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Journalist Susan Page shares these and other insights,The Matriarch: Barbara Bush and the Making of an American Dynasty, based on hours of interviews with Mrs. Bush and writings from her journals.
According toThe Matriarchexcerpt, “the tumultuous presidential campaign in general and Trump’s ridicule of son Jeb Bush in particular had riled her.”
“‘Angst,’ she told me,” Page writes.
At the time, Jeb, a former Florida governor, had only recently withdrawn from a bruising and disappointing presidential primary in which Trump had made him a high-profile early target of repeated and personal attacks. After Mrs. Bush appeared in an ad for her son, Trumpmocked him in January 2016: “He desperately needed mommy to help him.”
Trump built his campaign, in part, on bending the tastes and priorities of Republican to his whims: He openly — successfully — derided much of the legacy of the previous Republican president, Mrs. Bush’s son.
According to Page’s book, when Page asked Mrs. Bush last February if she still considered herself a Republican, the matriarch of a Republican dynasty replied: “I’d probably say no today.”
Mrs. Bush couldn’t “understand why people” were for Trump, and “expressed astonishment that women could support him,” Page writes.
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush, her husband, and PresidentGeorge W. Bush, her son, have had similarly sharp thoughts about their successor. In a 2017 book, the 41st president called Trump “a blowhard,” while his son, the 43rd president, said, “This guy doesn’t know what it means to be president.”
The elder Bush even voted forHillary Clinton— the first time in his life he voted for a Democrat for president, according to Page. Mrs. Bush wrote in her diary that she could not vote for either candidate and instead wrote in Jeb’s name.
Neither the younger Bush nor his wife, former First LadyLaura Bush, voted for Trump, a family spokesman previously told PEOPLE: They also wrote in candidates.
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Mrs. Bush’s disdain for Trump began decades ago, Page writes, and she wrote in her diary in the 1990s that “Trump now means Greed, selfishness and ugly.”
After the 2016 presidential election results were in, Mrs. Bush “woke up and discovered, to [her] horror, that Trump had won,” Page writes.
When her husband called Trump to congratulate him, Trump “was very nice” and trying “to be conciliatory,” according to Page, citing Mrs. Bush’s diary. (As much as Trump has a history of denigrating his foes, he can be equally gushing about them in person — calling theNew York Timesa “great American jewel” after his election.)
In Trump’s call with Bush senior, “He said that George was a great president and he admired us both,” according to Mrs. Bush’s diary. “He said Jeb was strong and a great man. He is trying … at this moment … to be conciliatory. He says he wants to represent all the people.”
Two weeks after the election, she wrote a “warm” note to to First LadyMelania Trump, urging her to protect her son, Barron. But it was not the letter she thought she’d mail.
“She had drafted a funny congratulatory letter to send to Bill Clinton — assuming that he would take over the role of presidential spouse,” Page writes.
Instead, Mrs. Bush was left to observe the Trump administration.
Shortly after the election, a friend gave her a presidential countdown clock which showed “how many days, hours, minutes and seconds remained in Trump’s term,” Page writes. The clock stayed in the bedroom, on her bedside table “where she could see it every day” until the day Mrs. Bush died.
source: people.com