The campaign trail turned rough Wednesday for former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush as he reached for a strong showing in South Carolina’s GOP primary Saturday.
Jeb Bush is getting the most attention he’s gotten in weeks, not over a remark on the future of the country or what he'll do as president, but because of a simple tweet.
Jeb Bush, John Kasich and Marco Rubio are locked in a high-stakes political chess match in South Carolina, strategically moving money and other campaign resources around in a bid to pull ahead in the Republican primary race—or at least keep their campaigns afloat if they don’t
Galaxies of electrons in our Einsteinian universe are being expended on U.S. primary election prognostications. Still another perspective may be useful.
Former President George W. Bush was making his first direct foray into the 2016 campaign Monday in South Carolina, hoping a state that put him on the path to the White House 16 years ago can do the same for his brother, Jeb.
Eyeing their first wins in a capricious campaign, Republican Donald Trump lashed out at his opponents Monday while Democrat Bernie Sanders sought to play it safe on the eve of the nation’s initial primary. GOP contenders vying for second and third saw fresh hopes for survival after New Hampshire as both parties settled in for a drawn-out slog to the nomination.
A video snippet of one of Bush’s stump speeches there, where he tells his audience to “pleases clap,” is being passed around the web, as an object of ridicule and pity.
Jeb Bush’s recent cancellation of advertising plans in Iowa and South Carolina was yet another cost-saving step for a down-in-the-polls presidential campaign that had already thinned its staff