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- <text id=94TT1304>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Elections:The Sons Also Rise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ELECTIONS, Page 39
- The Sons Also Rise
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> To everyone's surprise except their dad's, the Bush brothers
- are real contenders in Texas and Florida
- </p>
- <p>By S.C. Gwynne/Tampa
- </p>
- <p> "That young Bush boy, you know, the former President's son?
- He talks a good game, but has he ever done anything?...Every
- business he has ever been involved with had to be bailed out
- by his daddy's friends. Seems like he always gets to start at
- the top."
- </p>
- <p> The boy in question is George W. Bush, 48, Republican candidate
- for Governor of Texas. The text--part of a recent political
- ad--is the handiwork of the campaign staff of incumbent Governor
- Ann Richards, who gained notoriety at the 1988 Democratic Convention
- when she said President Bush had been "born with a silver foot
- in his mouth." Though the ad is not entirely true, it neatly
- summarizes the problem facing George W. and his younger brother
- Jeb, 41, who last week became the Republican nominee for Governor
- of Florida. In their campaigns for public office they are clearly--and unapologetically--riding Dad's coattails in states
- that he carried in both 1988 and 1992; they are also struggling
- mightily to convince voters that they are strong politicians
- in their own right.
- </p>
- <p> Against considerable odds, they are succeeding. In Florida's
- Republican primary Sept. 8, Jeb polled 46%, 10 points higher
- than anyone had predicted, in a tough field of six candidates.
- Last week the rival candidate in a runoff decided to withdraw,
- leaving Jeb as the party's nominee. In a poll taken several
- weeks before the primary, he had pulled to within 3 percentage
- points of incumbent Governor Lawton Chiles. In Texas the most
- recent poll showed young George leading Ann Richards by a point,
- in spite of her enormous popularity and 60% job-approval rating.
- </p>
- <p> As political animals, the Bush brothers are strikingly similar.
- Both cut their teeth in Dad's campaigns; both are flush with
- money gathered with the help of the decades-old Bush fund-raising
- apparatus that covers all 50 states; both use operatives from
- their father's previous campaigns. On the issues their campaigns
- are virtual carbon copies. They consider the No. 1 issue to
- be crime, especially juvenile crime. They call for longer sentences
- and expansion of their states' overcrowded jails. They champion
- the right of local communities to run their own school systems.
- They say welfare should be cut off after two years; they oppose
- gay rights, and abortion in most cases. They favor the death
- penalty. Their basic message: reduce the size and influence
- of government.
- </p>
- <p> The common Bush traits extend to their personal life as well.
- The brothers were itching to run for office in the 1980s but
- were counseled by their parents to, in effect, make something
- of themselves before running. They complied. George W. made
- his first million in the oil business and in 1989 became managing
- partner of the Texas Rangers; Jeb made his first million in
- real estate and recently became a partner in the Jacksonville
- Jaguars, a new N.F.L. franchise. Though they come from a family
- of certified New England blue bloods, they are Texas boys by
- upbringing and have few lingering ties to the snobby Episcopalianism
- of Greenwich, Connecticut, where their father grew up.
- </p>
- <p> Of the two, George W. has had the most complicated relationship
- with his father. Like his dad, he attended Phillips Academy
- in Andover, Massachusetts, and Yale. Though he had a tempestuous
- relationship with his father--he once challenged him to a
- fight--he continued to follow in his footsteps. He became
- a pilot in the National Guard. In 1974 he decided to move to
- Midland, Texas, just as his father had in 1950, looking to cash
- in on an oil boom. "He fights his father at the same time that
- he embraces him," says a friend.
- </p>
- <p> In the White House, where he was known to his chagrin as "Junior,"
- George W. developed a reputation as a fierce partisan. When
- it came time to fire chief of staff John Sununu, George W. did
- the dirty work for his father. In his gubernatorial campaign
- in Texas, young George has avoided political appearances with
- his father, whose role has been limited to attendance at several
- fund raisers. "I am very comfortable with my relationship with
- my dad," says George W. "He is a big plus for me, and I will
- not try to run away from him. But it is very important for people
- to not get confused about whether or not I can be Governor.
- And one way to create confusion in their minds is to go stumping
- around the state with him." George W. fully intends to roll
- out Barbara Bush on the campaign trail. "My mother will help,"
- he says. "I'm sure she will."
- </p>
- <p> Jeb, whose name is an acronym for John Ellis Bush, has seemingly
- fewer problems with his father. Like George W., he went to Andover
- but then attended the University of Texas. He met a Mexican
- girl named Columba on an exchange program and married her. (He
- is fluent in Spanish.) Jeb worked briefly for Texas Commerce
- Bank, moved to Florida in the late 1970s and later worked on
- his father's 1988 campaign. While he and a partner built up
- their real estate company, Jeb was named head of the Dade County
- Republican Party. Later, he was appointed secretary of commerce
- for the state of Florida. Along the way, several of Jeb's former
- business associates landed on the wrong side of the law, and
- he has been embroiled in controversy several times about his
- business deals. "In hindsight," he says, "I would not have associated
- with people who turned out to be dishonest. I'll have to deal
- with that this fall, I'm sure." Jeb's comfort level with his
- father was apparent last week, when he and the former President
- made joint appearances in Florida.
- </p>
- <p> Both sons are immensely talented campaigners. George W. bristles
- with purpose and cracks wise. While he is built like a second
- baseman, Jeb inherited his father's long limbs. At 6 ft. 2 in.,
- he is an imposing presence with a gentle demeanor. George tends
- to generalize in his speeches; Jeb is loaded with statistics.
- </p>
- <p> How does the former President plan to help? "I'm staying out
- of the way on the issues," he told TIME's Hugh Sidey. "The national
- press would like to say, `Here's what the father believes, here's
- what the son now thinks.' They don't need that. They don't need
- anything to do with Washington." Except for occasional phone
- calls, he and Barbara have deliberately stayed in the background.
- "We don't hover," Bush said. "It's more the personal touch.
- They know what I know about politics. And they don't need a
- presence. They might need somebody to lift them up if they get
- bruised. But...it's their time. I've had my time."
- </p>
- <p> If the grandsons of Senator Prescott Bush and sons of President
- George Bush win on Nov. 8, the Bush family can lay claim to
- one of America's most unusual political dynasties. No former
- President has ever had two sons as Governors at the same time.
- Jeb and George W. need only convince voters that they have earned
- the right, not inherited it. Says their dad: "I may get a line
- in the Guinness Book and a great deal of pride and a lot more
- baby-sitting duties."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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