Story updated at 1:18 p.m. ET to reflect Bush’s remarks.
DETROIT — Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush called America’s opportunity gap “the defining issue of our time” Wednesday in Detroit, where he delivered one of his first major speeches since announcing in December that he may run for president.
Speaking at the Detroit Economic Club, Bush took aim at the slow pace of economic recovery since the 2008 financial crisis. “More Americans are stuck at their income levels than ever before,” Bush said.
He blamed Washington politicians for not understanding the needs of millions around the country still looking for work. Bush took aim at what he called a federal bureaucracy that creates a “spider web that traps people in perpetual dependence” on government.
“People don’t want to wait for the government to deliver prosperity,” Bush said, “they want to earn it themselves.”
“The recovery has been everywhere but in the family paychecks. The American Dream has become a mirage for far too many,” Bush said in the prepared remarks.
Washington, he added, is ”a company town. And the company is government. It’s all they know. For several years now, they have been recklessly degrading the value of work, the incentive to work, and the rewards of work.”
The American dream, Bush added, “has become a mirage for far too many.” Bush said his speech Wednesday is the fist in a series of addresses the former governor will make to lay out his solutions to close the opportunity gap.
Bush’s proto-campaign has been most active behind the scenes up to this point, corralling staffers and donors to its side before other candidates-in-waiting can scoop them up. The former Florida governor got a big boost last week when Mitt Romney decided to abandon his own presidential ambitions. In addition to freeing up staff, fundraisers and surrogates for Bush to court, Romney’s exit dampened tea party hopes that the two establishment heavyweights would get bogged down in an expensive primary fight that might allow a conservative insurgent to sneak through.
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