Was able to remove the rudder. Put a jack under the rudder and lifted it slowly back up.
Tapped on the top of the rudder quadrant to lower it on the rudder post, exposing the top of the shaft.
Took some sandpaper to it, hoping to smooth it out a bit, then applied a liberal amount of silicone lubricant.
Lowered the jack, inserted the metal emergency tiller on top of the rudder shaft then pounded on top with a mallet.
Dropped pretty quickly and 'stuck' in the same location, with about 3mm (1/8") of the rudder shaft sticking up above the quadrant.
Said a silent prayer then gave the top of the shaft some good bashes and it dropped below the surface of the quadrant. Now I knew it was just a matter of tapping it out. Another couple minutes of light tapping and it dropped all the way.
Thankfully, the hole I had dug was barely deep enough. Was surprised at lightness of the rudder assembly. The carbon fiber definitely cut the weight of the shaft in half.
This assembly is definitely different than post hull #200 361's. There is no split ring in the rudder tube. It's a solid bearing surface. Also no washer. I can see why Beneteau cut costs. This must have cost some $$$. Will be sending pictures to Tides Marine who made the sub 200 hull number assemblies, so they can make sure there aren't parts missing.
Both rudder bushings have light debris stuck to them. Not bad for 20 years but I can see how the steering could stiffen as whatever is stuck to the bushings expanded by absorbing water. Also antifouling paint had been jammed up inside the lower bushing surface.
The observations of adhesive or epoxy on the bushing was actually the lubricant I had sprayed to assist with removal.