Jeb Bush said he would be a more fiscally conservative president than his brother as the Republican 2016 candidate appeared as a guest on Stephen Colbert’s inaugural episode of “The Late Show” Tuesday night.
There was a family theme to the interview as Colbert asked Bush to differentiate himself from his brother President George W. Bush to which the governor said he’s “younger” and “much better looking.”
But when pressed by Colbert on actual policy differences Bush critiqued his brother’s inability to bring fiscal restraint to Washington.
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“I think my brother probably didn’t control the Republican Congress’ spending. I think he should have brought the hammer down on the Republicans when they were spending way too much because our brand is limited government,” he said.
“He didn’t veto things, he didn’t bring fiscal restraint,” added the former Florida governor who boasted of being called “Veto Corleone” in his home state.
Colbert acknowledged that brothers don’t always agree politically – introducing his own brother who was sitting in the audience – and who confirmed the differing partisan persuasions.
“I want your vote,” Bush said to Colbert’s brother who lives in the early voting state of South Carolina.
Bush also told the host that his mother was “just joking” when she told NBC News that the country had had enough Bush’s and Clinton’s in the White House before the 2016 race began to heat up.
The comedian further pressed the candidate (who he called the front-runner, with “one possible exception,” referring to Donald Trump) on whether Washington’s political culture can be changed to which Bush agreed, “We have to restore a degree of civility.”
“I don’t think Barack Obama has bad motives. I just think he’s wrong on a lot of issues,” Bush said. Colbert pointed out the New York City studio audience’s approval for that remark. “You were so close to getting them to clap,” he quipped.









