Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and possible Republican presidential candidate speaks to the media after addressing the Rick Scott's Economic Growth Summit held at the Disney's Yacht and Beach Club Convention Center on June 2, 2015 in Orlando, Florida. Many of the leading Republican presidential candidates are scheduled to speak during the event.
Five lessons for Jeb Bush ahead of his Eurotrip
01:13 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

Jeb Bush will be traveling to Germany, Poland and Estonia -- but not the U.K., where several GOP candidates have tripped up.

The former Florida governor is expected to pound President Barack Obama's policies toward Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Washington CNN  — 

Jeb Bush is Europe bound. High on the travel agenda: steering clear of the pesky foreign quagmires that have engulfed his GOP brethren on recent trips abroad.

The former Florida governor will visit Germany and also tour Estonia and Poland – two former Soviet-bloc states that offer an easy platform for criticism of the Obama administration’s policy towards Russian President Vladimir Putin.

It should be an easy mission for an accomplished politician – a quick flit across the pond to bolster foreign policy credentials ahead of a likely presidential campaign.

But Bush should choose his words with care if he is to avoid extending a dubious streak that has seen Republican candidates tumble into controversy overseas.

Mitt Romney, the 2012 presidential nominee, endured a disastrous trip to Europe three years ago and committed a huge gaffe by questioning Britain’s readiness to host the London Olympic Games on the eve of their taking place.

Romney tried to roll back his criticism but was openly mocked in front of a huge crowd by London Mayor Boris Johnson in unflattering video footage that was beamed back to the United States.

Romney also went to Poland and suffered the indignity of reporters yelling at him to answer for his missteps – before a top campaign aide was caught on camera telling the press pack to “kiss my a**.”

Romney’s disastrous sojourn earned him the unwelcome headline “Mitt the Twit” in the merciless British tabloid press.

This election cycle has not been kind to potential presidential candidates who venture across the Atlantic either.

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal also managed to irk Johnson when he claimed in January that some areas of Europe, including parts of Britain, had become Muslim “no-go zones.”

READ: In Florida, not-yet-candidate Jeb Bush marks his territory

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, meanwhile, found out earlier this year that answering questions abroad about boiling political issues back home can also get you into trouble.

Christie said that parents should have a “measure of choice” about whether to vaccinate their kids, drawing charges that he was equivocating to appease evangelical conservatives.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker made his own trip to London this year and dodged a question on whether he believed in evolution – and managed to steer clear of deeper distractions by avoiding questions on pretty much everything else.

Perhaps wisely, Bush is avoiding London, where journalists like nothing more than tripping up visiting American presidential candidates.

Had he braved the wrath of the British media, Bush would likely have faced unwelcome questions about his brother, former president George W. Bush, and the Iraq war, both of which remain deeply unpopular in the U.K.

His visit to Germany will recall then-Sen. Barack Obama’s trip to Europe during the 2008 presidential campaign, which saw him deliver a soaring speech before a crowd of hundreds of thousands euphoric Germans in downtown Berlin.

But even Obama, who was wildly popular in Europe, didn’t escape controversy. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was apparently annoyed at his campaign’s request for him to speak before the iconic Brandenburg Gate, where President Ronald Reagan once cried, “Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall!”

Obama did not get that privilege until his second term, in 2013, by which time he was much less popular in Europe and, as a consequence, drew a much smaller crowd.