BERLIN – Days before his scheduled June 15 presidential announcement, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush told reporters on Wednesday that a late decision to replace his presumptive campaign manager was a strategic move rather than a response to his tepid position in the polls.
“I don’t read the polls,” he told reporters outside the Pestana Hotel in Berlin, where he is on the first leg of a trip through Germany, Poland and Estonia. “It’s fun to see them when you’re winning, not so fun when you’re not. Doesn’t really matter, though, it’s June for crying out loud, so we got a long way to go.”
Bush said that he had chosen Florida Republican Danny Diaz as his campaign-manager-in-waiting over David Kochel, who was tapped for the role initially, to allow Kochel to take a different role masterminding the campaign’s efforts in early states.
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“You have a real focus on four states in February, then you have an avalanche of states after that and you think about how to organize all that, how to develop the messaging part of this, the scheduling part of it, it’s a pretty overwhelming challenge and so I decided to kind of split up the duties,” Bush said. “David has got great success in these early states, particularly Iowa, he’s also got a great strategic mind, and Danny’s a grinder.”
He added that he was “confident that the team in place will do their job and I got to do my job as well.”
Responding to a reporter’s question about his early expectations for the race, Bush pushed back against the idea that he should be in a more dominant position by now given his fundraising strength and high-profile name brand.
“I know I’m going to have to earn this,” he told reporters. “It’s a lot of work and I’m excited about the prospects of this. It’s a long haul. You start whenever you start and you end a long, long way from today. I just urge everybody to be a little more patient about this.”








