Sunday, March 08, 2009

George Prescott Bush Biography VIDEO

George Prescott Bush Biography VIDEO. Republican National Convention Blog. George P. Bush wins GOP nomination for Texas land Commissioner


Bush announced in September 2012 his intention to run for office, saying that he was considering one of several state offices. In November, he filed papers required to run for state office in Texas.

In January 2013, Bush filed a campaign finance report stating he had received about $1.3 million in campaign contributions. In March 2013, Bush filed to run for Texas Land Commissioner.

Outgoing Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson is running for lieutenant governor in 2014.

As of June 2013, Bush had raised $3.3 million dollars of campaign funds. On November 19, 2013, he officially filed the papers to run for Texas land commissioner.

In November, 2013 John Cook, the former mayor of El Paso officially filed to run for Texas Land Commissioner on the Democratic ticket.

March 4, 2014, George P. Bush won the Republican nomination for Texas land commissioner.

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George Prescott Bush

George P. Bush at the Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Date: June 18, 2011 (by Gage Skidmore)
George Prescott Bush (born April 24, 1976 in Texas) is the eldest of three children of former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and his wife Columba Garnica Gallo who was born in Mexico. He is the nephew of President George W. Bush, and the grandson of President George H. W. Bush.

At the age of 12, Bush spoke before the 1988 Republican National Convention, which nominated his grandfather.

People magazine ranked P, No. 5 on its list of 100 most eligible bachelors in 2000.

P went to high school with popular musical artist Enrique Iglesias at Gulliver Preparatory School in Miami. He earned an undergraduate degree in history from Rice in 1998, and earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Texas School of Law in 2003.

Like grandpa and uncle at Yale, P was a freshman walk-on to the Rice University baseball team but unlike grandpa and uncle, he got little playing time and abandoned the game by his sophomore year. Bush played quarterback for the Jones College intramural football team. Bush earned an undergraduate degree from Rice in 1998, After earning his history degree, George P. took a teaching job in an agricultural community south of Miami. He earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Texas School of Law in 2003.

When asked in 2003 about whether he planned to run for office himself, P. replied that his grandmother, Barbara Bush, had advised that anyone thinking about entering politics should distinguish himself in some other field first: "Make a name for yourself, have a family, marry someone great, have some kids, buy a house, pay taxes, and do the things everyone also does instead of just running out and saying, 'Hey, I'm the nephew of or the son of or the grandson of...'."
Amanda BushP married a law school classmate, Amanda "Mandi" Williams, on August 7, 2004 in Kennebunkport, Maine, the Bush family gathered to attend his wedding at St. Ann’s Episcopal Church near Walker’s Point. P. met Williams in a trial advocacy class at the University of Texas at Austin Law School.
He sat behind her and passed notes during class, asking her if she wanted to join him in a round of golf. P. says he wants to "start a family as soon as possible," Amanda is a media law attorney at the Jackson Walker LLP in Fort Worth. They currently live in Austin, Texas.

During the 2004 campaign, he was a clerk for a federal judge; the Hatch Act prevented him from getting involved until the final months.

P. practiced law in Dallas until 2005 before joining N3 Capital, a real estate investment company of which he is part owner, in Fort Worth, Texas. N3 Capital has since moved its headquarters to Austin, Texas and changed its name to Pennybacker Capital.

On March 21, 2007 the United States Navy Reserve announced the selection of George P. for training as an intelligence officer. Once commissioned as an Ensign for eight years of reserve service, he will attend direct commission officer training, and then undergo a year of intelligence training. "My grandfather's my hero, and what really sold me on the ultimate decision was having the chance to see the CVN-77 be commissioned under his name," refering to the aircraft carrier named for his grandfather -- the USS George H.W. Bush.

P. said the death of Pat Tillman, the NFL player and Army Ranger who was killed in Afghanistan in 2004 in what was later determined to be a friendly-fire incident, "was a wake-up call for me." He said he had "looked into active duty" and had somber conversations with his wife about the possibility.

The commitment involves two weeks of annual training. He can volunteer for active duty or be deployed after he finishes his intelligence certification, which takes about two years. He'll have to run a mile and a half in 13 minutes, which he said he can do now, but he's trying to get down to the 10 minutes and 30 seconds required for SEALs and special operations. He's also a weightlifter as well as golfer.

In 2007 He was a member of the board of directors of the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce and the Fort Worth Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and was involved with the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Bush attended a small Catholic parish in downtown Fort Worth.

P. is a leader of the Maverick PAC, which was formed by young Texas donors to the Bush-Cheney campaign. The group scheduled a series of meetings with the 2008 Republican presidential candidates.

SOURCES:
George Prescott Bush Image Licensing: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. Attribution: Gage Skidmore

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Congressman Roy Blunt Weekly Republican Address 03/07/09 VIDEO PODCAST TEXT


PODCAST Congressman Roy Blunt Delivers Republican weekly radio address download MP3 2.9 mb running time 2:27 min.

"Hello, I'm Missouri Congressman Roy Blunt. I serve on the House Energy and Commerce Health Care subcommittee and chair the Health Care Solutions Working Group here in the House of Representatives.

"I attended President Obama's health care summit Thursday afternoon. I appreciated the opportunity and again told the President that I'm ready to work together to improve health care in America.

"Americans are worried about their access to quality, affordable health care and they are looking for responsible solutions. Republicans agree, and we are committed to developing new and innovative solutions to fix what's broken, while making sure that we keep what works.

"Republicans are committed to access, affordability, competition and a quality system that puts patients and doctors in the driver seat.

"I agree with President Obama that if you like your current health insurance plan, you should be allowed to keep it. But that's not what is currently being discussed in Washington. Some people are spending a lot of time talking about how to spend more of your money on bigger government run programs. I'm concerned that if the government steps in it will eventually push out the private health care plans that millions of Americans enjoy today. This could cause your employer to simply stop offering coverage, hoping the government will pick up the slack.

"Just imagine a health care system that looks like a government run operation most of us are all too familiar with -- the local DMV. Lines, paper work, taking a number. Or how about another government agency -- the IRS.

"I don't want our health care to resemble that system and you probably don't either. That's why real competition is the key -- it encourages innovation so that the health care treatments and services available to you are the ones that you need and you want. Republicans are committed to common-sense solutions that promote competition and innovation.

"Not surprisingly the government never gets the price right: overpaying for some services, underpaying for others. It's also a system that leads to unfair rationing of care.

"Part of that comes from the backward way the government looks at problems. Washington is the only place that tells you how much they care about something based on how much it costs, instead of how well it works.

"America has the best doctors, health care providers and hospitals in the world. Republicans will lead the effort to make health care work for Americans. We'll also lead the fight against any proposals that undermine your ability to get the treatment the doctor you choose recommends.

"This is Roy Blunt, thanks for giving me a moment of your time."

Paid for by the Republican National Committee.

Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

SOURCE Republican National Committee