After a full year of Republican presidential candidates avoiding references to Bush and promising voters change, this past weekend featured an odd fight between Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee over who valued the incumbent president more.
Apparently, this wasn’t accident. Romney, in particular, is searching for a strategy to help bolster his campaign, and has decided seizing the Bush mantle may pay dividends.
ABC News’ John Berman Reports: Standing on the banks of the chilly Mississippi River in Davenport, Iowa, Mitt Romney gave a great big political bear-hug to President Bush. Praising the president’s foreign policy, Romney said, “I believe that our president has acted in good faith, and in an effort to protect his country, and do everything in his power to keep America safe.”
Bush has been without majority public support for 35 months straight, according to an ABC News/Washington Post poll released in December, with only 33 percent approving of the president’s job performance. So, why would a candidate show so much love for a president so low in public opinion polls?
Well, the first reason is, apparently, to draw a distinction with Huckabee, who is now comfortably in the lead in the Iowa, and who criticized the president for having an “arrogant bunker mentality” when it comes to foreign policy.
And the second, is because there’s a Republican niche audience who no one seems to be talking to: those odd folks who think Bush is a fine president and wonder why no one wants to seize his mantle.
The AP noted:
With the first test approaching quickly, Romney made a play Wednesday for Republican faithful with his praise for Bush.
While Romney acknowledged that the administration made mistakes in the course of the Iraq war, he said Bush’s troop-increase strategy is the right one and “these mistakes were not made out of arrogance or a bunker mentality” — countering Huckabee.
“The president is a person who is deeply devoted to this country and doing what’s right for this country, and protecting American lives,” Romney said.
All year, Republican presidential candidates have walked a careful line in how they’ve spoken of Bush.
And now, at least one of these candidates is trying to cross that line.
Should Romney get the GOP nomination, his embrace of the least popular president in modern political history should be the gift that keeps on giving.