CONCORD, New Hampshire – Jeb Bush is betting that the best cure to a divided party is a common enemy.
Speaking to a small crowd at the Snowshoe Club here, Bush levied a steady drumbeat of attacks on President Obama’s record, accusing him of restraining the economy, weakening national security, and running roughshod over the constitution.
Bush was in New Hampshire, the first in the nation primary state, ahead of a gathering of likely GOP presidential hopefuls this weekend. The Republican Leadership Summit, taking place Friday and Saturday in Nashua, was expected to draw most of the party’s top names including Bush, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and many others.
"To hell with the diet," Jeb Bush says as he digs into blueberry pie. pic.twitter.com/BNkolzLMFk
— Kasie Hunt (@kasie) April 16, 2015
It wasn’t all red meat, though. Bush declined to call on Republicans to block Obama’s Attorney General nominee Loretta Lynch, saying he favored “deference to the executive” when possible on nominees. “Based on demeanor, [she] doesn’t appear she has a record that would be as punitive as what Eric Holder acted on,” he said.
But, Bush added, Obama’s appointees are “one part political hack and one part academic.”
When it came to the economy, an area where Obama is now polling more favorably than not for the first time in years, Bush derided the “so-called recovery” for not producing higher wages.
“My belief is this president wants to get deals for his legacy whether its Iran or Cuba,” Bush said after a question on the administration’s rapprochement with the Castro regime. “He’s negotiating without getting any concessions in return.”
In Concord #NewHampshire Jeb Bush jokes anyone who wants to criticize his brother, George W, they can "step outside" pic.twitter.com/TEbIC0fHUF
— Anthony Terrell (@AnthonyNBCNews) April 16, 2015
That went over well enough. But for every punch Bush took at the president on their disagreements, it seemed he had to defend himself from tough questions on where they agree.
At the top of the list: immigration. “By doing nothing we lose elections and we have tepid growth,” Bush said, making the case for reform that includes a path to legal status for undocumented immigrants. “You can’t self-deport,” he added, referring to Mitt Romney’s 2012 prescription, because “that’s just not an American value.”








