Republicans voters are getting two very different visions of Latino outreach this month in Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
The dueling White House contenders occupy the top two Republican spots in several recent polls of potential primary-goers. Trump surged to his position riding an endless cycle of outrage and backlash that began in June when he alleged that undocumented immigrants were primarily criminals and “rapists” forced across the border by a conspiring Mexican government. Bush, by contrast, has calmly shored up his own front-runner position while promising an aggressive effort to attract Latino support.
In a series of campaign events and interviews this week, Bush offered up the most vivid preview yet of what he might bring to the table in a general election on this front.
RELATED: Jeb Bush says he was ‘hurt’ by Trump’s remarks on Mexicans
Sitting down with MSNBC’s Jose Diaz-Balart for a Spanish-language interview, Bush said he was personally “hurt” by Trump’s rhetoric. “In a political sense it was bad, and it creates an environment that is worse,” Bush added.
At every turn, Bush played up his own roots. His wife, Columba, was born in Mexico, and Bush even recounted consoling his son, George P. Bush, after he was harassed at a baseball game over his ethnic background.
“It was a good lesson to remember that we still don’t have a country of complete justice,” Jeb Bush said.
Earlier this year, Bush came in for some mockery after The New York Times dug up a voter form in which he had marked his own ethnicity as “Latino.” Bush may not go that far, but he is making an explicit case that his ties to Latino culture run deep and are an integral part of his identity.
“My children are Hispanic in many aspects,” he said on MSNBC. “We don’t talk about it, but the Hispanic influence is an important part of my life.”








