The Marco Rubio debate moment that worries Democrats
Loading...
| Washington
鈥淭here is no question that [Marco] Rubio is the Republican that Democrats fear most.鈥
Those words, Dan Pfeiffer before Tuesday night鈥檚 Republican debate,聽are truer than ever after the debate.
Here鈥檚 the moment that crystallized the point: Senator Rubio was presented with Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton鈥檚 credentials 鈥 an 鈥渋mpressive r茅sum茅,鈥 said Fox Business moderator Maria Bartiromo 鈥 and then asked how he can compete. Rubio didn't miss a beat.
鈥淭his next election is actually a generational choice 鈥 a choice about what kind of nation we will be in the 21st century," Rubio said.聽
Rubio, the youngest candidate on stage and a generation younger than Mrs. Clinton, followed with his own version of 鈥渉ope and change.鈥 America is a 鈥渟pecial country,鈥 he said, one where 鈥渁nyone from anywhere can achieve anything, a nation that's been a force for good on this planet.鈥
Rubio then painted a bleak picture of life today: hard-working Americans 鈥渓iving paycheck to paycheck,鈥 the nation facing 鈥渉umiliation鈥 abroad. His prescription for the future was left vague, but so was hope and change. As with Obama eight years ago, voters can project whatever they want onto this young, charismatic, ethnic minority, first-term senator.
In his first presidential run, first-term Senator Obama was making the exact same argument against likely Republican nominee John McCain.
鈥淗e is clinging to the policies of the past, and we are the party of the future,鈥 on March 31, 2008, in Lancaster, Pa.聽
That Rubio is running on the Obama playbook isn鈥檛 news.聽Still, this 鈥淥bama paradox鈥 presents itself starkly every time Rubio makes the generational argument. Republicans railed against Obama as a young, flashy celebrity with a thin r茅sum茅 his first time out. Now they have their own, Cuban-American version of Obama. And it鈥檚 hard to argue with success; Obama, after all, won the presidency twice.
Rubio hasn鈥檛 reached celebrity status, and is still in single digits in polls of Republican voters. But in these early debates, if voters are watching, they鈥檙e forming impressions of likability and character. And Rubio is gaining momentum, worrying Democrats, as Mr. Pfeiffer makes clear, citing conversations with fellow Democrats.
鈥淗e is a skilled messenger and could very credibly run a change vs. more of the same campaign against Clinton,鈥 the former Obama aide writes for CNN. 鈥淩ubio is also the most broadly appealing GOP candidate and would have the best shot to close the nonwhite vote gap with the Democrats.鈥
But there鈥檚 a 鈥渂ut,鈥 of course.
鈥淲e haven't seen Rubio tested in any real way in this campaign, and his support seems to be very top down,鈥 Pfeiffer writes. 鈥淥peratives, pundits and donors are wowed, but the voters are pretty meh on Rubio to date. This is very different from Obama, who had tremendous grassroots support from the beginning.鈥
Then he offers the all-purpose caveat: It鈥檚 still early. There are still almost three months to go until the kickoff Iowa caucuses, and just under a year until Election Day. As one New Hampshire GOP voter put it on the eve of Tuesday鈥檚 debate, 鈥淚 still don鈥檛 know what to think of that guy, what鈥檚 his name? Marco Polo?鈥
The Republican 鈥渆stablishment鈥 鈥 the party leaders, politicians, and big donors 鈥 is still sorting through its feelings about former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Rubio鈥檚 former mentor and friend. Mr. Bush has struggled to wow voters, and has been blessed (in fundraising) and burdened (with the public) by his last name, as the son and brother of two former presidents Bush. Rubio鈥檚 comment on generational change could just as easily have applied to the older, grayer former governor as it did to Clinton.
In that establishment 鈥渂racket,鈥 Tuesday night鈥檚 debate didn鈥檛 settle anything. Bush performed well enough, and certainly better than in the last GOP debate, when he went after Rubio on his poor attendance record in the Senate, and was clobbered by Rubio鈥檚 response.
On Tuesday, in Milwaukee, the two Floridians played nice and kept it positive. The prime target for all the candidates was Clinton. And if Rubio does go on to win the GOP nomination 鈥 a big 鈥渋f鈥 鈥 his task in going up against the likely Democratic nominee will be more complicated than Obama鈥檚 challenge against McCain.
Clinton would be the first woman president, and Rubio would have to be careful in how he goes after her. But there鈥檚 a playbook for that, too. When Clinton ran for the US Senate in New York against the younger Rep. Rick Lazio (R) in 2000, he made a move during a debate that was widely seen as disrespectful to a distinguished older woman. He left his podium, walked over to her, and waved a piece of paper at her, demanding she sign it (the so-called 鈥淣ew York Freedom from Soft Money Pledge鈥). She refused, and Mr. Lazio gave up.聽
The incident immediately entered campaign lore, filed under 鈥渨hat not to do.鈥
Rubio鈥檚 momentum has been building up slowly 鈥 too slowly, in the eyes of some Republican operatives, who see voters wowed first by Donald Trump, then Ben Carson, depriving attention from the more conventional candidates. The race for top 鈥渙utsider鈥 is still hot, and includes another young Cuban-American first-term senator, Ted Cruz of Texas.
But Rubio is the one running the hope-filled campaign as the candidate of the future. And if he really is the Latino Obama, the playbook is written.