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Former Member

Jeb Bush Draws on Family Dynasty for Fund-Raising Efforts

 

Money Raised So Far

The first Federal Election Commission filing deadline for presidential candidates is Wednesday, but some organizations have released their totals early. Below, the announced money raised by the campaigns, “super PACs” and nonprofits supporting each candidate.

 

Millions raised by CampaignSuper PACNonprofit
Jeb Bushrepublican$11.4in 16 days$103.0 
Ben Carsonrepublican$10.5in 58 days  
Ted Cruzrepublican$14.5in 100 days$38.0 
Carly Fiorinarepublican$1.4in 58 days$3.4 
Marco Rubiorepublican  $16.1$15.8
Hillary Rodham Clintondemocrat$45.0in 79 days$15.6 
Bernie Sandersdemocrat$15.0in 62 days  

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Jeb Bush Draws on Family Dynasty for Fund-Raising Efforts

JULY 10, 2015, Source

 

KENNEBUNKPORT, Me. — Maybe it was the sunset selfies on the lawn at Walker’s Point, the family compound, with the state flags of Texas and Maine fluttering in the salty breeze.

 

Maybe it was the standing ovation for the elder President George Bush, frail but beaming, when he arrived Friday morning at a discussion of how to elect another of his sons to the White House.

 

But over two days of lobster rolls and strategy sessions, whatever reluctance Jeb Bush may have had about publicly embracing his dynastic inheritance seemed to vanish. And for the hundreds of donors to Mr. Bush’s campaign for president who gathered in this seaside town — seat of the Bush family for more than a century — the family name seemed to have few downsides.

 

“I think Jeb’s made clear that he’s not going to run away from his family,” said Eric J. Tanenblatt, who led the Georgia campaign of George W. Bush, Mr. Bush’s older brother, in the 2000 presidential election.

Mr. Bush’s father, his mother, his wife and even his son have raised money for his campaign or for his “super PAC,” tapping into a family donor network that began as his mother’s Christmas card mailing list. And now an invitation to Walker’s Point, for decades the ultimate V.I.P. room in Republican politics, is Mr. Bush’s to bestow.

 

On Monday, he invited the last Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, to Walker’s Point for lunch, hoping to soothe lingering hurt over what Mr. Romney’s supporters considered a desultory endorsement of their candidate in 2012. On Thursday, a visit to the compound was the prize for members of the vaunted Bush fund-raising operation, who arrived to the news that they had amassed more money, and more quickly, than any presidential effort in history. Marking the day, they gathered with the Bush family for a group photo.

 

Such donor retreats have become a routine feature of presidential campaigns, all the more important as the price tag for a major-party candidacy breaches the $1 billion mark. They are designed to reflect some actual or projected essence of the candidate: Hillary Rodham Clinton gathered her top fund-raisers in May at a Brooklyn warehouse, for example, while Mr. Romney invited top donors for annual hikes and foreign policy lectures at the Stein Eriksen Lodge Deer Valley in Park City, Utah, a favorite destination of his family.

 

George W. Bush, the former president and former Texas governor, styled himself as a political outsider, and pointedly eschewed the establishment trappings of Maine. Many of the donors in Kennebunkport recalled, with something less than fondness, their frequent meetings at his ranch in Crawford, Tex., huddled under a tent in 100-degree heat.

 

But few candidates, they said, could compete with the Bush family’s inner sanctum, a compound of a half-dozen homes on a rocky spit jutting into the Atlantic, one of them recently built for Jeb Bush and his family.

 

“This is to the Bushes what Hyannis Port is to the Kennedys,” said Dirk Van Dongen, a lobbyist in Washington who was making his first trip to the Bush home.

 

In his early months as a candidate, Mr. Bush seemed unsure of how tightly to embrace the family mantle. He dodged questions about his older brother’s record as president and eschewed his last name on campaign literature. (His exclamatory bumper stickers read, simply, “Jeb!]. Announcing his campaign last month, Mr. Bush declared that “not a one of us deserves the job by right of résumé, party, seniority, family, or family narrative.”

 

This events in Kennebunkport, however, were rich with such narrative. 

Arriving on Thursday, the guests were greeted by Barbara Bush, Mr. Bush’s mother, and ushered into the main house for drinks. (The veteran Bush donors had chosen their socks carefully, in tribute to the elder Mr. Bush, known for his taste in brightly colored ones.) Later, they were whisked by old-fashioned trolley to a nearby luxury resort, where Jeb Bush promised his guests that he would not let their hard work go for naught.

 

On Friday, the donors sat for a political briefing led by Mr. Bush’s senior campaign staff, who praised them for nearly beating the record fund-raising pace set by Mr. Bush’s brother during his 2004 campaign. Mr. Bush spoke as well, according to attendees, telling the guests he relished the closeness of the race in New Hampshire, where polls show several other candidates with a chance at winning, because a victory there could only come if he earned it. Mr. Bush’s parents attended the briefing.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

The republicans

Running

 
Bush          Carson

 
 
Christie          Cruz
 

 
 
Fiorina          Graham
 
 
 
Huckabee          Jindal
 
 
 
Pataki          Paul
 
 
Perry         Rubio 
 
 
Santorum          Trump
 
Probably

 
Kasich         
Walker
Not running


Romney

FM

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