SUMMERVILLE, South Carolina – Jeb Bush took the stage Wednesday at a beautiful country club here fit for a picture-perfect wedding. If the state’s voters don’t say “I do” on Saturday, it could be his campaign’s funeral.
Bush’s event began just moments after the campaign received a deflating piece of news: South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who Bush had called “probably the most meaningful endorsement” in the state on Tuesday, would endorse Sen. Marco Rubio.
Bush didn’t address the news in his remarks, but at one point in the speech he complained that the pundits were trying to run him out of the race.
“It’s all been decided, apparently,” he said. “We don’t have to go vote. I should stop campaigning, maybe. That’s not how democracy works, right?”
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This is not the kind of thing you usually hear from winning candidates, and it was almost physically painful watching the candidate’s frustrations pour out. Afterward, Bush told reporters he was “disappointed” by Haley’s endorsement.
“She’s a very good governor, and should I win the nomination there will be a role for her in the campaign,” he added.
Bush trotted out a fresh look this week, dropping his trademark glasses for contact lenses, but the old problems have followed him. He’s competing with Rubio and Ohio Gov. John Kasich for mainstream GOP votes on one end and tormented by Donald Trump’s vicious insults, which this week have focused on his brother George W. Bush, on the other.
Bush issued one of his toughest arguments on Wednesday as to why Rubio, his former protégé, was still not qualified to lead based on his limited experience as a legislator.
“It’s hard for me to be lectured to by a gifted young guy who thinks that going to a committee hearing means you know something about the world,” Bush said. “You know something about the world when you’re involved in the world, when you’re actively engaged.”
By contrast, Bush recounted how he had governed through crisis after crisis in Florida, headlined by multiple hurricanes in a short time span.
The audience there was supportive, but they sounded worried about his campaign and they let him know it. One voter said he was “afraid your message doesn’t resonate” and asked whether Bush was “knocked off center” by Trump’s insults.
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“I don’t feel like I’m shaken up by the bully,” Bush said. “I’m the only guy going after the guy, because he’s hijacking the party that I believe is the path to prosperity for more and more people.”
Another voter said he loved Bush’s brother, but wanted to know whether the governor could be a “sumbitch” when needed.








