MANCHESTER, New Hampshire — Jeb Bush is trying to pull off a comeback this month, and for about a half hour in a small barn on the New Hampshire coast, you could almost believe it might happen.
“We’re Americans, dammit!” Bush said. “We’re not from another place, we’re Americans. This is always how we’ve propelled ourselves forward.”
Speaking at the event in Rye, Bush seemed like a new man. He was animated, upbeat and nearly shouted his stump speech in which he foresaw a country “on the verge of greatness” if only it could “unite behind a common purpose” under the right leader.
“You guys elect presidents and that’s why I’m here and that’s why I’ll be here and I’ll come back and back and back,” Bush said.
As the saying goes, nothing concentrates the mind like the sight of the gallows, and Bush looked focused as ever as he sought to redeem a campaign on the verge of being swept into irrelevance. It was a stark contrast to his hesitant debate performances and the “low energy” caricature spread by Donald Trump.
“Good energy tonight,” one man told Bush at a town hall in Raymond later that night.
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“I actually have pretty good energy every night,” Bush replied.
If a comeback is going to happen, it will be in New Hampshire, where Bush spent three days this week at intimate town halls and house parties and roundtables and schools, trying to convince small crowds – and maybe himself – that his time was at hand.
Bush started his quest in the state pledging to “show my heart” to voters, and what they saw on his latest swing was raw and bloody. Through three days of events and conversations with reporters, he mounted a rousing defense of his record and spoke with bracing candor about his daughter’s past struggle with drug abuse, his fears of disappointing his father, and his own weaknesses as a candidate.
Squint right and you could almost see the contours of a Bush revival. Outside that small barn in Rye, however, grim reality was still waiting.
“He’s probably fifth right now,” Scott Brown, who hosted the Rye event as part of his “No BS BBQ” candidate series, told MSNBC when asked where Bush ranked in the state. Brown, a former Republican senator from Massachusetts, now resides in New Hampshire and mounted a losing campaign for Senate there in 2014.
The good news, according to Brown and every GOP voter who talked to MSNBC this week, is that New Hampshire makes up its mind late. Bush has 12 paid staff in the state and is planning on hiring more, and his campaign claims to have the largest organization of anyone in the state.
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“He’s got good people in New Hampshire helping him out who know what to do and he certainly could bounce back,” Dave Carney a veteran GOP strategist told MSNBC.
The bad news is – well, there’s a lot of bad news. A WBUR survey this week pegged him at fifth place with 7% support, behind frontrunner Trump, Ben Carson, John Kasich and Marco Rubio. A separate Monmouth survey put him at 7% support, behind all five names plus Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
With news like that, a major part of Bush’s job right now is to keep his backers from panicking.
“I promise you I’ll do better,” Bush told donors in a call on Wednesday, according to audio obtained by NBC News. “All the nervous nellies on the call, chill out. We’re going to do better, I promise you.”
It’s an enormous weight. And while Bush told MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt on Thursday he doesn’t spend time “on the couch meditating my navel,” it was hard not to read something deeper into his comments to a group of Manchester middle school students on Wednesday morning about his relationship with his father.
“My dad was such an inspiration for me that whenever I made a mistake all he would have to say is ‘I’m disappointed in you’ and it would send me into a deep spiraling depression for days,” Bush said.
In New Hampshire this week, Bush’s revamped new message to voters was broadly – almost defiantly — similar to the old one: Elect Bush, because he’s the optimistic conservative with a record of getting things done. The problem, Bush told reporters on his campaign bus, wasn’t his message but that he couldn’t express it properly on the national stage when it came time to debate.
“I think I do pretty good when I’m out with real people interacting with them,” Bush said. “I have fun doing it, but the debate process is different, I just got to translate what I do, last night twice, and what I’m going to do today three or four times, translate that into a debate experience.”
Bush won’t meet his rivals onstage again until Tuesday in Milwaukee, but several were in town the same week to file paperwork to get on the ballot.








