favorite. “No one’s going to give it to me. That’s more than apparent to me.”

He also attempted to sound forward-thinking.

Marco Rubio  charged Monday night as he announced his candidacy that he’s part of a generational change needed in Washington.

At 62, Jeb Bush is part of an older generation, but in his speech in Nashua he extolled the virtues of disruptive technology and innovation. The big question he said is: Will it overwhelm us?

“We’re on the verge where my little 4-year-old (grandson) Jack is going to live to be 130 years old,” he said. “Your kids and grand kids are going to as well. We’re on the verge of discovering the cures of diseases using life science that defies our imagination. Are we capable of making disruption our friend, or will it overwhelm us? And that requires the leadership to fix a few big, complex things.”

Bush was the last speaker of the forum’s Friday afternoon session. Nineteen possible presidential candidates are scheduled to speak over the course of two days. He spoke 15 minutes, then took questions for another 15 minutes from the attendance of hundreds.

He talked about how the GOP must offer a compelling alternative for the masses next year, and not be too negative in assessing the Democrats who have been in charge and could continue to be in charge after 2016.

Immigration never came up in the Q&A, but his support for Common Core education standards did. Based on the audience’s reaction to the term being used throughout the day, it’s absolutely a negative for his candidacy.

Bush took the question head-on, though, saying he was going to bring it up if nobody else had. He said he was all about raising standards to have high school students prepared to enter college or the job force. “Whether it is Common Core, which is higher standards than all but a handful of states, or standards created at the state level, to me is not as meaningful as the fact that they should be higher.”

On Cuba, not surprisingly, Bush disagrees with President Obama normalizing relations with the communist island. “I didn’t agree with the way he did it in secrecy … I don’t agree on how he negotiated, basically making unilateral concessions for our country, with nothing in return.”

Bush said those negotiations should have been to demand more freedom and release of political prisoners by the Raul Castro-led government. More freedom for businesses to start up. Free elections. Freedom of movement. Freedom of religion.

“Until you disavow terrorism in general, we can’t open up relationships,” Bush said/ He said if the U.S. had done that, Cuba would be in a different situation than it is, with reduced oil prices cutting Venezuela’s ability to  subsidize the island nation.

He says that would have created a much better climate for negotiations than just hoping that the sheer force of the president’s personality would get Castro to change course. “Despots don’t go quietly into the night,” he said.

Bush is not the final speaker of the day. That honor goes to his Miami-area neighbor, Rubio, who will speak as the dinner speaker on Friday night. Rubio got that slot after Chris Christie delayed too long in deciding whether or not he was going to appear at the event.

Mitch Perry

Mitch Perry has been a reporter with Extensive Enterprises since November of 2014. Previously, he served five years as political editor of the alternative newsweekly Creative Loafing. Mitch also was assistant news director with WMNF 88.5 FM in Tampa from 2000-2009, and currently hosts MidPoint, a weekly talk show, on WMNF on Thursday afternoons. He began his reporting career at KPFA radio in Berkeley and is a San Francisco native who has lived in Tampa since 2000. Mitch can be reached at [email protected].



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