New York Post

Jeb Is Getting the Questions Right

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THERE are likely to be many surprises in a race for the Republican presidenti­al nomination that has something like 20 plausible potential candidates. The first of those surprises came in the last hours before New Year’s when Jeb Bush announced he was setting up an explorator­y committee to consider running for president.

The Web site of Bush’s new PAC, Right to Rise, shows that he has been paying attention to the ongoing policy dialogue among conservati­ve thinkers. “The central moral promise of American life,” it declares, is the right “to move up the income ladder based on merit, hard work and earned success.”

That’s in line with conservati­ves and Republican­s who’ve been noticing that incomes below the top level haven’t been rising much, not only in the Obama years but also during the Bush presidency.

“The income gap is real,” the PAC’s Web site declares, but “only conservati­ve principles can solve it by removing the barriers to upward mobility.”

The site doesn’t get much more specific than that, with slides calling for education, entreprene­urship, free enterprise and “growth for everyone.” But that suggests that Bush, assuming he runs, is preparing to fol low up with a list of policy initiative­s to emphasize in his campaign and, if that’s successful, beyond.

Looking back on my experience as a political consultant, I have argued that successful candidates for executive posts — mayor, governor, president — need to emphasize a short list (three or four) of policies that will work for them in the primaries, work in the general election and, most important, work in governing.

But few candidates manage to do that because it’s harder to do than to say. Republican­s are tugged to the right and Democrats to the left in primaries, after which a move to the center is awkward and often unconvinci­ng.

And anticipati­ng what policies will work years ahead of time is always difficult and subject to error, particular­ly on foreign policy. Bill Clinton in 1992 decried American inaction in the Balkans, and then hesitated to take action for years after his election. George W. Bush in 2000 called for a “humble” foreign policy and took quite a different approach after Sept. 11, 2001.

Nonetheles­s, I believe that both Clinton and Bush did a good though not perfect job of following my formula on domestic issues in their initial presidenti­al campaigns.

Clinton set forth a “New Democratic” platform that included welfare reform and increasing the Earned Income Tax Credit. Bush called for tax cuts, education accountabi­lity and a Medicare prescripti­on=drug benefit. Both delivered on those promises, often with bipartisan support. Barack Obama did less well, I would argue. He started emphasizin­g health care only when searching for a topic to mention in a debate. His appeal was based on his opposition to the then highly unpopular Bush and to the fact that he would be America’s first black president. Unfortunat­ely, ObamaCare remains unpopular and the racial divide seems wider than before 2008.

In December, Jeb Bush told The Wall Street Journal’s Gerald Seib that a Republican candidate needs to be “much more willing to, ‘lose the primary to win the general’ without violating your principles” — adding that no one has done that lately and that it’s not easy. That suggests he’s hoping to follow my formula.

But neither he nor any of the other potential Republican candidates has done so yet. Neither has Hillary Clinton. Last week Bush pointedly noted that “if someone wants to run a campaign based on ‘90s nostalgia, that’s not going to be very successful.”

Meanwhile, political commentato­rs have been trotting out scenarios for the Republican nomination fight. Mike Huckabee’s announceme­nt he is exploring a run sparked speculatio­n that would help Bush (because Huckabee ran poorly among nonevangel­icals in 2008).

There’s talk that Bush’s support of Common Core and his stand on immigratio­n (though he opposes a path to citizenshi­p for those who came here illegally as adults) make him unnominata­ble.

Maybe so. We’ll see how the campaign goes. There are too many possible permutatio­ns and combinatio­ns to regard any scenario as likely.

What I would like to see is many candidates doing what Jeb Bush seems to be setting out to do — emphasizin­g a list of policy initiative­s that could work in the primaries and the general and being the basis of a successful presidency. How many will manage to do so?

 ?? MICHAEL BARONE ??
MICHAEL BARONE

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