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politics and politicians Title: Time for Jeb to go? Earlier today, I asked, Whats the raison dêtre for Jeb! 2016 now? Last night I put it more bluntly on Twitter: Prediction: Jeb's out before the next debate. Ed Morrissey (@EdMorrissey) October 29, 2015 Chuck Todd told Todays panel this morning that the Team Bush contingent had the air of a wake after the debate: [T]he most significant story from last night is that Jeb Bushs campaign now finds itself on life support, especially after Bush swung and missed when trying to hit Rubio over his Senate voting record. As one Republican operative told NBCs Peter Alexander, Bush had to demonstrate to his supporters and donors after a rough last few weeks that the former Florida governor could land a punch, particularly after telegraphing to the political world that it was coming. But Bush missed. Badly. It was the equivalent of a teenager who, after telling the whole school that he was going to fight a classmate at lunchtime, ended up being the one taking the licking. Weve covered politics long enough to know that a presidential candidate can rise from the dead (John McCain), withstand a bad debate performance (Barack Obama), and shine when it counts rather than months before the first votes are cast (John Kerry). But Jeb Bush is in trouble right now. Big trouble. Bush has to do something to buy time: For Bush, last nights debate will either be the moment that ended his presidential campaign, or the point when his campaign hit rock bottom (because he cant go any lower, right?). But to buy time, Team Bush has to do SOMETHING to calm the campaigns most ardent supporters whether its new campaign staff or Bush admitting to strategic mistakes. The bad news for the campaign was last night. The silver lining: Every president and nominee has faced some near-death experience. Yes, Bush has a large campaign chest, and has dominated the donor lists for some time. Where has that gotten him? Hes faded into the also-rans, now running behind Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, as well as Donald Trump and Ben Carson. In one sense, Bushs supporters have been waiting for him to do something for almost a year. The examples for silver linings that Todd uses were all still competitive by this point in their cycles yes, even McCain and Kerry had gotten within striking distance of the leaders. Bush is going the opposite direction. Matt Lewis has seen enough: At this point, it seems the likelihood of Bush a) tarnishing his reputation and b) inadvertently helping Donald Trump win the GOP nomination greatly exceeds the chance that he could turn things around. His body language betrays a guy who doesnt really want to do what it takes to win today and who is out of step with the current Republican Party. Bushs low point came when he tried to attack Marco Rubio, and was immediately slapped down. If last night really was a do or die moment for his campaign, then its time for the Bush family to begin making arrangements. One gets the sense that he wants to cry No Mas, but accepting defeat might not be part of the entitled Bush D.N.A. The danger is that he might decide that its easier to attack Rubio via TV ads than in person, and that would be a shame. Were no longer in the silly season, CNBC aside. The time for hard truths for candidates who are not distinguishing themselves has arrived, and the time for donors to have those long talks with their favorites has too. Bush should choose this moment to leave not just for that failure to gain traction, but for the strange decision to personally attack Rubio and to botch it as badly as he did. Even beyond the fact that Bush has spent almost a year and ended up among the statistical noise despite all of his organizational and financial advantages, this all but proved that hes simply not a good enough candidate to run in the general election. But Bush shouldnt be the only candidate to exit as October turns to November. Here are a few others: The entire undercard Theyre entertaining, but thats it. The dual-debate format is wearing down audiences without adding anything to the GOPs chances for victory. Theyve had three tries at bouncing out of the second division, and all four are still the St. Louis Spiders. Enough. Reince Priebus should put an end to the warm-up act if the candidates themselves wont do it. Mike Huckabee Hes a former governor who connects well with people, but hes going nowhere despite his high media profile over the last several years. Three debates is enough. Rand Paul Perhaps the biggest surprise of this cycle is how little traction Paul actually has among Republicans nationally. Hes not good in the debate format, either. The longer he stays in, the more chance he has of doing damage to a race Paul can win his Senate re-election bid. He has a fallback plan, and its time to deploy it. John Kasich Last night was supposed to be a do-or-die moment for Kasich, who completely changed his approach
and failed again to impress. Kasich should concentrate on making himself into a viable running mate for the general election, especially since Ohio will be critical for the GOP, and part of that will be to disappear for a while rather than attacking other Republicans indiscriminately. That leaves us with six candidates the same six that Jonathan Last cites, by the way: Trump, Carson, Rubio, Cruz, Christie, and Fiorina. All of them add substance and style to the mix onstage, and six people is about the maximum manageable for substantive discussions on policy. Christie and Fiorina are not likely to contend for the top spot, but they are tough onstage and have remained their authentic selves throughout the contest. Getting down to six now gives us a good potential for a reshuffling of the pack and a further narrowing as the primaries approach. Republicans need to start getting serious about this process. Jeb Bush has an opportunity to provide leadership in doing so. It may be his last opportunity to remind people of his best qualities, rather than let that embarrassing exchange with Rubio define him into his retirement. Poster Comment: Hard to resist the bountiful harvest of Jeb! obituaries. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 18.
#3. To: TooConservative (#0)
Who would have expected this headline 3 months ago?
No one ever thought Trump could keep his numbers up (even if 60%-80% of those polled say they aren't committed to any candidate yet). Bush is falling hard because he had such a big name and reputation advantage and the Bush network of donors (overlaps with the Romney donors). When you have every advantage but can't deliver a few lines in a debate, you fall hard. As far as media and pundits are concerned, Bush is dead meat. He might still pull it out but he has nowhere near the amount of celebrity Teflon that has allowed Trump to survive some of his policy positions and general campaign remarks. Of course, this rush to hold a Jeb! funeral does tend to reflect the pundits preferring Rubio over Bush to begin with. And if they all believe that only Rubio or Bush can stop Trump/Carson, then dumping Bush to unify behind Rubio makes sense for the GOPe types and even many writers on the Right who still have buyers' regret over Dumbya's 8 years.
Jeb! is failing because he is unable to effectively compete. He could not engage with Trump without being squashed. All did not believe Jeb! could stop Trump. He attempted to attack Rubio and got squashed. Rubio is manifestly the superior politician and debater. The GOPe will coalesce around Rubio as their best candidate. On the RCP poll averages, if Rubio inherited the entire Bush following, he would rise to 16%. The Trump (26.2%), Carson (22%) and Cruz (6.6%) total is 54.8%. Fiorina is at 5.8%. The GOPe needs to find a way to lure some of the Trump/Carson/Cruz following. Rubio provides the best chance.
How did he become a governor?
#19. To: buckeroo (#18)
Money and influence. Grandpappy was a senator, pappy and bro were presidents, and son is Commissioner of the Texas General Land Office. They could be the best and the brightest. I see money and influence rather than genius and competence.
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