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Jeb Bush huddles w/advisors: How can I avoid being tripped up by conservative base in the primaries?
Hot Air ^ | December 12, 2014 | Allahpundit

Posted on 12/12/2014 6:27:14 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Good question, but the question Jeb should be considering is how do you survive two tons of ROMNEYMANIA dropping square on your head. ‘Cause it’s comin’, son.

No, seriously, with each passing day this sounds more like Huntsman II. But with lots, lots, lots more money involved.

“I just said to him, ‘I think if you look back, despite the far right’s complaints, it is the centrist that wins the nomination,’” Mr. McCain, an Arizona Republican, said he told Mr. Bush.

In the past few weeks, Mr. Bush has moved toward a run for the White House. His family’s resistance has receded. His advisers are seeking staff. And the former governor is even slimming down, shedding about 15 pounds thanks to frequent swimming and personal training sessions after a knee operation last year.

But before pursuing the presidency, Mr. Bush is grappling with the central question of whether he can prevail in a grueling primary battle without shifting his positions or altering his persona to satisfy his party’s hard-liners. In conversations with donors, friends and advisers, he is discussing whether he can navigate, and avoid being tripped up by, the conservative Republican base…

“I think people are ready for somebody honest, frank and willing to tell them what they think,” said Mr. Baker, adding of Mr. Bush, “I think he could run in a primary where he’s true to himself, his values and policy positions.”…

“We often say, ‘Let Jeb be Jeb,’” is how Mike Murphy, a longtime adviser, put it.

I’m not sure why John McCain, who’s happily posed more than once as a border hawk in primaries to pander to righties before reverting to form, is advising Jeb Bush to free his inner centrist. Either way, the takeaway from the Times story is the same as it was in the last few splashy “Jeb’s thinking about it!” features that have come down the news pike: As one ominous line late in the piece puts it, Jeb wants to run a “truth-telling campaign,” a phrase that sounds a lot like Huntsman-ese for “explaining to conservatives why they’re wrong.” With each new story in this vein that gets published, suspicions on the right deepen that Bush is guilty of the cardinal sin that Huntsman was guilty of and that the GOP’s congressional leadership, particularly in the House, seems too often guilty of, namely, believing that the Republican Party’s conservative base is a bigger problem for America than Democratic orthodoxy is. Is he running because he has a conservative vision, the odd Common Core or immigration heresy aside? Or is he running because the wingnuts are threatening to wrest the nomination from the donor class and someone with clout needs to step up and punch them in the face? Why would any tea partier turn out in the general election for a guy who took that approach with them, however successfully, in the primaries?

“If he goes forward with a campaign in which he avoids trying to appease the most conservative voters and wins the nomination as well as the presidency,” the Times notes, “it could reshape Republican politics for a generation.” I think that’s the deeper goal here, if not for Jeb himself than certainly for many of the establishmentarians who are egging him on to run as a loud and proud RINO. If he does that and wins, it’ll theoretically convince RINOs everywhere that there’s little to fear in challenging the tea party. (That’s gravely mistaken, as TPers can and do punch above their weight in Senate and especially House primaries, but that’ll be the takeaway.) It’ll demoralize righties for awhile too and make centrism newly respectable for grassroots Republicans who aren’t keen on the tea party for whatever reason. All of this is right in line with the more aggressive approach taken this year by the donor class to beat back conservative challenges in congressional primaries; Jeb winning the nomination as an unapologetic centrist would be something of a knockout blow. But the more that perception takes hold among conservatives, that the Bush candidacy is a torpedo aimed at them deliberately, obviously the greater incentive they’ll have to resist Jeb, even if it means refusing to turn out for him against Hillary. After all, if he loses the general election because they stayed home, it’ll send the message that they can never be challenged so directly in the primaries again. If you think the party’s divided now, imagine it after a Hillary victory that was helped along by animosity between the GOP base and its own nominee.

One interesting question is whether Christie or Romney would be willing to play the same tea-party-crushing role for establishmentarians as Jeb. Christie probably would because he’s Christie; the more cautious Romney, whose career is one long story of telling people what they want to hear and then reversing himself if need be, might not. (Which is ironic, since Romney was one of the forces behind the establishment’s big primary wins over conservatives this year.) Anyway, for your exit question, explain something to me: Why would a center-right voter prefer Jeb Bush to Scott Walker? We all do understand, I hope, that Walker will be running basically as a centrist, yes? He doesn’t need to pander to righties; he spent four years taking withering fire from lefties for his collective bargaining reforms and beat them at every turn. Unless he comes out for single-payer, he’s bulletproof on the right. I think he’s going to run as a similar sort of pragmatist as Bush — lots of talk about jobs and education, squishy on immigration, socially conservative but low key about it, and if tea partiers start getting restless with him, he’ll pull the ol’ “remember the time the unions spent millions to recall me and I kicked the sh*t out of them?” card. And then everyone will quiet down. He’s much younger than Bush, has midwestern appeal that Bush doesn’t, and more importantly, lacks all of the Bush family baggage that Jeb will be carrying around. So like I say, if you find Ted Cruz and Rand Paul a bit too far right, why would you prefer Jeb to Walker?


TOPICS: Florida; Campaign News; Issues; Parties
KEYWORDS: 2016; bush; establishment; fakeconservative; fakeconservatives; gope; gopestablishment; jebbush; rino; rinos; romney
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To: Jack Hydrazine
You've hit it Top Dead Center.

From the article:
“I just said to him, ‘I think if you look back, despite the far right’s complaints, it is the centrist that wins the nomination,’” Mr. McCain, an Arizona Republican, said he told Mr. Bush.

Peculiar how with Republicans centrists are golden while with Dems its the far left radical Marxists.

21 posted on 12/12/2014 6:40:11 PM PST by stormhill
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

That’s easy! “Don’t run”


22 posted on 12/12/2014 6:40:19 PM PST by NonValueAdded (Pointing out dereliction of duty is NOT fear mongering, especially in a panDEMic)
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To: NonValueAdded

Thought I said that! LOL!


23 posted on 12/12/2014 6:46:10 PM PST by doc1019
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

RINO ALERT!


24 posted on 12/12/2014 6:47:48 PM PST by ogen hal (First Amendment or reeducation camp)
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To: dowcaet

We didn’t really have a conservative last time. Bachman just wasn’t going to work out.


25 posted on 12/12/2014 6:48:49 PM PST by demshateGod (The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Flubber. Bush should be named flamby like they called French President


26 posted on 12/12/2014 6:49:43 PM PST by lavaroise (A well regulated gun being necessary to the state, the rights of the militia shall not be infringed)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The NWO establishment types want and need jebbush because I believe that they want to ensure a match-up between two progressives again.
I think that the uni-party elites know that jebbush would likely lose to any commie Dem, so that a jebbush candicy is progressive insurance.


27 posted on 12/12/2014 6:50:18 PM PST by grumpygresh (Democrats delenda est. President zero gave us patient zero.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Seriously, I can't think of a reason in the world to vote for another Bush.
28 posted on 12/12/2014 6:50:50 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Revel
is declaring? Ever since Jorge Busho showed his filthy liberal big government messycan loving self, we've known we were held in contempt by the GOPe.
29 posted on 12/12/2014 6:52:09 PM PST by LouAvul (If government is the answer, you're asking the wrong question.)
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To: FlingWingFlyer

That’s what I was thinking.


30 posted on 12/12/2014 6:52:24 PM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He can’t: Strike 1) Not Conservative, Strike 2) His father and brother played conservatives, then went socialist, Strike 3) He’s consulting with the political class to trick the Republican electorate or make them believe something (unconservative) that they currently do not OR should not.


31 posted on 12/12/2014 6:54:26 PM PST by JSDude1
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To: Revel
So conservatives need a strong plan.

Easy. Pick one candidate running well to the right of Bush and stick with him. No more parade of seven conservative dwarfs slugging it out with each other while the media and the rest of the Left sits smiling and watches.

32 posted on 12/12/2014 6:55:05 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The good news is old Jeb knows he’s not going to sail through the process like his brother.


33 posted on 12/12/2014 6:56:23 PM PST by LongWayHome
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To: JSDude1

Read my lips: No more Bushes, Roves,.....


34 posted on 12/12/2014 6:56:52 PM PST by Leo Carpathian (FReeeeepeesssssed)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Jeb should be asking himself how the Bush brand is going to recover from the torture documents that have just been released.


35 posted on 12/12/2014 6:58:31 PM PST by RC one (Militarized law enforcement is just a politically correct way of saying martial law enforcement.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

VOTE FOR JEB OR ELSE HIS BROTHER WILL HAVE YOU TORTURED!


36 posted on 12/12/2014 6:59:36 PM PST by RC one (Militarized law enforcement is just a politically correct way of saying martial law enforcement.)
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To: RC one

There are no torture documents screw that bs.


37 posted on 12/12/2014 6:59:42 PM PST by Williams
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

It is an “act of love” for patriots to NOT vote for Jeb Bush should he decide to run.


38 posted on 12/12/2014 7:00:00 PM PST by Blue Highway
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Huddling with John McCain to strategize about managing the base? That's about as suicidal as it gets.

In 2000, McCain came out of nowhere to surprise GWB, the consensus pick of the Republican governors (his real base of support), and win some early primaries. McCain did this by playing the maverick, and attracting independent and crossover votes. Not to mention some adulatory press coverage.

My view was, and still is, that McCain at that point had Bush on the ropes and could have beaten him. Bush was reeling, and he moved right to rally a last ditch firewall among the base. But McCain had the momentum, and the buzz, and a favorable press, and a personal biography that commanded universal respect. To take Bush, all he had to do was reassure the base, by giving rank and file conservatives a couple of things to cheer about.

McCain instead let the press gaggle and bad advisors lead him astray. Instead of rallying the base, he went to South Carolina and picked an entirely unnecessary fight with Christian conservatives. Bush seized the opportunity and never looked back.

Had McCain gone to South Carolina and pushed for school choice or entitlement reform or energy independence or parental notification on abortion -- or any of many other such issues -- he would have won. All he had to do was give wavering conservatives a reason to cheer, not on everything, but on a couple of things to allow them to rationalize voting for a maverick. Instead, he kicked sand in their eyes.

Jeb Bush had better be careful what lessons he gleans from Team McCain.

39 posted on 12/12/2014 7:01:42 PM PST by sphinx
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Jeb Bush??? This is like a really, really bad Dan Aykroyd movie.
40 posted on 12/12/2014 7:05:48 PM PST by meadsjn
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