Charleston, SC – It was like old times all over again. President George W. Bush walked out to a crowd of several thousands adoring supporters, who cheered, snapped photos, and beamed as he spoke.
What he needs the crowd to do, though, is vote for his brother, Jeb Bush, on Saturday in the state’s critical primary. It’s not at all clear they’ll do so.
The former president’s appearance came two days after a high-octane Republican debate in which Donald Trump accused the Bush administration of manufacturing intelligence to justify the Iraq War, and stood by his past comments calling for George W. Bush’s impeachment.
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It was, as Jeb Bush said in his own speech Monday night, a scenario that he never imagined possible.
“I closed my eyes and I thought it was Michael Moore on the stage,” the former Florida governor said.
And yet, Trump is the dominant front-runner in polls of South Carolina and beyond while Bush is the one struggling to regain his footing after a fourth place showing in last week’s New Hampshire primary. For the family that’s been part of every winning Republican ticket since 1980, it’s a waking nightmare.
George W. Bush got a chance to respond to Trump personally on Monday, though, and he defended his record, saying he had been motivated only by a burning desire to protect America. He contrasted his brother’s “humility” with certain unnamed rivals who use “loud words,” “bluster,” “theatrics” and “petty name calling.”
“Americans are angry and frustrated, but we do not need someone in the Oval Office who mirrors and inflames our frustrations,” the former president said. “We need someone who can fix the problems that cause our anger and frustration and that’s Jeb Bush.”
Politically, the Bush campaign couldn’t be happier to see Trump start a fight over the family’s record on national security. Polls have shown George W. Bush is still popular with Republicans and campaign aides believe he’s even more beloved in South Carolina, which has a deep military tradition and carried him past challenger John McCain in the 2000 GOP contest.
This all had led to a wave of speculation that Trump, who has since toned down some of his harsher accusations, might have done serious damage to himself.
Don’t be so sure.
It’s true Republicans like the last Bush and his father, former President George H.W. Bush, on a personal level, but it’s a much more complicated relationship than the numbers indicate. It’s not a coincidence that Republican candidates praise Ronald Reagan to the point of parody but rarely mention Bush 43 or Bush 41 as role models. The constant refrain from primary voters — “No more Bushes, no more Clintons” — is a comment on dynasties on the surface, but it also speaks to the party’s unease.
That complicated emotional relationship was palpable in Charleston on Monday.
Over and over again the same theme came through in interviews: People voted for one or more Bushes, loved them to death, couldn’t wait to cheer them on that night, and yet were deeply uncomfortable with voting for another one.
Beth College, a 61-year old nurse living in Mt. Pleasant, typified this ambivalence.
College came to check out Jeb Bush, is “a big fan of his father and brother” and wasn’t happy when Trump criticized the Iraq War on Saturday. As she sees it, the WMD intelligence was a close call either way and Bush did the best he could.
But Trump is still high on her list of candidates thanks to his business acumen — and she has serious misgivings about voting Bush.
“I’m not sure I want a Bush dynasty,” she said. “We need new blood and new ideas and it’s hard not to have your beliefs and ideas handed down from your family.”
The former president understood the power of this argument all too well, addressing it directly in his speech that night.
“If serving as President of the United States makes me part of the so-called establishment, I’ll proudly carry that label,” he said.








