Mitt Romney’s announcement Friday that he will not run for president a
third time has reset the budding 2016 field – with political
strategists saying his exit could position Jeb Bush as establishment
favorite while helping him assemble a campaign team in key early-voting
states.
At the same time, the former Florida governor could become an even
bigger target for party conservatives who criticize both Bush and Romney
as too moderate; now, only Bush remains.
“Unless [New Jersey Gov.] Chris Christie can show he is more viable
than he has demonstrated at this point, we are going to have one
establishment candidate versus an entire conservative field,” Steve
Deace, a syndicated conservative radio talk show host based in Iowa,
told FoxNews.com.
Being the “establishment” candidate would have its upsides.
Now, veteran operatives who were torn between Bush and Romney will be
free to put their energies into the Bush camp, should he decide to run.
Had Romney run, both men would be vying for the same resources,
including Wall Street money and institutional party support.
“This frees up any uncertainty for campaign funders who just did not
know what to do between Jeb and Mitt – they no longer have that
conundrum,” one Republican strategist, who did not want to be named,
told FoxNews.com. “Plus there is a whole pool of conservative
establishment voters who would have been torn between [them].
“It doesn’t mean that they will automatically shift to Bush, but he will have a greater ability now to pick [those voters] up.”
Even before Romney’s announcement, Bush was starting to pick up members of Romney’s old gang.
On Thursday, Bush’s team confirmed that Romney’s former senior Iowa
adviser, David Kochel, had signed on as a senior strategist for Bush’s
newly launched Right to Rise PAC.
Reports also emerged that former Romney donors were moving toward
Bush, and folks who ran the ground games in key primary states in 2012
were no longer as enthusiastic. Doubts lingered over whether he could
manage a third campaign and win.
Bush also flew out to Utah for a private meeting with Romney last week.
“I will give [the establishment] credit,” Deace said. “They were
headed for an all-out self-immolation with both Romney and Bush running.
So Jeb goes out on a plane and basically knee-caps Romney in public.”
Romney didn’t quite frame it that way on Friday. In a conference call
with supporters, only three weeks after he surprised donors by
announcing he was weighing a run, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee said
he was out.
Romney said he believes that he could win the nomination, and that he would have enough funding and support.
But he said it would have been a "difficult test and a hard fight."
He said he did not want to “make it more difficult for someone else to
emerge who may have a better chance of” becoming president.
On the heels of the announcement, Romney planned to have dinner with Christie Friday night.
Along with Christie, plenty of other potential GOP candidates could
compete with Bush for the big donors and the high-profile strategists,
including Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and others.
But there are signs Bush – after avoiding a big conservative summit
in Des Moines last weekend that Christie attended -- is ready to make
the foray into the first-in-the-nation caucus state in a big way. Those
caucuses are now one year away.
Charlie Szold, communications director of the Iowa Republican Party,
told Fox News that Bush has called the chairman of the Iowa GOP, and
“indicated he's interested in playing here in Iowa.”
"I would say, clearly, Governor Bush hiring David Kochel is a good
indication he's interested in Iowa and wants to participate actively in
this process,” Szold said. “Kochel has been a good friend to Iowa for
many years and we're excited to have him playing such an important role
in a presidential election."
Bill Whalen, political analyst at the Hoover Institution, said
Romney’s exit should send a signal to Bush to get his campaign, if that
is what he intends, in full gear.
“I think the lesson for Jeb Bush is to get in early and start staking
out positions,” he said. “It’s probably time to stop playing footsie.
Start collecting money and support and force the rest of the field to
react.”
The conservative base is starting to react, too, said Whalen, who
noted that “now there is one less person to beat up and now the focus is
on Bush.”
Deace said Romney’s decision not to run “clearly puts a bigger
bull’s-eye on [Bush’s] back,” but at the same time, he said,
conservatives had hoped that Romney and Bush were going to have to fight
it out a bit longer. Right now, there is a herd of potential candidates
playing to the conservative base -- including former Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz -- who would
have to wrestle each other for the support of the base come primary
time.
Whalen said one shouldn’t count out a “mainstream runoff,” either.
“There is a large pool of money in Republican circles… they are looking
for the candidate who is the most capable of winning 270 electoral
votes,” he said, adding: “While Bush would be the front-runner, he would
not be the overwhelming front-runner.”
He said Romney’s exit has created an “opening” for Christie, Rubio and even Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
If Romney’s own words Friday are any indication, he is not banking on Bush either:
“I believe that one of our next generation of Republican leaders, one
who may not be as well-known as I am today, one who has not yet taken
their message across the country, one who is just getting started, may
well emerge as being better able to defeat the Democrat nominee.”
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