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  • 10
    Mar
    2013
    9:51am, EDT

    Jeb Bush: 'History will be kind to my brother'

    By Carrie Dann, NBC News

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush says that the public will view his older brother, former president George W. Bush, more favorably as time passes. 

    "In (my father's) four years as president a lot of amazing accomplishments took place," said Jeb Bush, the son of former President George H.W. Bush, during an interview on NBC's Meet the Press.  "So my guess is that history will be kind to my brother, the further out you get from this and the more people compare his tenure to what's going on now."

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush discusses the shifting statistics of the Republican party.

    The 43rd president has largely stayed out of the spotlight since leaving office. After presiding over broad public discontent over the Iraq War and a flailing economy, George W. Bush left the White House with poor approval ratings and was notably unpopular even within his own party. 

    Jeb Bush said he hasn't yet spoken to their famous parents about the idea of his own 2016 run. 

    "I don't want to begin the process to think about it until it's the proper time to do so," he said. 

    Jeb Bush was interviewed on NBC as a part of a media blitz to promote his new book, 'Immigration Wars: Forging an American Solution." 

    He has come under fire this week for failing to include a path to citizenship for unauthorized immigrants in his proposed immigration plan, a turnaround from his previous embrace of that proposal. 

    He acknowledged Sunday that he could still back a plan that includes a path to citizenship but said that his book was intended to offer a reform plan that conservatives strongly opposed to "amnesty" could still support. 

    "If they can find a way to get to a path to citizenship over the long haul, then I would support that," he said of ongoing bipartisan negotiators on the reform effort. "But this book was written to try to get people that were against reform to be for it.  And it is a place where I think a lot of conservatives should feel comfortable, that there's a way to do this and not violate their principles."

    Asked whether or not he thinks he is more likely than his fellow immigration reform advocate and Floridian Republican Sen. Marco Rubio to end up in the Oval Office, Bush poked fun at "addicts" of political journalism. 

    "You guys are crack addicts," he told host David Gregory. (He later jokingly corrected that characterization to "heroin addicts.")  "You really are obsessed with all this politics."

    2802 comments

    Keep telling yourself and trying to convince anyone who will listen to you that George W will be viewed more favorably over time Jeb, if it makes you feel better. The fact is brother George W will always be seen as the worst President in history, and that legacy will follow you the rest of your poli …

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  • Updated
    4
    Mar
    2013
    1:46pm, EST

    Jeb Bush: No pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants

    By Carrie Dann, Political Reporter, NBC News

    In an apparent reversal from his past statements, former Florida Republican Gov. Jeb Bush said Monday that his immigration reform plan would "fall short" of offering a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants living in the United States -- a key provision being put forward by the bipartisan group leading reform efforts on Capitol Hill.

    The former Florida governor talks about his new book, "Immigration Wars," in which he offers his own prescription for comprehensive immigration reform, and says Republicans need to work harder to appeal to fast-growing minority voters.

    “Our proposal is a proposal that looks forward, and if we want to create an immigration policy that's going to work, we can't continue to make illegal immigration an easier path than legal immigration,” Bush said on NBC’s TODAY Show.

    Bush -- an outspoken proponent of GOP outreach to Latinos who has previously embraced a path to citizenship -- said that he backs measures to allow illegal immigrants to become residents of the United States if they meet certain criteria. But he argued that the possibility of full citizenship would merely encourage more illegal immigrants to make their way inside the nation’s borders.

    “There has to be some difference between people who come here legally and illegally,” he said. “It's just a matter of common sense and a matter of the rule of law. If we're not going to apply the law fairly and consistently, then we're going to have another wave of illegal immigrants coming into the country.”

    Related: Jeb Bush: I won't rule out 2016 White House run 'but I won't declare today'

    Bush’s rejection of that goal appears to be a turnaround for the possible presidential prospect. In a June 2012 interview with Charlie Rose, he acknowledged that his support for a path to citizenship placed him at odds with many in his party.

    “You have to deal with this issue. You can’t ignore it,” he said during that interview. “And so, either a path to citizenship -- which I would support and that does put me probably out of the mainstream of most conservatives -- or a path to legalization, a path to residency of some kind.”

    In a January op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Bush and Clint Bolick, his co-author on a new book about immigration, wrote that opportunities for citizenship strengthen America. 

    Former Florida governor Jeb Bush talks with TODAY's Matt Lauer about the sequester cuts will have on the economy and national security and strategies for improving our immigration system.

    "America's immigration system should provide opportunities for people who share the country's core values to become citizens, thereby strengthening the nation as have countless immigrants have before them," he said. (In the same op-ed, the pair also wrote that "amnesty promotes illegal immigration.")

    Bush's voiced opposition to full citizenship rights also puts the former governor – and brother of former President George W. Bush – to the right of Republican senators like John McCain, Marco Rubio and Jeff Flake, all members of the Senate’s bipartisan “Gang of Eight” currently tackling immigration reform legislation.

    That group’s proposal would offer “probationary legal status” for illegal immigrants who register with the federal government, pass a background check and pay back taxes and fines.  After certain border security criteria are met, those individuals would become eligible to apply for green cards and – eventually – the ability to seek full citizenship.

    Bush appeared on the TODAY show to promote his book “Immigration Wars: Forging an American Solution,” which hits shelves tomorrow. 

    NBC's Mark Murray contributed to this report. 

     

     

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 4, 2013 1:18 PM EST

    396 comments

    Isn't this the guy that just all but announced he will run in 2016? Someone really ought to cue him in that the Romney strategy of feeding your base with rhetoric you don't believe doesn't get you elected to the presidency. Just ask the 47%.

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  • 6
    Dec
    2012
    1:29pm, EST

    Jeb Bush to chair National Constitution Center; gets non-partisan nod from Bill Clinton

    By NBC's Domenico Montanaro
    Follow @DomenicoNBC

     

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, rumored to be mulling a 2016 bid for president, will become chairman of the National Constitution Center, according to a press release from the center.

    Top Talkers: Three weeks after his re-election, a majority of the country approves of the job President Obama is doing, a new CNN/ORC poll shows. And in New Jersey, current Gov. Chris Christie has announced his bid for re-election, and a new poll should be an encouraging sign. 77 percent of N.J. approves of his job, according to a new poll. The Morning Joe panel discusses.

    Bush will succeed former President Bill Clinton as chairman and follow in his father George H.W. Bush's footsteps, who served in the role before Clinton.

    Clinton praised Bush's ability to work with supporters "regardless of party" in the release. 

    "It has been a great honor to serve as the Center's Board Chairman for the past three years," Clinton said, "and I couldn't be more pleased that Gov. Bush will lead this world-class museum into the future. Gov. Bush will be an eloquent spokesman for the Center's mission and will work well with all of the Center's supporters regardless of party."

    126 comments

    Is this more maneuvering from another Bush for a bid for the presidency? I don't care who endorses the man, we cannot afford another Bush in the WH! No matter what, the apple doesn't fall far from either tree.

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  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    1:17pm, EDT

    Romney eases back into politicking at first post-hurricane rally

    By NBC's Garrett Haake
    Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    TAMPA, FL -- Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney reined in his criticism of President Barack Obama on Wednesday, signaling a softer tone at the outset of a three-stop swing through Florida coinciding with the president's trip to New Jersey to survey hurricane damage.

    Returning to the campaign trail after cancelling several campaign events out of respect to victims of Hurricane Sandy, Romney joined several prominent Florida Republicans in blending a pitch for storm recovery support with more traditional political fanfare.

    In his first formal campaign event (Romney morphed one planned stop in Ohio into a "relief event" on Tuesday), Romney struck hopeful notes.

    "You should know I could not be in this race if I were not an optimist. I believe in the future of this country I know we have huge challenges, but I’m not frightened by them, I’m invigorated by the challenge," Romney told supporters gathered in an airplane hangar here near the close of his remarks. "We’re going to take on these challenges we’re going to overcome them!"

    As the storm cleanup begins, the Republican presidential candidate is facing questions about his position on the federal government's role in disaster relief. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

    And Romney included an entreaty for donations to the Red Cross as the East Coast reels from the impact of the hurricane earlier this week. (Romney himself made a donation to the Red Cross, an aide told NBC News.)

    "If you have an extra dollar or two, send them along and keep the people who are in harms – who have been in harms way, who’ve been damaged either personally or through their property, keep them in your thoughts and prayers," Romney said. "We love all of our fellow citizens.  We come together in times like this and we want to make sure that they have a speedy and quick recovery from their financial and in many cases, personal loss."

    Romney was joined on the trail by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the latter of whom noted that Floridians are more familiar with hurricanes than most of the nation, and urged the roughly 2,000 attendees here to pay back the generosity they have experienced after past storms.

    At a campaign event in Tampa Bay, Florida, presidential hopeful Mitt Romney promotes a five-point plan for growing the economy.

    "People are going to be living with the aftermath of the storm, and so our hearts and our prayers go out to them, and also our help," Rubio said. "If you see on the screen the number you can text the Red Cross and make your donation. We have been the beneficiary of these donations in the past. Let's make sure we pay it forward for our neighbors and fellow Americans up north who are suffering."

    Bush, who had to handle numerous hurricanes during his time as governor, also waded into the politics of disaster relief, suggesting that local governments contributed more to recovery efforts than the federal government.

    "My experience in all this emergency response business is that it is the local level and the state level that really matters," he said to applause. "That if they do their job right the federal government part works out pretty good."

    Brian Snyder / Reuters

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney greets audience members at a campaign rally in Tampa, Florida October 31, 2012.

    But today's event was certainly a return to the issues that have driven the campaign for the last year -- with Romney criticizing the president's stewardship of the economy indirectly, and offering his own plan in contrast.

    “My view is pretty straight forward and that is I believe that this is time for America to take a different course, that this should be a turning point for our country, and I say that because I look at where we are and with 23 million Americans – you think about that. These are real people. These are folks trying to put food on the table," Romney said. "Twenty-three million people struggling to find a good job. This is something that requires in my view a different path than we’ve been on."

    Slideshow: On the campaign trail

    Reuters, Getty Images

    In the final push in the 2012 presidential election, candidates Mitt Romney and Barack Obama make their last appeals to voters.

    Launch slideshow

    695 comments

    Give me a break! Willard NEVER quit campaigning! It's been proven his "Relief Rally" was a complete sham just like the rest of his campaign. See, the problem is, Willard & his crack-pot team have been busted for going to Wal-Mart Monday night, buying up $5K in relief supplies, then handing them  …

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  • 26
    Aug
    2012
    2:49pm, EDT

    Some prominent Republicans won't be in Tampa

    The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore explains why the Republican convention has been 'effectively cancelled' on Monday and what whether the threat will be

    By Tom Curry, NBC News national affairs writer
    Follow @NBC_Tom_Curry

     

    Updated at 8:30pm ET TAMPA, Fla. — Tropical Storm Isaac has forced Gulf State governors to delay or possibly abandon their trips to the Republican convention. 

    Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal have said that, at a minimum, they will be delaying their trips to Tampa. 

    On Sunday Jindal issued a statement noting that a hurricane watch is in effect for the New Orleans metro area and the parishes adjacent to Lake Pontchartrain. He urged the people in that area to ensure that they had an evacuation plan in place, as well plenty of water, non-perishable food items, and other essentials they may need.

    Earlier Sunday, Kyle Plotkin, Jindal's communications director, told NBC News that the governor would not leave people in his state in "peril."
    "The Governor was slated to speak at the convention in 2008 when (Hurricane) Gustav hit, he not only didn’t speak, he didn’t even go.  He will certainly not leave the state if our people are in peril," Plotkin said in an email.

    Apart from the Gulf State governors, the prominent Republicans who won’t be in Tampa are primarily party leaders of the past, as well as one failed GOP presidential hopeful, and a few GOP Senate contenders.

    Former President George W. Bush and his father, former President George H.W. Bush, have both decided to not attend the convention, but former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is scheduled to be there and has been given a featured speaking spot on Wednesday night.

    Recommended: Romney's path to the White House runs through Florida

    National conventions are partly designed to honor those who have brought the party victory in the past. Ronald Reagan gave seven GOP convention addresses, the first of them as an unsuccessful presidential contender in 1968, asking the delegates to make Richard Nixon’s nomination unanimous, and the last of them his farewell at 1992 event in Houston, one of the most poignant convention performances of the television era.

    In that 1992 farewell, Reagan reminded delegates of the creed that still defines Republicans today: “We believe that no power of government is as formidable a force for good as the creativity and entrepreneurial drive of the American people.”

    NBC News Political Director, Chuck Todd, DNC Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Republican Governor from Arizona, Jan Brewer, and Republican Strategist Mike Murphy discuss what changes in the polls could occur following the Republican National Convention.

    But not all ex-presidents are equal in terms of their stature after leaving office.

    When Reagan left office, 63 percent of Americans approved of his performance as president. But when George W. Bush left office in 2009, his Gallup approval rating was only 34 percent. So it’s hardly surprising that Bush won’t be at the Tampa convention. Former Vice President Dick Cheney will also not be attending.

    The 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin will be another Tampa non-attendee, but the man who chose her to be his running mate, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, is also slated to be speaking at the convention on Wednesday night.

    Another Tampa absentee will be former ambassador to China and Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, whose bid for the Republican nomination found little support among primary voters.

    At least four GOP Senate candidates will be skipping the convention: Rep. Todd Akin of Missouri – whom party leaders are pressuring to exit the race after his inflammatory rape comments -- New Mexico’s Heather Wilson, Virginia’s George Allen and Montana Rep. Denny Rehberg. All four are in what are likely to be competitive races, although Akin’s future as a candidate remains uncertain.

    Another Republican Senate candidate in a competitive race, Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts, will be spending one day at the Tampa convention.

    NBC's Jamie Novogrod contributed reporting.

    357 comments

    Correction- all prominent republicans won't be in Tampa. I guess they aren't crazy enough for this round.

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  • 26
    Aug
    2012
    10:15am, EDT

    GOP elders describe high stakes for Romney in Tampa

    On Meet the Press, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush says the Republican Party needs to try and stay focused on the economy instead of

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    TAMPA, Fla. – Republican elders said Sunday that this week’s Republican National Convention here in Florida offered Mitt Romney an opportunity to re-introduce himself to voters heading into the height of the fall campaign season.

    As GOP heavyweights gather in Florida for a hurricane-shortened convention, some of the party’s most influential voices laid out on “Meet the Press” the stakes for Romney.

    The convention offered Romney a chance “to reconnect with people,” said former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R) of the forthcoming convention.

    Convention organizers canceled Monday’s activities due to safety concerns associated with an impending hurricane, leaving Romney and the GOP with one less day to drive its message about what they charge are the failures of President Barack Obama, particularly when it comes to matters of the economy.

    NBC News Political Director, Chuck Todd, DNC Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Republican Governor from Arizona, Jan Brewer, and Republican Strategist Mike Murphy discuss what changes in the polls could occur following the Republican National Convention.

    But Republicans also acknowledged that Romney must use this national platform to reverse some of the damage done to his personal reputation over the summer. The Obama campaign and Democratic super PACs have spent tens of millions of dollars on television ads in key swing states taking aim at Romney’s private sector career, personal wealth and handling of issues important to women.

    Related: McCain: Further delays to GOP convention 'could be harmful'

    Exacerbating problems for the Republican brand has been this past week’s uproar over Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin’s (R) comments about “legitimate rape.” Republicans have sharply distanced themselves from the conservative congressman’s remarks, while Democrats have sought to link those sentiments with Romney and the Republican Party as a whole.

    “I'm surprised that we, the Romney-Ryan ticket, are neck and neck in the polls right now particularly with some of the setbacks we have experienced,” said Arizona Sen. John McCain, the GOP’s 2008 presidential nominee.

    Jewel Samad / AFP - Getty Images

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and his wife Ann arrive at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, to attend Sunday services on August 26, 2012.

    Recommended: Hurricane impending, Republicans cancel first day of convention

    Convention organizers have laid out a daily theme here in Tampa meant to soften Romney’s public image and offer greater insight into his family and charitable work, among other personal details. The convention also revolves heavily around leveling an indictment of Obama’s economic policy during the last four years.

    It’s a high-stakes act for Romney; the conventions are regarded as one of the few opportunities to sway undecided voters, whose numbers are dwindling in this especially competitive election.

    “This is the big Etch A Sketch moment for Mitt Romney,” Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, said Sunday of the impending Republican festivities.

    On Meet the Press, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., talks about his experience four years ago dealing with severe weather in the midst of the Republican National Convention.

    But there are also long-term stakes for Republicans this week in Tampa, particularly as it relates to closing the gap among women and Hispanic voters, with whom Obama enjoys a healthy advantage over Romney in the polls.

    “My personal view is that we need to move beyond where we are,” Bush said of the current Republican rhetoric on immigration. He said that, on immigration, Republicans must change “not necessarily the core of our beliefs but the tone of our message and the intensity of it.”

    But Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R), the chief proponent of a tough immigration law in her home state, said Republicans must emphasize “the rule of law.”

    From Florida, David Gregory reports on Romney's likeability challenge; Andrea Mitchell reports on Republicans trying to push Akin from the race; and Chuck Todd notes that Romney faces another storm, this one named Isaac.

    She added: “Certainly those kinds of issues are going to have to be discussed moving on into the future.”

    Related: Jeb Bush on White House run: 'I'm not there yet in my life'

    But Republicans overall stressed the primacy of the economy this election cycle, the issue on which Romney has an advantage over Obama in most polls.

    “I think Mitt wins when it's about these big things,” Bush said. “When it's about the constant distractions, it'll be a very, very close race.”

    1477 comments

    By GNOP elders, don't you mean the party of pale, male & stale? Willard is losing the women vote by 10% Willard is losing the hispanic vote by over 30% Willard has ZERO percent of black voters And, these dinasours still believe they are the 'big tent party"? These days, they couldn't fill a "pu …

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  • 26
    Aug
    2012
    9:43am, EDT

    Jeb Bush on White House run: 'I'm not there yet in my life'

    Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush said the 2012 election would have been a good time for him to run politically, but he personally is not ready to have made a run for office.

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    TAMPA, Fla. – Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said Sunday that he’s “not motivated” to seek the White House and follow in the footsteps of his presidential brother and father.

    Bush, whom many Republicans had implored to run for president this year, acknowledged on “Meet the Press” that 2012 would have offered a prime opportunity for him to seek the Republican presidential nomination.

    Recommended: GOP elders describe high stakes for Romney in Tampa

    But Bush, who had been scheduled to speak here on Monday night of the Republican National Convention before weather forced the cancelation of that day’s activities, would not rule out a future run for president, though he did not seem eager to do so.

    “I don't think about it. I'm not motivated by it. It takes an incredible amount of discipline and ambition,” Bush told moderator David Gregory.

    “I'm not there yet in my life,” the former Florida governor added.

    Recommended: McCain: Further delays to GOP convention 'could be harmful'

    Jeb Bush’s father, George H.W. Bush, served as president of the United States from 1989-1993, and his brother, George W. Bush, served as president from 2001-2009.

    234 comments

    It will be decades if ever, before this country is accepting of another "Bush" in the White House! Jeb can thank his little bro "W" for stealing his thunder... Speaking of FL, on another note, another ex-Governor named Charlies Crist has come out and endorsed President Obama on the eve of the GNOP c …

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  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    12:19pm, EDT

    Bush carries Romney's message in swing state Ohio

    By NBC's Alex Moe
    Follow @AlexNBCNews

     

    HAMILTON, OH -- In his first public campaign appearance for Mitt Romney, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush did not shy away from attacking President Obama, and advanced the presumptive GOP nominee's messaging this week.

    “There are a lot of positive reasons to support Mitt Romney but I want to give you a reason that it is important: because the current president of the United States doesn’t get it,” Bush told the crowd inside United Performance Metals. The president “said in Virginia: “If you got a business, you didn’t build that, somebody else made it happen.” Now that was kind of like saying the private sector is doing good but its the economy that is doing bad. These are insights into the thinking of a man who has had no practical experience in creating jobs.”

    Campaigning in the battleground state of Ohio Wednesday just hours before Mitt Romney himself appears in the state,  Bush said it is Obama who has created “a morass” and “a dark cloud over our country” that only Romney can help improve.

    “I am so tired of the president of United States –- with the awesome seal he gets to go around with -– pointing, trying to create divisions. Trying to punish people rhetorically for the hard work that will restore American’s greatness,” he said.

    Bush’s comments come amid a week in which the tone of the presidential campaign has taken a more divisive tone, with harsh words being exchanged between the Obama and Romney campaigns.

    Echoing Romney’s comments just yesterday, when the former Massachusetts governor accused Obama of cronyism, Bush called for an end of policies that allow for failed loans that aid companies, like Solyndra.

    “Crony capitalism needs to be rejected and eliminated in our country and what we need to do is restore entrepreneurial capitalism where government plays a role but it is a limiting role. And where we celebrate success rather than punishing it,” he said.

    Bush, whose name was once included as a possible vice presidential pick for Romney, shed no direct insight on any VP speculation but did predict that two states are vital to the November election:

    “There are two states that actually matter a little bit more -– my beloved state of Florida, which is like the purplest of all the states in this election and Ohio. If we do our part in Florida and you do your part in Ohio, I believe Mitt Romney will be the next president of the United States and the restoration of America’s greatness will begin.”

    Gov. Bush, a member of the prominent political Bush family, kicked off his speech giving a “Bush family update” to the couple hundred person crowd. The 43rd Governor of Florida said his parents -- former President George H. W. Bush and former first lady Barbara Bush -- and his older brother -- former President George W. Bush -- are doing “pretty good.”

    31 comments

    I wonder why the Romney camp thinks that Jeb Bush appearing in Ohio will actually help him. Perhaps it's because he's not Mitt Romney, but still, with the George W. baggage and all, voters everywhere are not going to see Jeb as a plus for responsible economic growth.

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  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    2:33pm, EDT

    Big Romney donors headed to star-studded retreat this weekend

    By NBC's Garrett Haake
    Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    GRAND RAPIDS, MI -- Some of Mitt Romney's most deep-pocketed donors will flock to Utah for an exclusive gathering this weekend featuring top Republican political figures and strategists.

    More than 100 of the GOP's top fundraisers and bundlers will attend the "First National Romney Victory Leadership Retreat," a weekend-long retreat intended to rally, educate and reward the men and women who have been the primary financial backers of the presumptive nominee's campaign thus far.

    The attendees will be treated to presentations, briefing and panel discussions featuring an all-star cast of Republican politicians, including several thought to be among Romney's top vice presidential choices.

    Among the possible VP contenders a Romney campaign adviser confirmed would be in attendance are former Govs. Tim Pawlenty (MN) and Jeb Bush (FL), Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The GOP's last presidential nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain, will also attend, according to Republican sources familiar with the event's schedule.

    Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell will speak at one of the weekend's two major dinners, according to a McDonnell staffer.

    The Washington Post has reported that Sen. John Thune, Rep. Paul Ryan -- two other rumored VP short-listers will attend, as will Republican power-broker Karl Rove. NBC News has not independently confirmed this information.

    "All the major players of the party will be there," Dallas businessman Ray Washburne, who will attend the retreat, told NBC News. "Its kind of a reunion of all the people who worked hard on the campaign so far."

    Washburne is indicative of the type of Republican rainmaker the Romney campaign intends to woo, and reward, at the retreat. The real estate developer, investor and restauranteur headed up a recent Romney fundraiser in Dallas that brought in $3.6 million for the campaign, and has co-chaired Romney's fundraising effort in the Lone Star state after the first candidate he supported -- Pawlenty -- dropped out of the race.

    The invitees are primarily those donors who have raised enough money to qualify as national finance committee members, one Romney adviser said.

    "The party is all falling in behind the candidate now, and this is kind of the first kind of anointment of Mitt by everyone," Washburne said.

    On Saturday, attendees will be briefed by top Romney campaign officials, including political director Rich Beeson, and the famously media-averse campaign manager Matt Rhodes, on the state of the campaign and strategy going forward. That night they will also attend the second of two dinners with the candidate himself.

    Attendees at the weekend-long retreat will at gather at a resort hotel in the mountains surrounding Salt Lake city, not far from where Romney first rose to prominence by running the Salt Lake City Olympics in 2002, and in the state where he still retains a rock star-like political status.

    Romney and his guests will be far from the prying eyes of most media. The entire three-day conference is closed to the press, and Romney has no public events in Utah to draw reporters here otherwise. His campaign has refused most official requests for comment on the conference, including several made for this report.

    When the conference concludes at the end of the weekend, the campaign will continue with one major question -- likely to be discussed all weekend -- that will remain unanswered: Was the vice presidential nominee among those in attendance?

    "That's all anybody wants to know," Washburne said.

    NBC's Alex Moe contributed.

    136 comments

    a weekend-long retreat intended to rally, educate and reward the men and women who have been the primary financial backers of the presumptive nominee's campaign thus far. If they are going to educate the men/women who provide large sums of money, the retreat will take much longer than any given wee …

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  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    12:36pm, EDT

    Jeb Bush walks it back?

    By NBC's Mark Murray and Kelly O'Donnell

    Earlier this morning, we pointed that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush pulled a Cory Booker or Bill Clinton -- going off message when he talked about immigration, taxes, and the state of his party on Monday.

    As the New York Times put it:

    Mr. Bush questioned the party’s approach to immigration, deficit reduction and partisanship, saying that his father, former President George Bush, and Reagan would struggle with ‘an orthodoxy that doesn’t allow for disagreement.

    Going one better, he praised his father’s 1990 deficit-reduction deal, which drew the lasting ire of his party’s fiscal hawks for its tax increases.

    And now like Booker and Clinton, it appears that Bush is walking back that critique.

    In a series of tweets today, Bush said: "The point I was making yesterday is this: The political system today is hyperpartisan. Both sides are at fault."

    He added, "My dad & Reagan sacrificed political points for good public policy."

    And he concluded: "Past 4 years, Democrats have held leadership roles w/opportunities to reach across political aisle. For sake of politics, they haven't."

    49 comments

    It was only a matter of time... lol "My dad & Reagan sacrificed political points for good public policy."

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    Explore related topics: jeb-bush, fl, first-read, decision-2012

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