Release is seen as ground-breaking exercise in transparency
By Thomas Beaumont and Stephen Braun
Associated Press
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Jeb Bush released a trove of emails from his time as Florida's governor on Tuesday, a massive yet incomplete record selected to show the likely Republican presidential candidate as in touch with constituents and closely involved in his work as the state's chief executive.
The release, which came with the first chapter of an e-book that chronicles Bush's obsession with communicating by email, is a vast and ground-breaking exercise in transparency for a presidential prospect - even if it's not a complete record of Bush's administration.
Nor was it intended to be, aides to Bush said.
"The focus of the project is to make them more widely available," said Bush spokeswoman Kristy Campbell.
But doing so drew some immediate criticism, however, because the un-redacted emails include some personal information - names, emails addresses and, in a few cases, Social Security numbers - of those with whom Bush corresponded.
Florida's open records laws are among the strongest in the nation, meaning the emails - all of those sent to and from Bush's personal email address from 1999 to 2007 - have long been open to public review. Bush said Tuesday he released what his team got from the state's archive, and pledged to block out any information that shouldn't be public.
"If we have private information that's out there, we're going to take it off for sure," he said.
The records, posted Tuesday to a new website, account for a sliver of the material on file at the state archive, and do not include emails sent to and from his official government email address, as well as other records such as office notes and calendars.
But by cracking open his Blackberry for inspection, and pairing it with what amounts to a reader's guide to the hundreds of thousands of messages, many only a few words long, Bush is able to shape how the emails define him among his would-be GOP primary opponents and Democrats already trying to paint him as an out-of-touch businessman little different than 2012 nominee Mitt Romney.
In the book chapter, Bush writes that he was seldom without his Blackberry while serving as governor from 1999 to 2007, spending roughly 30 hours per week reading and returning email to staff and Florida residents.
Bush casts himself as being readily accessible, to the point that he freely gave his personal email address to constituents. "As much as I could, I emailed back," he writes, describing the experience as "quite humbling" at times, but "always eye opening, and (it) certainly kept me on my toes."
While replying to schoolchildren and Florida's least connected, Bush also comes off as a detail-oriented list-keeper, who at times tersely reminded aides of deadlines.
After taking office in January 1999, Bush advised staff that the state's then nascent website needed a thorough upgrade. Hearing nothing, two weeks later he ended his follow-up: "If you disagree, come and tell me why. If you agree, help me make it so."
But even amid the flood of emails that show Bush interacting with aides on a wide range of topics, the electronic trail of those topics is at times interrupted or incomplete.
From his earliest days as governor, for instance, Bush's administration had to develop and shepherd his first state budget through the Florida legislature.
But the earliest email files, dating to Bush's first days in office, show him dealing with aides on a budget plan that was already in mid-stream. The emails released Tuesday provide no evidence of Bush and his aides grappling over his budget proposal in its infancy.
Bush's aides say most of those interactions were in person during hours-long sessions in the governor's office.
Also not included in Tuesday's release are telephone records, including those marking the roughly 40,000 calls Bush's office received during the legislative and court battle over whether to end life support for Terri Schiavo. The brain-damaged Florida woman died in 2005 after her feeding tube was removed. Schiavo's husband wanted her feeding tube removed, against the wishes of her parents. The governor's efforts to order that she remain on life support were later ruled unconstitutional.
The emails Bush highlights in the book chapter include examples in which he paid particular attention to child welfare, education spending and veterans, while focusing on conservative economic priorities such as cutting the number of state employees and cutting taxes.
They surface as Bush has said focusing on lower and middle-income Americans would be the focus of a potential national campaign.
"Jeb's attempt to rebrand himself as a champion for middle-class opportunity is as laughable as the idea of Mitt Romney as an anti-poverty crusader," Democratic National Committee spokesman Ian Sams said in a statement.
Sams was referring to Romney's brief consideration of a 2016 campaign for president, which he said would have focused on low- and middle-income Americans.
Published: Thu, Feb 12, 2015