Republican hopeful Jeb Bush is cleaning up his worst political mess since stumbling over questions about the Iraq War months ago, a troublesome turn for a candidate selling himself as the party’s steadiest option. The episode, along with Bush’s persistently weak favorability ratings, could give opponents an opening to undermine his image as the field’s most electable alternative to Donald Trump.
His most recent struggle came this week after he questioned whether the government spends too much on medical care for women. The former Florida governor raised the issue on Tuesday in an appearance at the Southern Baptist Convention in Nashville, where he backed the as-of-now unsuccessful efforts in Congress to cut off funding to Planned Parenthood.
“You could take dollar for dollar — although I’m not sure we need half a billion dollars for women’s health issues — but if you took dollar for dollar, there are many extraordinarily fine organizations, community health organizations, that exist, federally sponsored community health organizations, to provide quality care for women on a wide variety of health issues,” Bush said.
Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton seized on the quote immediately, calling it “absolutely, unequivocally wrong” on Twitter. Bush said in a statement later that he “misspoke” and meant to address only funding earmarked for Planned Parenthood — not broader spending on women’s health.
President Obama’s campaign frequently highlighted Mitt Romney’s calls to defund Planned Parenthood in 2012, and it’s a good bet that footage of Bush’s remarks will make it into Clinton’s ads should the two meet in the general election.
Making matters worse, Bush’s remarks could not have come at a more inconvenient time for the social conservative movement he was trying to court on Tuesday.
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