Jeb Bush: No Place For Father, Reagan In Today’s GOP

The “dysfunction” is “disturbing,” says the former Florida governor. A pox on both parties.

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Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush on Capitol Hill earlier this week. Image by Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush said today that both Ronald Reagan and his father George H. W. Bush would have had a difficult time getting nominated by today’s ultra-conservative Republican Party.

“Ronald Reagan would have, based on his record of finding accommodation, finding some degree of common ground, as would my dad — they would have a hard time if you define the Republican party — and I don’t — as having an orthodoxy that doesn’t allow for disagreement, doesn’t allow for finding some common ground,” Bush said, adding that he views the hyper-partisan moment as “temporary.”

“Back to my dad’s time and Ronald Reagan’s time – they got a lot of stuff done with a lot of bipartisan suport,” he said. Reagan “would be criticized for doing the things that he did.”

Bush cited, in particular, “the budget deal my dad did, with bipartisan support — at least for a while — that created the spending restraint of the ‘90s,” a reference to a move widely viewed now as a political disaster for Bush, breaking a pledge against tax increases and infuriating conservatives. It was, Bush said, “helpful in creating a climate of more sustainted economic growth.”

“Politically it clearly didn’t work out — he was a one term president,” his son said.

Bush called the present partisan climate “disturbing.”

“It’s just a different environment left and right,” he said of “this dysfunction.”

And Bush also blamed President Obama for much of the conflict.

“His first year could have been a year of enormous accomplishment had he focused on things where there was more common ground,” he said, arguing that Obama had made a “purely political calculation” to run a sharply partisan administration.

His remarks to a group of reporters and editors at the headquarters of Bloomberg LP in Manhattan were the latest in a series of concerns Bush, one of the best-respected figures in his party, has raised about its current direction. Other Republicans, including former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, have suggested that this GOP wouldn’t nominate Reagan, who raised taxes and made grand bargains with Democrats on immigration and fiscal issues. Bush also repeated criticism of the “tone” of the discussion of immigration issues.

Bush said that Mitt Romney’s move to channel Republicans’ anger over immigration in the primary has put him “in somewhat of a box” in the general election. He advised Romney to offer a “broader and more intense” approach to the issue. He suggested Romney continue to campaign in Hispanic communities, that he recast immigration as an economic issue, and that he focus on the question of education.

“I do feel a little out of step with my party on this,” he said.

Bush also had praise for Rep. Paul Ryan for proposing a budget and disdain for Democrats for refusing to engage it.

“It’s all about talking points rather than engagement,” he said of Congressional hearings on the Ryan budget, during one of which, he said, he was grilled by Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the DNC Chairwoman.

“She clearly doesn’t like me — not from Washington, from past battles,” he said.

Bush said he finds reason for optimism in statehouses, and cited two governors as particular models: Indiana Republican Mitch Daniels and Colorado Democrat John Hickenlooper.

Bush did offer Obama one point of agreement: That the economic “headwinds” the president has been mocked for citing are real.

“We’ve got major headwinds with Europe and the slowdown in Asia as well,” Bush said, predicting weak economic growth in the short term.

But Bush sounded a remarkably gloomy note about the present moment: “We’re in very difficul times,” he said. “We’re in decline.”

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    15 Responses So Far

    • chunkball 11 months ago

      Anyone recall the debt ceiling debate? were Obama put forward 70% spending and tax cuts for 30% stimulus at the beginning. After a week of arguing it was 99% spending and tax cuts and john boehner was so insulted by the fact that Obama only caved 99.9% of the way that he stormed out of the meting declining that Obama is an unreasonable socialist and vowed not to work with him For the rest of his presidency. Mr Bush is right though all this bipartisanship is Obama’s fault.

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    • remym 11 months ago

      I love the way Jeb and all the Republipukes always try to make the extremism bipartisan. No Jeb, your party is hyper-extremist just like you said. The left and the Democratic party have time and time again tried to solve our problems in a bipartisan way. It is an abject lie to say that Obama has been partisan, he has thrown his supporters under the bus in the name of bipartisanship and for that he has lost my support. Your party is so extreme and unhinged they are nearing deep space orbit.

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    • halj 11 months ago

      Boo hoo. Jeb, guess what? There’s no room for YOU either! Maybe you should start a third party for RINOs.

    • TommKatt 11 months ago

      THERE ARE STILL INTELLIGENT REPUBLICANS IN AMERICA!!!!!! I never thought for a millisecond that it would ever be someone related to G.W Bush! I hope they had coats on stand-by in you know where, because it’s froze over!!!
      Democrats have become comparable to kids with Mom and Dad’s credit card at college, and Republicans appear only to be concerned with punishing the kids and cutting up the credit cards. The issues should be approached by all parties involved and they should try to come up with a doable plan that may be tough on everyone for awhile, but the rewards are worth it in the end.
      I say let’s fire everybody and start from scratch with folks that aren’t so friendly with big business and lobbyist. It does read, “We the people” instead of “We the Corporation” if I remember correctly. Besides…if corporations are people, don’t they need to have a certified copy of their birth certificate proving that they are 100% U.S. citizens?

    • alr7 11 months ago

      I’ve never agreed fully with Jeb Bush,even when he was Governor of Florida (where I live). However, his integrity has never been questioned which is something that today’s GOP leaders cannot claim. As a former GOP’r, I lft theparty after they”belly flopped off the deep end with the Tea Party and its band of crazies. The GOP today is a party of political sabotage and puts politics above the good of the nation. We are all beginning to see how shallow the talent pool is and I can only hope that voters willo votefor what’s good for the country and not what’s good for their egos..

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    • newu1150 11 months ago

      Bush was a conservative gov. the gop just keep moving more the right more to the right more to the right, couple more steps and they will simply fall the edge of the earth.

    • bzonline123 11 months ago

      Bipartisan support? Your folks must be kidding. Each political side better to shoot each other with guns, otherwise how could America be brought down? Also anyone frequently mentions his father’s achievement is not a good habit. Don’t be seen as living inside your father’s shadow, get your own foot moving. God helps those people who help themselves, not a sentence from Bible but practically quite true.

    • gia howard 11 months ago

      I disagree with his conclusion. I think Mitt
      Romney is exactly the one to bridge the
      extremes.

    • maxh4   Jeb Bush: No Place For Father, Reagan...  about 11 months ago
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    • Philip Corradini 11 months ago

      Call me naive, but I’m still shocked at the level of hatred and vitriol coming out of today’s Republican Party. This is a national tragedy.

    • rdbrewer 11 months ago

      It’s wrong for a liberal like Jeb Bush to invoke Reagan like that.

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    • tjj3 11 months ago

      So, Bill Clinton says we should extend tax cuts for those making more than $250,000 and Jeb Bush is saying that Republicans are too dogmatic.  Both parties should learn to compromise while examining and considering ALL options to reduce the deficit. It’s refreshing to see party stalwarts deviating from party dogma. Let’s hope this starts a trend.

    • robertsmx 11 months ago

      “His first year could have been a year of enormous accomplishment had he focused on things where there was more common ground” Mr Jeb Bush…. which was?

    • deaddrift   +  Jeb Bush: No Place For Father, Reagan... and thinks it’s WTF  about 11 months ago
    • deaddrift 11 months ago

      Jeb is an interesting case study. He is so much brighter than his brother; yet even while he identifies one of the crucial problems in today’s Republican party he unwittingly exemplifies another problem that is just as significant. Which is, this bizarre inability to identify reality. Obama didn’t compromise? Huh? What planet are these wingnuts living on where Obama didn’t compromise with Republicans? How many concessions did he make to congressional Republicans on healthcare reform? Dozens, you say? And yet he got zero—not one—Republican vote in support? Republicans have to figure out a way to escape this reality-denying trap they are in. It’s going to mean an enormous overhaul of heir philosophy, of course, since so much of that is premised on long discredited theories about economics and social justice, but they really need to find a way. Pronto.

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    • maxh4 11 months ago

      @spongeworthy: why don’t republicans just cut spending themselves, when they are in power? They spend so much more then dems anyways.. Obama is the least spending potus of the last 30 years.. tjek the facts.

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    • spongeworthy 11 months ago

      That was impressive. Not only does your headline mischaracterize the Governor’s comments, but you completely omitted the reason we cannot strike a “grand bargain”. Both Bush I and Reagan engaged with the Democrats and struck grand bargains. Then the other side reneged on promised spending cuts.  This is documented reality, so forgive today’s GOP for failing to make this mistake yet again. I guess if you had noted that, it would have come off as “fair and balanced”, and we can’t have that, can we?

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