Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush is pledging that if elected president he will take on the “arrogance” and “sheer incompetence” that he says permeates Washington.
Bush plans to lay out some of his domestic priorities Monday in a speech that will begin to outline how he will change the culture of what he calls “Mount Washington.” When he was Florida’s governor, Bush referred to state government as “Mount Tallahassee” because he said it was remote from the state’s residents and settled in it ways.
Bush is speaking on the campus of Florida State University, or less than a mile from where he served as governor for eight years.
“Should I win this election, you will not find me deferring to the settled ways of “Mount Washington,” Bush says in excerpts released early Monday. “The overspending, the overreaching, the arrogance, and the sheer incompetence in that city — these problems have been with us so long that they are sometimes accepted as facts of life. But a president should never accept them, and I will not.”
Bush also criticizes the size of the federal government payroll and how people are promoted. He said he plans to “disrupt” the establishment.
“It’s a system stuck in old ways, ruled by inertia, and unaccountable to the people,” said Bush.
It’s not surprising that Bush would begin rolling out a series of policies even as the field for president continues to grow. Before he ran for president he constantly urged other Republicans to offer alternatives to Democratic-backed ideas like President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul instead of just opposing them.
The speech also reinforces Bush’s attempts to distance himself from the other Washington politicians in the race, including Sen. Marco Rubio, who is also from Florida.
When Bush became governor in 1999 it marked the first time that Republicans had complete control of Florida state government in more than a century. Many GOP leaders, including current FSU President John Thrasher, were eager to work with him on a long line of substantial initiatives, including an overhaul of the state’s public school system that remains contentious 15 years after it was first put in place.
Bush, who has been an infrequent visitor to Tallahassee since he left office in 2007, is expected to tout that record as proof of his ability to push forward changes on taxes and spending. In advance of his speech the Bush campaign website released new videos mentioning that Bush balanced budgets for eight years and built up billions in reserves while slashing state worker jobs.
The video, however, does not note that Florida requires the state to pass a balanced budget. The reserves cited by Bush also include money that the state won in a landmark settlement reached with the nation’s tobacco companies prior to his election.
Bush was able to cut taxes consistently while he was governor because the state’s economy tracked upward, part of which was due to a supercharged real estate market that collapsed after he left office.
(AP)
4 Responses
Is campaigning against “Washington” really a good idea for Jeb Bush? For 12 of the last 26 years, the president of the United States has been a member of his family.
Is campaigning against arrogance and incompetence really a good idea for Jeb Bush? What could be more incompetent than the WMD that an earlier Bush believed necessitated a brief war in Iraq, when it turned out that there were no WMD and the war was not brief? What could be more arrogant than “Mission Accomplished”? The only thing more arrogant than “Mission Accomplished” that I can think of is the continuing presence on TV of the Bush family confidante and former Vice President Dick Cheney opining on Middle East policy. Remember when Dick arrogantly that the US “will be greeted as liberators in Iraq?”
Mr. nfgo3, what’s your problem? You dont like President Bush? it’s not Jeb’s fault that his brother was president. I don’t like Jeb either, but not because of his brother
One of my objections to Jeb! is that his status as a leader is evidence that the barriers to entry into a candidacy for president are so high, and entrenched interests have undue influence over the US presidential selection process. (President Obama and former President Bill Clinton are worthy exceptions, i.e., they are from families having no important connections to US politics and no wealth.) Even if Jeb!’s policies were aligned with mine, I would nevertheless find it disturbing that the prominence of his family in US politics (which goes back 2 or 3 generations) gives him an advantage over other candidates. That is, in part, why I objected to Al Gore, son of a US senator, and why I object to Hillary, wife of a president. (Hillary also has other objectionable qualities.) I do not consider this “my” problem. I consider it a problem for America.
While everything said about Bush I and II is true, my problem with Jeb is that I do not believe the presidency should be a family business.
BTW that is also one of my objections to Hillary.