The Hill
By Jonathan Easley and Jesse Byrnes
May 12, 2015
Former
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush will skip the Iowa straw poll, dealing a major
blow to an event that has been the traditional starting point for the
presidential campaign.
Bush
will instead attend the Red State Gathering in Atlanta during the first
week of August, an event hosted by conservative blogger Erick Erickson,
along with five other
GOP 2016 hopefuls, including Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal, Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and businesswoman Carly
Fiorina.
The
other candidates attending the Red State confab haven’t said yet
whether they’ll also attend the straw poll, but there appears to be an
opening to attend both.
Bush’s
absence, first reported by The Des Moines Register, and the competing
event in Atlanta, deals a major blow to the Iowa straw poll.
“No
matter how you slice it, the fact that Erickson already has commitments
from five presidential candidates is a bit of a concern,” former Iowa
Republican Party political
director Craig Robinson wrote on his blog, The Iowa Republican.
“It’s
one thing when one candidate opts to attend an event that is competing
with the Republican Party of Iowa’s premier political event, but having
five candidates do
it would deal a blow to the Iowa GOP.”
Jeff Kaufmann, the chairman of the Iowa Republican Party, criticized Bush’s decision on Twitter.
The
straw poll has been criticized by mainstream Republicans as boosting
hardline conservatives in the party. Then-Rep. Michele Bachmann
(R-Minn.) won the last Iowa straw
poll in 2011. The event has only picked the eventual Republican nominee
twice in its several decades of existence but is popular among
political observers.
The
event is also extremely costly for candidates to participate in,
although the Republican Party of Iowa took steps this month to reduce
the barriers to entry. It’s
been moved from Ames to Boothe, and candidates will no longer have to
bid for space or provide food to the masses.
Bush
is the front-runner nationally, where he holds a narrow lead in the
polls over Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.) and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in
the race for the GOP presidential
nomination, according to the RealClearPolitics average.
However,
he’s buried in a deep pack of candidates in Iowa, the
first-in-the-nation caucus state, which many view as an early indication
of his troubles with the party's
base.
Bush
trailed six other likely and declared Republican presidential
candidates among likely caucus-goers in a recent Quinnipiac University
poll.
With Bush out, Robinson said all eyes are now on Walker.
“It
should surprise nobody that Jeb Bush is already confirmed to be in
Atlanta and not rural Boone on that weekend,” Robinson said. “Erickson
actually benefits from holding
a competing event with the Straw Poll because it gives candidates like
Bush an easy out.
The
candidate that is probably the most concerning on RedState’s list is
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker," he continued. "Walker is currently the
frontrunner in Iowa,
and if he opts to not participate in the Straw Poll it will change the
dynamics of the event in a substantial way.”
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