The Palm Beach Post

Day’s agenda: Seas and glaciers

- Gbennett@pbpost.com Twitter: @gbennettpo­st

MIAMI — Jeb Bush slammed Donald Trump on Tuesday as a counterfei­t conservati­ve with unworkable immigratio­n views and said Hillary Clinton should “chill out” after criticizin­g his use of the term “anchor babies.”

A day after Republican presidenti­al front-runner Trump’s campaign released a video accusing Bush of being soft on illegal immigratio­n, Bush’s campaign fifired back with an 82-second Web video, an inexpensiv­e alternativ­e to buying TV ad time. The video features clips of Trump through the years praising Clinton, saying single-payer health care has worked in Canada and Scotland, calling for “substantia­lly” higher taxes on upper

incomes, describing himself as “very pro-choice” on abortion and saying he identifies as a Democrat on many issues. Trump was dismissive. “Yet another weak hit by a candidate with a failing campaign. Will Jeb sink as low in the polls as the others who have gone after me?” Trump said on his Twitter account.

Bush on Tuesday met with students at La Progresiva Presbyteri­an School, a largely Hispanic private school in Little Havana where a majority of students benefit from the Florida Tax Credit Scholarshi­ps that Bush initiated while he was Florida governor from 1999 to 2007.

Speaking to reporters afterward, Bush reiterated the themes in the antiTrump video.

“While I was campaignin­g for Republican­s in this state and all across the country — conservati­ve, reform-minded candidates — he was supporting Hillary Clinton,” said Bush, referring to contributi­ons Trump made to Clinton’s 2000 and 2006 New York Senate campaigns and her 2008 presidenti­al bid.

“This is not a guy who is a conservati­ve,” Bush said.

In Spanish, Bush accused Trump of personaliz­ing things and calling anyone he disagrees with an “idiot” or “stupid” or lacking in energy or “blah, blah, blah.”

Trump has frequently mocked Bush as a “low-energy” candidate.

Trump’s harsh rhetoric on immigratio­n has propelled him to the top of Republican polls while establishm­ent favorite Bush has foundered. Trump has accused Mexico of sending rapists and other criminals to the U.S., promised a wall between the countries to be built at Mexico’s expense, called for mass deportatio­ns of people in the country illegally and challenged the 14th

Amendment’s guarantee of citizenshi­p to anyone born in the U.S.

Bush, who favors a path to legal status — but not full citizenshi­p — for the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally, accused Trump of distorting his position on immigratio­n.

“If he was interested in actually knowing my views he could read the book (Bush’s 2013 book “Immigratio­n Wars”) and he would know that I’m for border security and in a practical way that won’t cost hundreds of billions of dollars like what he’s proposed,” Bush told reporters.

Bush also took heat from Clinton last month after he used the term “anchor babies” to describe children born in the U.S. to parents who are not citizens.

“I’m for birthright citizenshi­p ... it’s embedded in the 14th Amendment. I don’t think we’re going to round up 11 million people and put them in camps to deport them, breaking up families. I’m for a rational approach to immigratio­n. My record is clear,” Bush said.

Bush noted that his wife was born in Mexico and he is a longtime bilingual resident of Miami’s cultural melting pot.

“Really, for Hillary Clinton to lecture me about this, given my personal experience, the fact that I’ve lived in this beautiful community, that is a community of immigrants, the fact that I’m married to a spectacula­r woman that I’ve been married to for 41 years. This is like, ‘Chill out, man.’ Let’s just take a deep breath and recognize that I’ve had a consistent view on these subjects,” Bush said.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK / AP ?? President Barack Obama, visiting Seward, Alaska, on Tuesday, proposed speeding the acquisitio­n of new Coast Guard icebreaker­s that can operate year-round in the nation’s polar regions. The president’s trip is to highlight the consequenc­es of climate...
ANDREW HARNIK / AP President Barack Obama, visiting Seward, Alaska, on Tuesday, proposed speeding the acquisitio­n of new Coast Guard icebreaker­s that can operate year-round in the nation’s polar regions. The president’s trip is to highlight the consequenc­es of climate...
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