Los Angeles Times
By Lisa Mascaro
April 13, 2015
Three years ago, Sen. Marco Rubio was heralded as the Republican Party’s future.
After
the GOP’s stinging 2012 presidential loss, strategists prescribed the
charismatic, young tea party favorite as the antidote to a fractured
party — someone who could
even expand the base by attracting Latino voters.
He
so dazzled the 2012 Republican National Convention when he introduced
Mitt Romney that some called the conservative a transformational
candidate not seen by Republicans
since Ronald Reagan.
But
despite the cheers that greeted the 43-year-old Florida senator as he
announced his presidential bid Monday, the early buzz has faded. And
after a political misstep
over immigration reform, Rubio finds himself just another name in an
increasingly crowded field of 2016 presidential rivals who have chipped
away at what were once his strongest assets.
Former
Gov. Jeb Bush, with his unmatched fundraising juggernaut, knocked off
Rubio as the GOP establishment favorite. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas is
stealing the hearts of
evangelicals and tea party activists. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is
the new fresh face.
Now
seen at best as a sleeper candidate, Rubio needs to reignite the
excitement that once led the party to view him as a front-runner.
On
Monday he tried to do exactly that. In front of nearly 1,000
supporters, he evoked his youth and his parents’ immigration from Cuba,
displaying the skills that make
him one of the party's more gifted communicators.
“Now,
the time has come for our generation to lead the way toward a new
American century,” he told the crowd at Freedom Tower in downtown Miami,
known as the Ellis Island
of the South for welcoming Cuban exiles.
Though
some have questioned whether Rubio, a freshman senator with a young
appearance and a thin legislative record, has the experience or
commanding presence Americans
expect of their president, Rubio presented his age as a benefit,
drawing a contrast with older rivals like Bush, 62, and the Democratic
front-runner, Hillary Rodham Clinton, 67.
“Just
yesterday, a leader from yesterday began a campaign for president by
promising to take us back to yesterday,” he said, referring to Clinton’s
campaign kickoff Sunday.
“While
our people and economy are pushing the boundaries of the 21st century,
too many of our leaders and their ideas are stuck in the 20th century,”
he said, adding that
America won’t succeed by “going back to the leaders and ideas of the
past. We must change the decisions we are making by changing the people
who are making them.”
Rubio’s backers are confident he can repeat the kind of come-from-behind victory that propelled him to the Senate in 2010.
“He’s
proven time and time again he’s the comeback kid,” said Nick Iarossi, a
Florida lobbyist for casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, a top-ranking
Republican donor. “Anyone
who would underestimate him does so at their peril.”
But
Rubio — No. 2 in a 2012 national presidential survey of Republican
voters — has languished in fifth or sixth place behind Bush, Walker and
others in recent polling.
Rubio
stumbled badly in 2013 by first proposing, and then abandoning, a
sweeping immigration reform plan, which alienated its advocates.
Many
conservatives haven’t forgiven Rubio for joining Senate Democrats in
passing the now-dead bipartisan plan that would have created a path to
citizenship for those
in the country illegally. Critics blasted it as “amnesty.”
“It’s
a wart on an overall positive story,” said Michael Needham, chief
executive of the conservative Heritage Action for America, the political
arm of the influential
Heritage Foundation think tank.
Rubio
has tried to move on from the issue, saying he miscalculated Americans’
desire to first tackle border security, which is of huge importance to
his party’s most loyal
voters. But as he becomes the third official Republican candidate for
2016, the issue is certain to follow the man who dreams of being the
first major party Latino presidential nominee.
At
Monday's event, he gave only passing mention to the need to “modernize”
immigration laws, calling for a more robust military, tax reform,
reduced government spending
and the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. At one point, he spoke in
Spanish, offering an inspirational quote from his late father.
Rubio
has amassed a strong campaign team, many coming from Mitt Romney’s 2012
presidential bid. To bolster his policy credentials, the freshman
senator recently rolled
out a series of position papers and a new book, “American Dreams,” in
which he takes his own party to task for what he said was outmoded
policy thinking.
“He’s
the only Republican candidate that is acceptable to all branches of the
Republican Party — the establishment groups, the tea party groups, the
libertarian groups,”
said billionaire auto dealer Norman Braman, who has pledged substantial
backing for the campaign.
Rubio’s
only-in-America story is expected to weigh heavily in the campaign. “In
many countries, the highest office in the land is reserved for the rich
and powerful,”
Rubio said Monday. “But I live in an exceptional country where even the
son of a bartender and a maid can have the same dreams and the same
future as those who come from power and privilege.”
Rubio
has credited his strongly conservative views to childhood talks with
his anti-communist Cuban grandfather. He sided with defense hawks last
month in seeking to boost
Pentagon spending, parting ways with two 2016 candidates, Cruz and Sen.
Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who voted against the budget.
In
recent months, Rubio’s GOP rivals have shored up their pathways to the
nomination, luring away constituencies that Rubio would need to win. The
presumed entry of Bush
makes it particularly difficult for Rubio to even capture his own state
of Florida, where Bush’s ties are deep.
And
his moves on immigration have dimmed his appeal to Latino voters — one
of the main reasons that party leaders once found him so attractive.
In
2013, when Rubio pushed his immigration plan, 54% of Latino voters were
likely to consider him for president, according to the polling firm
Latino Decisions. But when
told that Rubio had switched course on the immigration effort, 65% said
they weren’t likely to give him a look.
Since then, Rubio has attacked President Obama’s executive actions deferring deportations — which have cost him more support.
“He’s
going to have a very hard time getting back to his high mark,” said
Matt Barreto, a UCLA political science professor and co-founder of
Latino Decisions.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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