We haven't had a bilingual president in 70 years—Jeb Bush or Marco Rubio would change that
When Jeb Bush started speaking Spanish during his Presidential announcement speech this afternoon, he was talking to America’s fast-growing Latino population—but also following the advice of Thomas Jefferson.
“When you become a public man, you may have occasion for [Spanish],” the founding father wrote in a 1785 letter to his nephew Peter Carr. “The circumstance of your possessing that language may give you a preference over other candidates.”
Since Jefferson, who was not fluent himself, no other U.S. president has spoken Spanish beyond a high-school level. That could change after 2016: both Bush and Senator Marco Rubio—the two presidential candidates currently leading national polls in the Republican primary—are fluent Spanish speakers.
Bush speaks only Spanish at home with his Mexican-born wife Columba. He’s hoping that his lingual skills will help him connect with Latinos, a crucial and quickly-growing part of the country’s electorate.
“Trabajen con nosotros por los valores que compartimos y para un gran futuro que es nuestro para construir para nosotros y nuestros hijos,” Bush said in his speech at Miami Dade College: Work with us for the values that we share and for a great future that is ours to build for us and our children.
“I intend to let everyone hear my message, including the many who can express their love of country in a different language,” he added.
While it was common for presidents in Jefferson’s time to speak multiple languages (he spoke Latin, French, and Italian), monolingualism has been prevalent in the White House in recent years. No president since Franklin Roosevelt—who spoke German and French—has been fluent in any language besides English.
Jimmy Carter spoke some Spanish, while President Obama and George W. Bush have both used a few phrases in campaign ads and speeches. (Obama also speaks some Bahasa Indonesia, which he learned while spending four years in Jakarta as a boy.)
That’s a far cry from the country’s early history, when it was common for presidents to speak multiple languages fluently. English was a second language for Martin Van Buren, the eighth president, who grew up speaking Dutch in upstate New York.