Former President George H.W. Bush
is bucking his party's presidential nominee and plans to vote for Hillary
Clinton in November, according to a member of another famous political family,
the Kennedys.
Bush, 92, had intended to stay
silent on the White House race between Clinton and Donald Trump, a sign in and
of itself of his distaste for Trump. But his preference for the wife of his own
successor, President Bill Clinton, nonetheless became known to a wider audience
thanks to Kathleen Hartington Kennedy Townsend, the former Maryland lieutenant
governor and daughter of the late Robert F. Kennedy.
On Monday, Townsend posted a
picture on her Facebook page shaking hands next to the former president and
this caption: "The President told me he’s voting for Hillary!!”
In a telephone interview, Townsend
said she met with the former president in Maine earlier today, where she said
he made his preference known that he was voting for a Democrat. “That’s what he
said,” she told POLITICO.
Asked about Townsend’s post,
George H.W. Bush spokesman Jim McGrath in an email replied, "The vote
President Bush will cast as a private citizen in some 50 days will be just
that: a private vote cast in some 50 days. He is not commenting on the
presidential race in the interim."
George H.W. Bush
and former First Lady Barbara Bush have stayed out of the political debate
since campaigning earlier this year for their son Jeb's unsuccessful bid for
president. Neither George H.W. Bush nor his son, former President George W.
Bush, attended this summer's Republican National Convention in Cleveland where
Trump accepted the nomination.
Many former GOP
officials from both Bush administrations have also announced their support for
Clinton over Trump, including national security adviser Brent Scowcroft and
former Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez.
One Bush official
who has taken Trump's side is former Vice President Dan Quayle, who told
POLITICO in an interview this summer he was still holding out hope both Bushes
would back Trump. "Clearly in their heart of hearts I should hope they
would want a Republican president, but they can speak for themselves,"
Quayle said in an interview in July.
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