You are using an outdated browser.
Please upgrade your browser
and improve your visit to our site.

Is this Jeb Bush’s moment?

The big news of the New Hampshire primary, of course, was that Donald J. Trump won with a dominant 35 percent of the vote. A related subplot is the fact that Ted Cruz, the victor in the Iowa caucuses, won a respectable third place, despite investing little in a state that is less friendly to his brand of hardline politics. If this were a race based solely on results, the discussion would probably center on the two-man race developing between Trump and Cruz—they are number one and two, respectively, in the polls for the next primary in South Carolina.

But the race has been defined as a contest between ascendant outsiders and a high caste in disarray, which means that it is worth contemplating the significance of Jeb Bush’s fourth-place finish ahead of Marco Rubio. By any objective standard, Bush performed poorly, given the amount of money he has spent:

But with Chris Christie leaning toward the exit, with Rubio struggling to prove his mettle, and with New Hampshire runner-up John Kasich heading into more conservative states that may find his Prince of Light vibe a tad sanctimonious, Bush is arguably the most viable establishment candidate in the race right now. And that’s scary, if you’re the establishment.