Author Topic: Marco Rubio’s perception problem (Yahoo)  (Read 333 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline corbe

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38,637
Marco Rubio’s perception problem (Yahoo)
« on: January 14, 2017, 05:22:57 am »
Marco Rubio’s perception problem

Jon Ward
Senior Political Correspondent

Yahoo NewsJanuary 13, 2017



And so we have come again to a moment of testing for Marco Rubio.

His very public reservations over Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, have quickly put the Florida senator back at the center of attention. But by stepping out and threatening to derail Tillerson’s nomination with a key vote on the Foreign Relations committee, Rubio has also raised old and persistent questions about his core character.

One year ago, many would have predicted that Rubio would be in Washington this week preparing to be sworn in as the nation’s 45th president. The Republican presidential primary had not yet begun, and many believed that Rubio would ultimately win the nomination and defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Instead, the 45-year old lawmaker is now entering his second six-year term as a senator, after reversing earlier statements that he would not return to the Senate if he lost the GOP primary. He had a decidedly mixed first term. In the broadest sense, the first three years were a steady ascent upward, until the immigration bill that Rubio championed in 2013 fell apart that summer. Since then, Rubio has been brought down to earth, first by talk radio and then by Trump, who belittled and humiliated him last year.

And it is the questions about Rubio’s political instincts, maturity, toughness and conviction during that first moment of testing that remain unanswered after last year’s presidential campaign.

Rubio’s skills and assets are unquestioned: He is an articulate and passionate orator who performs well on TV, he exudes charisma and he is highly ambitious. His record on policy lacks any red-letter accomplishments, but he has worked hard to lead the GOP on foreign policy and family-friendly economic proposals.

His push for immigration reform in 2013 showed both courage and determination, as he moved quickly to lead the GOP after Mitt Romney’s disappointing 2012 loss. But he overestimated the amount of goodwill for him on the right and then found himself the public face of a bill that conservatives hated, and seemed to conclude that Democrats like Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., had used him to sell a bill that ultimately was a nonstarter for the grassroots.

Rubio’s full and hasty retreat from the legislation made him look craven. He looked to some like he was constantly reacting to public opinion rather than staking out a path that he believes in, factoring in the politics and then fighting for his position until the battle was won or lost.

In his presidential campaign, Rubio again fell short. He and his strategists ran a so-so campaign that prevented him from breaking out from the pack in the fall, he could not find an effective way (like all the other candidates) to take on Trump as the businessman gathered momentum, and then, just as he was poised to win New Hampshire and possibly develop an unstoppable head of steam, he suffered a debilitating breakdown in a debate.

During an infamous debate moment, Rubio cemented the core concern of many Republicans who wanted to vote for him. Under pressure from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, he went into robot mode, repeating manufactured talking points just as Christie was hammering him for doing exactly that. In late February and early March ahead of the Virginia primary, Rubio hit his second campaign sprint — in which he drew real blood from Trump but also sank to Trump’s level by mocking the size of his genitals — further convincing primary voters that he lacked seasoning, needed more time to mature, was too young, and so on.

And so now, Rubio faces two challenges with the Tillerson confirmation hearing. Anytime he maneuvers into the spotlight, he is accompanied by a chorus of second-guessing about his motives. Is this all just politics and positioning? Rubio seemed to acknowledge this when asked about how he’ll decide to vote: “I’m prepared to do what’s right,” he said.

And then there’s his second challenge: his decision on whether to ultimately vote for or against Tillerson. Does he feel compelled to follow up his tough questioning of Tillerson on Wednesday by showing he meant what he said, and that it wasn’t just a public relations ploy? He risks overreaching or miscalculating if he ends up sinking Tillerson’s nomination simply to prove his strength.


<..snip..>

https://www.yahoo.com/news/marco-rubios-perception-problem-193854038.html

« Last Edit: January 14, 2017, 05:23:49 am by corbe »
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.