Jeb Bush has pledged to be his own man as president, rather than follow the lead of father, President George H.W. Bush, and brother, President George W. Bush. When it comes to taxes, he’ll get his wish: Whatever he decides will run counter to at least one of their legacies.
Bush 41 became a permanent cautionary tale for conservatives after agreeing to a bipartisan budget deal that raised taxes despite declaring “Read my lips: No new taxes” in his 1988 convention speech. Bush 43, on the other hand, championed sweeping trillion-dollar plus tax cuts that Democratic critics derided for busting the budget and disproportionately aiding the wealthy.
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Bush earned strong reviews from the right as governor of Florida for his tax-cutting record. But more recent statements earned jeers from conservatives like anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist, whose group Americans for Tax Reform pushes Republican candidates to sign a pledge vowing never to raise taxes under any circumstances.
As part of a blanket ban on interest group agreements, Bush refused to sign the “taxpayer protection pledge” when he was governor, and he hasn’t done so as an expected presidential candidate either. Norquist said he’s less worried about the pledge, however, and more concerned about the former governor’s openness to a deficit-cutting deal along the lines of his father’s — and he’s raising his concerns early and at high volume.
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“He can’t say ‘I was governor and cut taxes, but elect me now and I’ll do whatever I want,’” Norquist told msnbc. “When you’re trying to run against the idea of a dynasty, against the idea of privilege, against the idea of hereditary position, to say to the peasants ‘I’ll let you know after you give me power’ — it just comes across as a ruler.”
Norquist’s group points to two incidents. In 2012, Bush was asked in a House Budget Committee hearing about a Republican presidential debate in which the candidates universally said they would oppose a “grand bargain” with Democrats to cut the deficit, even if it included $10 in spending cuts for every $1 dollar in new revenue. His response to the 10:1 offer: “Put me in, coach.”
“This will prove I am not running for anything,” he added.
The same year, Bush defended his father’s tax deal on policy grounds, if not political ones, to reporters at Bloomberg LP. Per Bush, the agreement may have lost Bush the election, but it “created the spending restraint of the ‘90s” and was “helpful in creating a climate of more sustained economic growth.”
“His brother’s position was ‘I saw what happened when they cheated my father, they’ll never do that to me, I’m signing the pledge,’” Norquist said. “[Jeb Bush] thinks if he takes the pledge the whole world will have a conversation about his dad. He’s got it wrong: The reason people are talking about his dad’s tax increase is because Jeb is saying he’d do the same thing.”
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You can expect to see the above Bush quotes pop up in the primary as rivals look to fuel conservative opposition to Bush, who will also have to defend his support for immigration reform and Common Core education standards that are unpopular on the right. How Bush responds and what tax plan he offers up himself will be one of the biggest tests of his campaign.
“If Governor Bush decides to move forward, he will not sign any pledges circulated by lobbying groups,” Bush spokeswoman Kristy Campbell told msnbc in an email. “His record on tax cuts is clear. He didn’t raise taxes. He cut them every year as Governor for a total of more than $19 billion in tax relief. He does not support raising taxes and believes cutting taxes and reforming the tax code will lead to greater economic growth and more prosperity for Americans.”








