In Miami, the Cuban-American community is not monolithic, but it is tight-knit. When former governor Jeb Bush and former state House Speaker Marco Rubio launched bids for president, supporters of the two favorite sons sought to put a friendly face on the rivalry. As Jorge Arrizurieta, a top GOP fundraiser and longtime Bush friend put it last summer, Miami’s Cuban-American politicos “really like Marco, but we love Jeb,” who has long been a sort of honorary member of the Miami Cuban family. But since last fall, the race between the longtime friends and allies; virtually neighbors in Miami, has turned ugly. The men are competing in the same “establishment” lane, for the same Republican voters and a similar pool of big donors. Both are running as hawkish neoconservatives on foreign policy, and as social and fiscal conservatives, though Rubio takes a harder line on abortion. The two also used to share a view on comprehensive immigration reform, before Rubio abandoned the policy — and a bill he and his team co-authored — under pressure from conservatives and media figures on the right.
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Arrizurieta and others are bemoaning the state of the race. Not only is their favorite, Jeb, doing poorly in the polls, he’s also being hit by increasingly personal attacks from the man he helped usher into political power in the Sunshine State, as Rubio and the super PACs supporting him tee off against the son and brother of former presidents.
The most recent hit came in the form of a mailer to New Hampshire voters from the pro-Rubio Conservative Solutions PAC, mocking the Bush dynasty. The mailer depicts Jeb wearing a crooked crown and standing beside an elderly Queen of England, King Henry VIII and the Burger King character. The caption below the Queen’s image is a quote from former First Lady Barbara Bush, saying, “We’ve had enough Bushes” as president.









