Everybody knows that Jeb Bush can’t run for President in 2008, and perhaps not ever, because his doing so would raise the specter of a “Bush Dynasty”, which Americans would find abhorrent. It is interesting, then, to read the political news from Governor Bush’s state, as reported by the invaluable (at a mere $3.95 a month) OpinionJournal Political Diary:
The Florida Democratic Party is showing obvious signs of desperation by floating talk that their candidate for governor next year to succeed Jeb Bush will be the closest thing they have to a political celebrity: Anthony Kennedy Shriver, son of former 1972 vice-presidential nominee Sargent Shriver and Eunice Kennedy Shriver, as well as the brother of Maria Shriver, California’s firstlady. . . .
The Miami New Times, an alternative newspaper, says local Democrats make no pretense that Mr. Shriver, who has never held office, would be anything more than an gamble that the fading charisma of the Kennedy family would somehow rescue them from continued political impotence. “It’s not hard to see the 39-year-old Shriver’s appeal. He has his family's trademark cheekbones, white picket-fence teeth, and tall, commanding presence,” the paper gushed. It also noted he currently runs a high-profile mentoring organization for young people and that his wife was born in Cuba, an important calling card in courting the Hispanic vote.
Mr. Shriver isn’t dismissing any of the speculation. “I don't want to rule out anything,” he told the New Times. “It’s obviously a great opportunity to serve in a really importantjob. . . . When you talk to Arnold [Schwarzenegger] about why he ran, he really felt that at that point in California, it would make an enormous difference if he was the guy who took that job.” Given that it’s not hard to convince a member of the extensive Kennedy clan to run for office, Mr. Shriver sure sounds like a man who is talking himself into becoming a candidate.
Now there is a dynastic candidate for you: a guy whom no one would tout for anything higher than state assemblyman, were it not for his genealogy. Of course he’s hardly the only Kennedy kinsman without visible qualifications to seek elective office. Governor Schwarzenegger was the odd man out; he was probably hurt more than helped by the family ties. Otherwise, the descendants of Joe Kennedy represent the bad side of family influence: candidates running on the strength of somebody else’s charisma. (Luckily, the voters catch on to most of them after observing them in action for a term or two.)
It’s hard to see the same factor at work on behalf of the Bushes. Senator Prescott Bush was moderately successful in Connecticut politics (twice elected to the Senate in big GOP years after losing two earlier bids), but one doubts that he had many admirers in Texas, where his son entered politics.
George W. and Jeb started their political careers with a well-known surname but not an especially popular one. To attribute their elections to the governorships of two major states to a Republican version of the Kennedy cult is so ludicrous an idea that only the mainstream American media could entertain it. Just as ludicrous as the notion that Anthony Kennedy Shriver ought to be a serious contender for governor of Florida.
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