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Our View | Jeb Bush: true conservative
The Longboat Key Observer ^ | December 10, 2014 | Staff

Posted on 12/10/2014 10:35:21 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Is former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush too moderate for the Republican Party? That is all the talk. But here’s a surprise: Adam C. Smith, political editor of the liberal Tampa Bay Times, authored this piece last Friday refuting with evidence that Bush as governor was “arch-conservative” and far from a “moderate squish.” — Ed.

Respected Ronald Reagan biographer Craig Shirley told the Washington Examiner recently that Jeb Bush is the latest in a line of Bushes who oppose Reaganism. Radio host Mark Levin has dismissed Florida’s former governor as “a very good moderate Democrat,” while pioneering conservative activist Richard Viguerie for at least two years has been trashing Bush as a dangerous, big government Republican.

Meanwhile, much of the speculation about the 2016 presidential race lately centers on whether a moderate is a viable contender for the Republican nomination.

Jeb Bush, a moderate squish?

The governor who treated trial lawyers and teachers union leaders as enemies of the state? Who stripped job protections from civil servants? Who slashed taxes? Whose passion for privatization included enacting the nation’s first statewide private school voucher program and extended to privatizing health care for the poor, prisons and child protection services?

This “very good moderate Democrat” defied court after court to try to force the reinsertion of feeding tubes for brain-damaged Terri Schiavo and consistently backed more restrictions on abortions and fewer on gun ownership. He fought for reduced entitlement spending and, deriding nanny-state impulses, repealed the helmet law for motorcyclists in Florida and vetoed a GOP-backed bill requiring booster seats for kids in cars.

“For us who live in Florida, who experienced the eight-year Jeb Bush governorship, it’s almost laughable and maybe even hysterical for people who live outside of Florida to claim that he’s a moderate,” said former House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, himself a conservative Republican who led the opposition to Florida accepting federal money to expand Medicaid to more than 800,000 people.

“This is a guy who probably has as conservative a record as governor as anybody I’ve ever seen,” Weatherford said, “and he has one of the most successful records as governor of anybody I’ve ever seen.”

The specious perception of Bush outside of Florida reflects both a fundamental misunderstanding of the man, probably due to assumptions based on the presidential records of his father and brother, and also how far rightward the Republican Party has shifted since Bush left the Governor’s Mansion in 2007.

“He is thoughtful and informed, but there is nothing liberal about Jeb Bush. He is an arch-conservative,” said Dan Gelber, who as a Democratic leader in the Legislature respectfully and constantly fought most of Bush’s agenda. “He might have been moderate now and again, but even then it was probably by accident.”

Bush was not just a successful Republican governor politically; He was a conservative activist governor who relished pushing the envelope on policy. Conservative activists elsewhere may revile the Bush name, but in America’s biggest battleground state this Bush is like a Milton Friedman or Barry Goldwater in terms of promoting conservatism.

“(The) mere fact that he was able to propose and implement a sweeping change in Florida government during his two terms remains a notable achievement in state governance. It is also a notable achievement for the conservative movement, because Bush showed that conservatives could do more than offer tax cuts; they could also change government in fundamental ways,” University of North Florida political scientist Matthew Corrigan writes in his new book, “Conservative Hurricane: How Jeb Bush Remade Florida.”

And yet Bush, 61, may be too moderate to win over today’s GOP primary voters.

Bush himself acknowledged as much last week when he suggested a successful Republican presidential candidate likely has to antagonize much of the party’s base, or “lose the primary to win the general.”

That’s because Jeb Bush, whether or not he is at heart more of a Reagan Republican than a George W. Bush Republican, holds positions on immigration reform and education that are toxic in a Republican primary.

When Bush governed Florida from 1999 to 2007, immigration reform was a minor issue here and nationally.

It’s a different world now. Mitt Romney helped kill Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s candidacy by bludgeoning him as soft on undocumented immigrants, and Marco Rubio is still trying to recover after embracing a pathway to citizenship in the Senate.

Likewise, back when Gov. Bush was at the vanguard of pressing for greater education accountability — and more private school vouchers — virtually every conservative political figure was on the same page. Today, the Common Core education standards adopted by more than 40 states are widely vilified by Republican activists, as well as by former Common Core supporters considering presidential campaigns like Rubio and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.

Bush is expected to make a decision on running in the coming weeks, but he looks and sounds like a candidate. And strange as it may seem for those who know him best to think of him as a moderate, staking out that space may be the right path for him to win the nomination.

With so many other potentially formidable conservative candidates — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Perry, to name just some of the prospects — campaigning as the competent pragmatist willing to “lose the primary,” so to speak, could pull it off.

“If there’s multiple people in the race, you don’t need 51 percent to win,” noted former Pinellas County state Sen. Dennis Jones, who was an endangered breed, a moderate Republican, after Bush took over the Florida GOP and often butted heads with him.

Jones, though, hopes Bush runs.

“Jeb certainly was a lot more conservative than I was, but I know him to be a real tough thinker, and I always respected him for the fact he never needed a poll to tell him what his position would be and you never needed to worry about him keeping that position,” Jones said. “When he brought a plan forward, he was down in the weeds and working with people to make sure it was going to be successful.”

But even Bush’s bona fides as a fiscal conservative are under attack because he has refused to pledge never to raise taxes under any circumstance.

All eight Republicans running for the 2012 Republican nomination said they would oppose any tax increase even if it was part of a deficit reduction package that included 10 parts of spending cuts for every $1 in tax increases. At a congressional hearing in 2012, Jeb Bush disagreed.

“If you could bring to me a majority of people to say that we’re going to have $10 in spending cuts for $1 of revenue enhancement — put me in, coach,” said Bush, who also explained why he never signed an Americans for Tax Reform pledge to never raise taxes.

“Republicans were all holding out on not raising taxes, and he was a guy from Florida, a former, washed-up politician from Florida not involved in that fight … and he jumps in says, ‘I’d raise taxes.’ You’re either part of the team and you want to be leader of the team, or you want to be something else. His dad decided to be something else,” Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform told the Wall Street Journal last week, referring to George H.W. Bush’s broken “no new taxes” vow. Yep, times have changed. In late 2006, Norquist told the Palm Beach Post that Jeb Bush was America’s best governor: “He should change his name and run for president.”


TOPICS: Florida; Campaign News; Issues; Parties
KEYWORDS: 2016; barfalert; bush; commoncore; fl; florida; jeb; taxes
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I didn’t know Karl (ignorant Bastard) Rove wrote for a paper in Floriduh.


41 posted on 12/10/2014 11:23:55 AM PST by VRWCarea51 (The original 1998 version)
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To: factoryrat

You are correct.


42 posted on 12/10/2014 11:25:09 AM PST by Dagnabitt (Amnesty is Treason. Its agents and supporters are Traitors.)
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To: VRWCarea51; Norm Lenhart; Old Sarge

” I didn’t know Karl (ignorant Bastard) Rove wrote for a paper in Floriduh.”

Is that YOU, Karl?


43 posted on 12/10/2014 11:26:47 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I don’t give a dam# if he’s more conservative than the reincarnation of Genghis khan....NO MORE BUSHES!


44 posted on 12/10/2014 11:26:49 AM PST by traderrob6
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To: stephenjohnbanker

How dare you blaspheme! You, you...YOU PURIST!!!!!!

(stomps off sulking in flannel onsie with coffee from Starbucks to tell Karl on you)


45 posted on 12/10/2014 11:29:24 AM PST by Norm Lenhart
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To: Norm Lenhart

Two purists...........both still batting 1,000.


46 posted on 12/10/2014 11:31:10 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Hugh and series conservative. :-)


47 posted on 12/10/2014 11:36:23 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose o f a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

LOL!


48 posted on 12/10/2014 11:38:25 AM PST by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: stephenjohnbanker

Should we get an agent on K Street? I mean with out predictive abilities there must be a way we could profit handsomely.

Maybe Zogby could salience Steve and Norm’s Secret Sauce and regain his polling stature.


49 posted on 12/10/2014 11:40:29 AM PST by Norm Lenhart
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He may be mostly conservative, but please not another Bush. I felt burned by W and am not in the mood to do it all over again.


50 posted on 12/10/2014 11:41:54 AM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light..... Isaiah 5:20)
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To: Uncle Miltie
Bush / Clinton 2016!

A more likely scenario is Jeb picking his son Prescott as his running mate in 2016. Maybe Hillary can pick Chelsea?

51 posted on 12/10/2014 11:43:34 AM PST by ek_hornbeck
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To: JulieRNR21; kinganamort; katherineisgreat; floriduh voter; summer; Goldwater Girl; windchime; ...
Y'all will love this.

Florida Freeper


52 posted on 12/10/2014 11:44:14 AM PST by Joe Brower (The "American People" are no longer capable of self-governance.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well Jeb is certainly the most conservative of the Bush’s, but that’s like saying Stalin was more conservative than Pol Pot


53 posted on 12/10/2014 11:44:24 AM PST by TexasFreeper2009 (Obama lied .. the economy died.)
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To: FR_addict
George W. was the best of the lot,

I'm not so sure about that. He was as bad if not worse than the rest of his family on immigration and amnesty, and on fiscal and welfare issues, W may as well have been a Clinton Democrat.

54 posted on 12/10/2014 11:44:55 AM PST by ek_hornbeck
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To: Norm Lenhart

” Should we get an agent on K Street? I mean with out predictive abilities there must be a way we could profit handsomely.”

Until now, I didn’t realize that common sense could bring top dollar.


55 posted on 12/10/2014 11:45:13 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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To: TexasFreeper2009; All

” Well Jeb is certainly the most conservative of the Bush’s, but that’s like saying Stalin was more conservative than Pol Pot”

LOL...............we have a WINNER!


56 posted on 12/10/2014 11:46:40 AM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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To: stephenjohnbanker

Only if we use our powers for evil. If we say it’s ‘lesser evil’ then we will have millions of people throw money at us.

Might even be the next GOP candidates for the President/VP slot.


57 posted on 12/10/2014 11:57:27 AM PST by Norm Lenhart
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To: Norm Lenhart

Norm Lenhart......” In your hart, you know he’s RIGHT! “


58 posted on 12/10/2014 12:03:24 PM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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To: stephenjohnbanker

I can only hope that upon my passing, Cheshires will line up to water my grave ;)


59 posted on 12/10/2014 12:07:06 PM PST by Norm Lenhart
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To: Norm Lenhart

They will, after they water mine.


60 posted on 12/10/2014 12:11:13 PM PST by stephenjohnbanker (The only people in the world who fear Obama are American citizens.)
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