NEW LONDON, New Hampshire—Jeb Bush’s final argument just days ahead of Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary election is two pronged: he’s an establishment candidate named Bush and the frontrunners are Barack Obama circa 2008.
Bush has been leading his recent campaign speeches with an anecdote about Obama — that the then-senator’s gifted speaking skills may have helped him win the Iowa Caucus eight years ago, but that didn’t translate into tangible accomplishments or leadership in the white house. This, the former governor says, also applies to the two senators vying for the Republican nomination in 2016.
“We’re electing a president of the United States, not a backbencher to the United States Senate,” Bush said of Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio.
That message emerged the day after Bush’s sixth place finish in the Iowa Caucus, as his campaign’s future depends on a much stronger showing in the upcoming first-in-the-nation primary where Bush has focused much of his resources for months.
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The more direct hits on his rivals during town hall events is just part of the campaign’s focus this week as a new two-minute television ad called “Turn Off Trump” has begun airing in New Hampshire. The spot shows Trump’s most controversial comments from the campaign, followed by Bush’s rebuttal of the billionaire’s “disparagements.”
On Wednesday, the campaign also published a full-page advertisement in the New Hampshire Union Leader, hitting Rubio by touting the backing of seven former Florida House Speakers -– asserting that the elected officials who know both Rubio and Bush best are siding with the former governor.
As Bush struggles to regain the dominance he lost last summer in the face of Trump’s rise, he is also relying more regularly on the political legacy attached to his last name.
“Let’s get this out of the way first — I’m a Bush and I’m proud of it,” he has taken to saying. “I’m part of the establishment because I’m a Bush — Great, doesn’t bother me a bit.”
The full embrace of his last name is now one of his standard campaign lines ever since voters began raising the candidate’s father and brother at daily town hall fodder in the past few weeks.








