Jeb Bush talks immigration, education, releases emails as he eyes 2016 bid

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[February 11, 2015]  By Bill Cotterell
 
 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Reuters) - In a visit to Florida's state capital on Tuesday, Republican Jeb Bush focused on the politically explosive topics of immigration and education reform, while emails were released from his time as governor there in an effort to burnish his credentials as he eyes a 2016 presidential bid.

Bush told a friendly audience of 300 longtime supporters at a $1,000-per-plate luncheon that his party should approach immigration as an opportunity to spur economic growth, a view at odds with hardliners in his party.

"People, the best and brightest around the world, want to come here, so we should fix our immigration system," he said, also stressing his support for securing U.S. borders.

"We have a chance of having 600,000 first-round draft picks every year," he said.

The trip highlighted his strength in Florida - the largest U.S. swing state - seen as crucial to the Republican Party's hopes of regaining the White House in 2016.

It also showcased how Bush, unlike many Republicans at this early stage of the nomination drive, is not running to the conservative right but instead presenting himself as a mainstream alternative while seeking to expand the scope of the party and appeal to independent voters.

Bush, the brother of former President George W. Bush and son of former President George H.W. Bush, is considered a frontrunner in the already crowded field of Republican presidential prospects.

He launched the "Right to Rise" political action committee last month to raise money as he explores a campaign.

eGOVERNOR

On Tuesday, he released thousands of emails from his two terms as Florida governor from 1999 to 2007 along with the first chapter of a campaign-style e-book to show he could connect with constituents at a personal level.

Early in his tenure, Bush made public his email address, jeb@jeb.org, and encouraged people to write to him. In the first chapter of an e-book he is to release, he said he spent 30 hours a week answering emails, earning the nickname "the eGovernor."

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"Everyone could email me," he writes. "So they did."

He and his advisers believe that by releasing large chunks of his communications from his time as governor it will show evidence of a chief executive at ease with connecting daily with people who write to him and responding to their concerns.

Bush also discussed education policy at a school reform conference hosted by his Foundation for Florida's Future.

"I'm for higher standards," Bush told reporters after the event.

As he travels the country ahead of a potential White House run, he has faced skepticism from the most conservative wing of his party, which is wary of his support for the "Common Core" national academic standards.

Standardized testing was central to the education reforms he championed as governor and Bush has suggested a middle ground could be found.

"You can alleviate people’s fears that you’re going to have some kind of control by the federal government of content or curriculum or even standards," he said. "I’m against all that."

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Washington; editing by Letitia Stein, Sandra Maler, James Dalgleish and G Crosse)

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