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What’s Jeb Bush up to?
Washington Post, by Chris Cillizza and Sean Sullivan
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Original Article
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Posted By:abuela10, 3/5/2013 6:59:36 AM
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| When Jeb Bush speaks, people — especially Republicans — listen. And so, it’s worth examining Bush’s surprisingly newsy appearance on the “Today” show Monday in which the former Florida governor addressed immigration, the budget fight and his own future political aspirations. Yes, Bush was ostensibly on the show to promote his new book. But, by weighing in on immigration (he said no longer supports a path to citizenship, though in a later interview with NBC’s Chuck Todd, he said that he could support one under the right circumstances)
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Reply 1 - Posted by:
Not your typical New Yorker, 3/5/2013 7:11:23 AM (No. 9208878)
He feels he´s entitled to the next losing spot on the GOP ticket.
He´s right, he would be the next loser.
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Reply 2 - Posted by:
Wetlandz, 3/5/2013 7:24:46 AM (No. 9208892)
I used to admire him. Now I just want him to go away.
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Reply 3 - Posted by:
Lawsy0, 3/5/2013 7:26:18 AM (No. 9208893)
Ho. Hum. Chris Cillizza and Sean Sullivan never bothered to ask what is Obama up to, so stop bleeding on the living room rug, youse guys, and QUIT trying to eke out a Bush Dynasty.
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Reply 4 - Posted by:
ann, 3/5/2013 7:27:39 AM (No. 9208897)
I agree.....he feels entitled.----Surely folks won´t buy his ´new´ immigration position.....imo, he will do anything to be President, and then flip to where he´s always been.....amnesty for illegals....afterall, he IS George W.´s brother, and George W. hasn´t met an amnesty bill he didn´t love.
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Reply 5 - Posted by:
bighambone, 3/5/2013 7:33:04 AM (No. 9208902)
Now he wants to take a libertarian approach to solving the illegal alien situation. Just give all illegal aliens a "green card" and make future US immigration easy for a billion or so aliens from all over the world who would like to live and work in the USA, so that they no longer have to resort to seeking an illegal entry to the country. Remember most illegal aliens are poor low skilled workers who earn low wages.
How do you have essentially an official open borders policy that allows all such applicants to enter the country along with a viable welfare state?
How do you reconcile such a glut of cheap foreign labor once it drives wages down in a lot of the surviving US industries to the point where a huge number of American workers in competition with an unlimited stream of foreign workers would only be able to find jobs that pay about the federal minimum wage?
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Reply 6 - Posted by:
Spidey, 3/5/2013 7:42:11 AM (No. 9208911)
Jeb Bush could be a very good administrative president,the problem is zeroing in on what his core beliefs are.I don´t want a president who will be full of jack in the box surprises,like his brother´s push for immigration.
there´s still a lot of affection in the republican party for the Bushes and you can´t top his name ID,good or bad.
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Reply 7 - Posted by:
Lala, 3/5/2013 7:44:26 AM (No. 9208917)
That train has left the station. Jeb should have run in 2000. But he didn´t. The country will never elect another Bush for president. Never. Sorry Jeb, it s just the way it is. Find some other way to make your legacy other than being yet another GOP loser.
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Reply 8 - Posted by:
JAN, 3/5/2013 7:45:09 AM (No. 9208918)
Don´t know
Don´t care
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Reply 9 - Posted by:
skedaddle, 3/5/2013 7:46:55 AM (No. 9208923)
The Bushes and most Republicans and Democrats are owned by the people who benefit from cheap, compliant, disposable labor. And they don´t care how many millions of people they grind into the dust so the few elite can be rich, rich, rich.
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Reply 10 - Posted by:
Crosscut, 3/5/2013 7:49:35 AM (No. 9208930)
Jeb, please go away.
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Reply 11 - Posted by:
samnj, 3/5/2013 7:55:22 AM (No. 9208941)
I´m tired of the Bushes, the Kennedys and the Clintons.
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Reply 12 - Posted by:
MDConservative, 3/5/2013 7:58:54 AM (No. 9208946)
"Jeb Bush could be a very good administrative president,the problem is zeroing in on what his core beliefs are."
It seems that´s a family trait...maybe Karl Rove can straighten it all out...compassionate conservative...no, that´s been used..."Read my lips"...too ironclad...Forward!...hmmmm.
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Reply 13 - Posted by:
StormCnter, 3/5/2013 8:00:14 AM (No. 9208949)
Good man, good governor, good all around national candidate potential, but he won´t be given a chance. Too bad.
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Reply 14 - Posted by:
Blue-Z-Anna, 3/5/2013 8:05:01 AM (No. 9208953)
Cheap labor is not a bad thing.
Selective enforcement is a very bad thing.
Government meddling in the free market to the point of scaring the horses and spooking the small business players is a very bad thing.
Marxists want to make everything illegal and then play footsie with enforcement.
Selling license and privilege is the family business for leftists.
See: Obamacare
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Reply 15 - Posted by:
tonyl, 3/5/2013 8:08:25 AM (No. 9208959)
To all of you above. Would he be worse than whoever the dems nominate in 2016? I say he´d still be much better.
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Reply 16 - Posted by:
noproblems, 3/5/2013 8:17:38 AM (No. 9208971)
One wonders if the repugs are stupid enough to "put" another bush on the ticket.
we need a lincoln, not a buchanan
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Reply 17 - Posted by:
jar, 3/5/2013 8:18:53 AM (No. 9208974)
Scroll down and you´ll see the woman who claims she had sex with Senator Menendez is now saying she was paid to make false claims. Wonder if the reverse is true - that she is now being paid to claim she lied about it.
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Reply 18 - Posted by:
obdurate, 3/5/2013 8:22:37 AM (No. 9208980)
We first had George-the hapless,then George-the feckless,the next Bush will be..?
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Reply 19 - Posted by:
noproblems, 3/5/2013 8:23:49 AM (No. 9208982)
it is a sign of a decaying party when etch a sketch type people (bushes, dole, mccain and romney) are always considered front runners.
also pathetic that the bush family is the main source of candidates for the repugs.
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Reply 20 - Posted by:
william1, 3/5/2013 8:39:28 AM (No. 9209004)
How about no.
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Reply 21 - Posted by:
Liberal like Jefferson, 3/5/2013 8:42:43 AM (No. 9209008)
Jeb I, Second Earl of Kennebunkport. Where is he in the royal dynasty line again?
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Reply 22 - Posted by:
jackie, 3/5/2013 9:05:54 AM (No. 9209042)
No.. He might be a good man... so was his dad and brother...look where that got us. He is even more "moderate" than they were.. That train has left the station Jeb..your too late..
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Reply 23 - Posted by:
dirtydave, 3/5/2013 9:07:13 AM (No. 9209046)
No more Bushs, please. No. More. Bushs.
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Reply 24 - Posted by:
Topic Thunder, 3/5/2013 9:08:28 AM (No. 9209049)
Thanking God his name is Jeb Bush and not JEFF Bush!
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Reply 25 - Posted by:
LouD, 3/5/2013 9:10:51 AM (No. 9209057)
Looks like the Bush haters are out in force this morning. I, for one, was much better off under George Bush than I am with this present puke. And #9, you sound like a typical liberal, dissing on rich people. Rich doesn´t necessarily mean bad.
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Reply 26 - Posted by:
Coy860, 3/5/2013 9:12:45 AM (No. 9209061)
18. In 20 years, Jeb´s son. AKA George Bush. You heard it here first.
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Reply 27 - Posted by:
Axeman, 3/5/2013 9:25:02 AM (No. 9209088)
He would be better than anyone on the Dem side. But he would lose. So we would get whoever the Dems put forth.
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Reply 28 - Posted by:
Chuzzles, 3/5/2013 9:48:56 AM (No. 9209139)
No more of the ´its his turn´ candidates. This version of Bush may be a good administrator, but so was Romney. Go read some of Romney´s recent interviews. He was a very poor candidate. No more moderate Republicans. The moderates who post here are a great example. There is no fire in the belly that is necessary to win. Just a willingness to roll over and let the Dems abuse them.
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Reply 29 - Posted by:
coldoc, 3/5/2013 9:56:05 AM (No. 9209151)
The posters are right. I´m bushed.
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Reply 30 - Posted by:
pickle1, 3/5/2013 9:56:33 AM (No. 9209152)
We have Obama because of Daddy Bush. We had Clinton because of Daddy Bush. We really don´t need anymore Bushes.
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Reply 31 - Posted by:
fb2002, 3/5/2013 10:02:23 AM (No. 9209162)
No MORE Bushes! We ran McPain, the Romney, and now possibly Bush....OMG do we ever want to get the rats out of power? We need a new party. A conservative party that will be a strong opposition to decline wrought by these socialist fools. The country has been a mess since Pelosi won the Speakership in 2006. Now we have four more years of zero. How much more destruction can this country take? Not much. An a Bush in the winds is NOT comforting, is downright SCARY!
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Reply 32 - Posted by:
GOPSecretary, 3/5/2013 10:23:16 AM (No. 9209197)
I lived in FL while Jeb was governor and everyone loved him except, of course, the MSM. And all you Bush haters, are you aware that GW tried in April of 2002 and 16 more times to reform Freddie and Fannie? The Dems stopped him every time. They wear the housing meltdown like an ugly hat but are protected by the MSM.
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Reply 33 - Posted by:
stablemoney, 3/5/2013 10:42:55 AM (No. 9209242)
This article mentions Jeb and Chuck Todd. That is too much puke for one article.
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Reply 34 - Posted by:
bighambone, 3/5/2013 12:43:18 PM (No. 9209521)
Unfortunately during the eight years that G.W. Bush was President, the liberal Democrats were able to hammer the name Bush into the dirt with no response from G.W. Bush who would not even effectively defend his own policies to the country. The result of all that was Barack Obama being elected.
If Jeb Bush were to run, and he certainly would be better then any liberal Democrat candidate, you can bet that both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama would team up to hammer this Bush to death before he ever got over the starting line, just as Obama did to Romney.
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Reply 35 - Posted by:
msjena, 3/5/2013 1:51:19 PM (No. 9209644)
If he can win, I´m fine with him as the Republican candidate.
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Reply 36 - Posted by:
plumnellie, 3/5/2013 3:40:15 PM (No. 9209832)
Oh what a huge secret. As if we all did not know.
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Reply 37 - Posted by:
ann, 3/5/2013 3:52:13 PM (No. 9209861)
Why are folks here called ´Bush haters´ when they disagree with policies put forth by previous Bush Presidents and don´t want a repeat by yet another Bush !! ? I simply find it disingenuous & hypocritical for Jeb Bush to write a book and tout he can solve the ´illegal´ problem .....when his brother tried to ram that same illegal problem down our throats in 2007!.....Does he think our memories are that short.
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Reply 38 - Posted by:
ChicagoWilson, 3/5/2013 6:43:16 PM (No. 9210136)
Who listens to Jeb?
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Susan Patton, the Princeton alumna who became famous for her letter urging Ivy League women to use their college years to find a mate, has been denounced as a traitor to feminism, to coeducation, to the university ideal. But really she’s something much more interesting: a traitor to her class. Her betrayal consists of being gauche enough to acknowledge publicly a truth that everyone who’s come up through Ivy League culture knows intuitively —
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Posted By: jackson- 4/8/2013 10:23:20 AM
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Chelsea Clinton has raised her profile in the last few days, which sparked the inevitable question about the former first daughter´s future: Will she ever be like Mom and Dad and run for office? Clinton, 33, essentially said "maybe" in an interview that aired Monday on NBC´s Today show. "Right now I´m grateful to live in a city, a state and a country where I strongly support my mayor, my governor, my president and my senators and my representative," said Clinton, whose father, Bill, was president from 1993-2001 and her mother, Hillary
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The Week, by Staff
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Posted By: NorthernDog- 4/7/2013 11:28:27 AM
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Gluten-free diets are all the rage, but they can be dangerous if not done right. What is gluten? It´s the spongy complex of proteins, found naturally in wheat, rye, and barley, that gives elasticity to dough and allows it to rise. When flour is moistened and either kneaded or mixed into dough, gluten molecules form an elastic, microscopic latticework that traps the carbon dioxide produced when yeast ferments, causing dough to inflate like a hot air balloon. Baking hardens the gluten, which helps the finished product keep its shape. Wheat — and gluten — is ubiquitous in the American diet.
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