USA TODAY US Edition

Matriarch had Trump ‘angst’

Barbara Bush didn’t recognize Republican Party

- Susan Page

Barbara Bush blamed Donald Trump for her heart attack.

❚ It wasn’t technicall­y a heart attack, though she called it that. It was a crisis in her long battle with congestive heart failure and chronic pulmonary disease that hit her like a sledgehamm­er one day in June 2016. An ambulance was called to take her to the hospital. The two former presidents who had been at home with her that day, her husband and her oldest son, trailed in a car driven by the Secret Service. The tumultuous presidenti­al campaign in general and Trump’s ridicule of son Jeb Bush in particular had riled her. “Angst,” she told me.

❚ Afterward, Jeb, whose presidenti­al campaign was already history,

urged her to let it go, to focus on herself and have faith in the country.

“Jeb said, ‘Mom, don’t worry about things you can’t do anything about,’ ” Barbara Bush recalled. “He’s right. Just do good, make life better for someone else.”

How did she think things were going in the USA in the Age of Trump?

“I’m trying not to think about it,” she said in an interview as the first anniversar­y of Trump’s election approached. “We’re a strong country, and I think it will all work out.” Even so, she was dismayed by the nation’s divisions and by the direction of the party she had worked for, and for so long.

Did she still consider herself a Republican?

In an interview with me in October 2017, she answered yes. When I asked her again in February 2018, she said, “I’d probably say no today.”

Barbara Bush had been one of the most recognizab­le faces of the Republican Party through two presidenci­es. She was the matriarch of one of the GOP’s leading families. But after Trump’s rise, she saw it as a party she could not continue to support, a party she no longer recognized – even as one of her grandsons, George P. Bush, was on the ballot as a Republican running for re-election as Texas land commission­er.

Reluctant for another race

Barbara Bush was reluctant for Jeb to run in 2016, but not because she thought he wasn’t up to the job. He had been the serious son. When he and George W. were young adults, nearly everyone viewed Jeb as more likely to be a president. But she had seen how brutal presidenti­al campaigns and the presidency could be. Her husband lost his bid for a second term, a crushing defeat. Her oldest son left the White House excoriated for pursuing a costly war in Iraq. Jeb would inherit all their baggage, all their enemies, she warned. She sensed a dyspeptic mood in the country, a weariness with the political establishm­ent that would disrupt his path.

Eventually, she campaigned for him. He asked because he was in trouble; he had lost the opening Iowa caucuses and was struggling for traction in New Hampshire. She agreed not only because she would do just about anything for her family but also because she was alarmed by Trump, the rival who was coming on strong for the nomination.

She returned to New Hampshire, the state that had rescued the elder George Bush’s presidenti­al prospects in 1988, to campaign once again. This time, she was 90 years old and using a walker. She pushed it through a New Hampshire snowstorm as she went from event to diner to interview.

“I love my son, and I know that America needs him,” she said in an interview on “CBS This Morning” three days before the primary, sitting side by side with him. “He’s honest, dependable, loyal, relatively funny, good-looking” – she elbowed him good-naturedly – “but funny. He’s got the same values that America seems to have lost. He’s almost too polite. I don’t advise him, but if I gave him advice, I would say, ‘Why don’t you interrupt like the other people do?’ And he does not brag like some people we know.”

She refused to say Trump’s name. “I’m not getting into a spitting match with him,” she said. “He can spit further than I can.”

Anchor Norah O’Donnell noted that Trump had ridiculed Jeb Bush for deploying his mother in the campaign. “Just watched Jeb’s ad where he desperatel­y needed mommy to help him,” Trump tweeted. “Jeb – mom cannot help you with ISIS, the Chinese or with Putin.”

“Putin endorsed him, for heaven’s sake,” Barbara Bush erupted. “Putin the killer! Putin the worst! He endorsed Trump! That’s an endorsemen­t you don’t want.”

Trump won the New Hampshire primary. Jeb Bush finished a disappoint­ing fourth. When he did no better in the South Carolina primary 11 days later, he decided to end his campaign. He called his mother. “I just want to let you know I’m heading home,” he told her. “I love you,” she said. Nothing more.

‘The real symbol of greed’

Barbara Bush’s negative opinion of Trump dated back decades.

“The real symbol of greed in the 80s,” she wrote in her diary in January 1990. She had just read a news story about Trump addressing a Los Angeles charity gala, an awards dinner for Merv Griffin hosted by the American Friends of the Hebrew University and attended by Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Trump had needled the former president for the high-priced speeches he delivered in Japan. “I see President and Mrs. Reagan in the audience. Did you have to pay them $2 million?”

A month later, she saved news clippings to show a friend about Trump’s separation from his first wife, Ivana. Their divorce would be finalized in 1992. She noted that Ivana’s allies said the $25 million settlement in the prenuptial agreement she signed wasn’t enough. “The Trumps are a new word, both of them,” she wrote. “Trump now means Greed, selfishnes­s and ugly. So sad.”

Trump had made a weird overture to George Bush in 1988, when Bush was poised to clinch the Republican presidenti­al nomination. In his biography of George Bush, “Destiny and Power,” Jon Meacham wrote that Trump told campaign strategist Lee Atwater that he was available to be Bush’s running mate. Writing in his diary, Bush dismissed the idea as “strange and unbelievab­le.”

More than a quarter-century later, Barbara Bush couldn’t quite imagine that Trump was going to win the White House on his own. “I don’t understand why people are for him,” she said in one interview. In another, she expressed astonishme­nt that women could support him. George Bush ended up voting for Hillary Clinton, the first time in his life that he cast a ballot for a Democrat for president. Barbara Bush wrote in Jeb’s name on the last day of early voting. “I could not vote for Trump or Clinton,” she wrote in her diary.

Barbara Bush’s original judgment, made three and a half years earlier, seemed prescient. “There are other people out there that are very qualified, and we’ve had enough Bushes,” Bush declared on NBC’s “Today” show in April 2013, amid speculatio­n about whether Jeb was going to run.

The country apparently did feel there had been enough Bushes, and enough Clintons, in high office. Jeb Bush lost the Republican nomination. Hillary Clinton won the Democratic nomination but lost the general election, trailing Trump in the Electoral College, though she carried the popular vote. “I think people didn’t want anybody who was in office,” Barbara Bush told me. “I think they wanted a whole new world.”

The morning after the election, George H.W. Bush, honoring the traditions of the office, called the presidente­lect to offer his congratula­tions. Trump “was very nice,” Barbara Bush wrote in her diary. “He said that George was a great president and he admired us both. He said Jeb was strong and a great man. He is trying ... at this moment ... to be conciliato­ry. He says he wants to represent all the people.”

Two weeks later, she wrote a warm letter to Melania Trump, who faced intense speculatio­n about whether and when she would move to Washington from New York.

Bush urged her to do whatever was best for her and to protect her son, Barron. She knew the White House could be a lonely place, especially for a child. She gave her some advice, the same advice she volunteere­d to Clinton in 1992, when the Clintons were preparing to move into the White House with an only child. Dear Mrs. Trump,

The world thought I was writing this note to Bill Clinton. I am glad that I am not. I wanted to welcome you to the First Ladies very exclusive club. My children were older and there fore I did not have the problems you do. Whatever you decide to do is your business and yours alone.

Living in the White House is a joy and their only job is to make you happy.

If you decide to stay in NYC that will be fine also. When you come to the White House let your son bring a friend. That is my unasked for advice.

God Bless you,

Barbara Bush

Bush also wrote a personal note to Karen Pence on the Christmas card she sent her and her husband, Vice President–elect Mike Pence, soon after the election. “I really wanted to write you earlier to tell you how much fun I had as the wife of the VP,” she told her. “It is a lovely house.”

‘Horror that Trump had won’

Those weren’t the letters Bush had expected to write after the 2016 election. She had drafted a funny congratula­tory letter to send to Bill Clinton – assuming that he would take over the role of presidenti­al spouse. “It said, ‘Welcome to the First Ladies Club,’ ” she told me. “‘We can’t wait to initiate you.’ ” She never mailed it.

“I woke up and discovered, to my horror, that Trump had won.”

She didn’t hide her horror from those close to her. After Trump was elected, a friend in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine, gave her a Trump countdown clock as a joke. The red, white and blue digital clock displayed how many days, hours, minutes and seconds remained in Trump’s term. She parked it on the side table in her bedroom, next to the chair she would sit in to needlepoin­t or watch television.

She liked the countdown clock so much that when the Bushes returned to Houston that October, she brought it with her. It sat on her bedside table, where she could see it every day. It was there to the day she died.

“Jeb said, ‘Mom, don’t worry about things you can’t do anything about.’ He’s right. Just do good, make life better for someone else.” Barbara Bush

 ?? RICHARD J. CARSON FOR USA TODAY ??
RICHARD J. CARSON FOR USA TODAY
 ??  ??
 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? “I love my son, and I know that America needs him,” Barbara Bush told CBS, so she put aside her reservatio­ns about political campaigns and joined Jeb Bush for a rally in Derry, N.H., on Feb. 4, 2016.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP “I love my son, and I know that America needs him,” Barbara Bush told CBS, so she put aside her reservatio­ns about political campaigns and joined Jeb Bush for a rally in Derry, N.H., on Feb. 4, 2016.
 ?? 1988 PHOTO BY J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? As a second, then first lady during her husband’s tenure in the White House, Barbara Bush had experience in how grueling politics could be.
1988 PHOTO BY J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP As a second, then first lady during her husband’s tenure in the White House, Barbara Bush had experience in how grueling politics could be.

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