Jeb Bush Keeps Policy Focus, Despite Fade in 2016 Race

Jeb Bush stared across the Londonderry Senior Center in disbelief
Jeb Bush Keeps Policy Focus, Despite Fade in 2016 Race
In this Aug. 19, 2015 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, speaks in Londonderry, N.H. AP Photo/Jim Cole
The Associated Press
Updated:

LONDONDERRY, N.H.—Jeb Bush stared across the Londonderry Senior Center in disbelief.

A voter at his town hall had just told him she'd read the candidate’s 3,000-word tax plan. “The fact that you read it makes me feel so pleased — even if you didn’t like it,” Bush said, unsuccessfully holding back a grin.

It was the sort of moment Bush surely dreamed about when he announced his 2016 bid six months ago. Soon, the two were deep in the weeds of his proposals for capital gains taxes on estates, when Bush paused. “We’re having a real wonk-a-thon right now,” he said gleefully.

It was also a moment all too rare for Bush, a former front-runner stubbornly sticking to a sober-minded approach to his campaign despite months of evidence that Republican voters aren’t much interested in what he’s selling.

The portion of Republican registered voters who think Bush could win the general election, should he win his party’s nomination, has dropped to 40 percent in a new Associated Press-GfK poll, down from 60 percent in October.

Republicans are now no more likely than Democrats to see Bush as a potential general election winner, and 39 percent say they view Bush unfavorably — almost the same percentage as billionaire front-runner and frequent Bush foil Donald Trump.

Perhaps even more troubling for Bush, given his insistence on talking about policy and his ability to govern, the poll found that GOP voters view Trump, the real estate mogul and reality TV star, as more competent than the two-term governor of Florida.

After setbacks in October, including deep campaign spending cuts and a widely criticized debate performance, Bush sought to reassure donors who have contributed more than $100 million to his campaign and a separate pro-Bush organization by resetting his effort with the auspicious slogan: “Jeb Can Fix It.”

Part of the shift in strategy was redoubling Bush’s emphasis on New Hampshire, where aides said the candidate’s serious style and affinity for one-on-one policy engagement was a close fit with New Englanders, who also typically hold themselves as independent of the national story line.

Since then, Bush has held nearly 20 town hall-style meetings in the state, each with about 100 voters attending, including in places most other candidates have not visited.

But the content of Bush’s town halls remains the same, with the brother and son of former presidents passing on Trump’s flash and penchant for bombast to remain centered on telling the story of his time as governor and his detailed plans for the nation’s economy and military.

He has faith — and some good-natured bullheadedness — that voters will eventually come around.

In answering immigration lawyer Marisa DiFranco’s question about what to do with the millions of immigrants in the United States illegally at an event this week, Bush mentioned the immigration policy book he co-authored, explained the economic criteria he would use to increase legal immigration, and then paused.