WARSAW, Poland — Facing scrutiny over his rhetoric and record regarding single mothers, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush told reporters on Thursday that two-parent homes help children “live lives of purpose and meaning.”
In a chapter of his 1995 book “Profiles of Character” entitled “The Restoration of Shame,” Bush, who is in Europe this week on an international tour, complained that having children outside of marriage had become common because there was “no longer a stigma attached to this behavior” and that “parents and neighbors have become ineffective at attaching some sense of ridicule to this behavior.”
Asked by msnbc whether his views regarding the application of shame had changed, Bush suggested his book’s warning had proved prophetic and stressed the importance of encouraging young people to get married before having children.
%22…%20my%20views%20about%20the%20importance%20of%20dads%20being%20involved%20in%20the%20lives%20of%20children%20hasn%E2%80%99t%20changed%20at%20all.%22′
“My views have evolved over time, but my views about the importance of dads being involved in the lives of children hasn’t changed at all,” he said. “In fact, since 1995 … this book was a book about cultural indicators [and] the country has moved in the wrong direction. We have a 40-plus percent out-of-wedlock birth rate.”
Bush has talked on the trail about research showing improved economic fortunes for children who are raised with two parents and on Thursday reiterated the importance of family structure.
“It’s a huge challenge for single moms to raise children in the world that we’re in today and it hurts the prospects, it limits the possibilities of young people being able to live lives of purpose and meaning,” he said.
After a follow-up question on whether the chapter was meant to apply to policy, Bush said that he was “speaking of [marriage] in the policy context and the focus was on men.”
In responding to the story, Bush’s staff has pointed reporters to a later passage in the book noting that raising the issue “does not mean we should demean the heroic efforts of single parents who are trying to raise good, decent children.”








