SCOTTSDALE, Arizona — The Republican Party is without a front-runner in the presidential nomination fight.
It’s a reality that’s been brewing for months, but has crystallized this week among the GOP officials gathered here in Arizona for the Republican National Committee’s spring meeting.
Jeb Bush has fallen from the man to beat to the richest member of the pack. Scott Walker seems to have gone underground. Marco Rubio is exciting but untested. And the Republican establishment is growing increasingly nervous that the party is facing a long, bloody primary fight that could drag into next summer.
“There are a bevy of riches,” former presidential candidate Rick Santorum said Thursday, putting the most positive possible spin on the chaotic reality that Republicans now face. “I don’t know how you could look at any metric and not see that this is a completely wide open race.”
Santorum’s rosy take is different from the slightly nervous, somewhat unsettled mood among the state party chairs, committee members and operatives who have gathered at the luxurious Phoenician resort. But hallway conversations, interviews and casual discussions over two days reveal they’ve largely reached the same conclusion about the state of the race: “It’s anybody’s ballgame,” as one longtime RNC member put it, bluntly.
Driving this reality? First, major mistakes. Earlier this year, it was Walker, who was leading in polls when he struggled to answer simple questions about President Obama’s religion. He ducked questions from reporters and voters in the weeks that followed — though he has opened up some in recent weeks — and refused press access to his ongoing trip to Israel this week. “Now he’s running the Hillary strategy,” said an RNC member who’s supporting a different candidate in the 2016 race. “It’s the right strategy for him, but it’s not a good situation.”
RELATED: Jeb Bush attempts to clarify Iraq remarks … again
And then there’s Bush, who this week couldn’t seem to find an answer to the question that has seemed the most obvious from the get-go: Whether he would have authorized the war in Iraq that his brother launched in 2003. He stumbled into it in the very first sit-down TV interview he’s given since December, when he announced he was interested in pursuing the presidency, telling Fox News’ Megyn Kelly that he would have launched the war. It took him four days to fix it.
“Knowing what we know now,” Bush finally said on Thursday during a town hall in nearby Tempe, “I would not have engaged. I would not have gone into Iraq.”
The stumbling raised fears among many Bush loyalists and admirers. “That’s not a hard answer. The answer is, ‘hell no,’” said one RNC attendee.
“I always encourage everybody to run for president, but it’s hard,” said Santorum, when a reporter asked if Bush was no longer an unstoppable force. “You’re [reporters] here to cut to the bone. And, I’ve felt that knife at the bone. And it’s a tough business, and if you’re not prepared for it … you’re not going to do very well.”
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Bush’s diminished stature is quite a switch from just four months ago, when the party met in San Diego and the halls were energized by the prospect of Bush’s impending candidacy. Back then, it had been about a month since Bush had announced he was interested in the race; Mitt Romney was considering a bid and many of the RNC’s members privately wanted Romney to get out of the way so they could jump aboard with Bush.








