New York Times (Opinion)
By David Brooks
April 21, 2015
Political
audiences always like patriotic rhetoric, but as several reporters have
noticed, this year’s Republican audiences have a special hunger for it.
The phrase “American
exceptionalism” has become a rallying cry. There is a common feeling on
the right that the American idea is losing force and focus, that the
American dream is slipping out of reach, that America is stepping back
from its traditional role in the world and that
President Obama doesn’t forthrightly champion the American gospel.
Even more than normal, Republicans seem to want their candidate for president to be drenched in the red, white and blue.
Along
comes Senator Marco Rubio of Florida. Rubio, 43, doesn’t just speak in
the ardent patriotic tones common to the children of immigrants like
himself. His very life
is the embodiment of the American dream: parents who tended bar and
worked at Kmart with a son who rose to become a United States senator.
His heritage demonstrates that the American dream is open to all who
come here legally and work hard. He is what many
Republicans want their country to be.
So
there is beginning to be a certain charisma to his presidential
campaign. It is not necessarily showing up in outright support. The
first-term senator still shows up
only with 8.3 percent support on the Real Clear Politics average of
2016 Republican presidential nomination polls, leaving him tied for 5th
in the field. But primary voters are open to him; the upside is large.
As
Harry Enten of FiveThirtyEight pointed out, Rubio’s net
favorable/unfavorable rating is higher than every other candidate except
Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin. Philosophically,
he is at the center of the party. In an NBC News/Wall Street Journal
poll, 56 percent of Republican primary voters said they could see
themselves supporting him even if he wasn’t their first choice at the
time, which put him above every other candidate.
So it’s probably right to see Rubio as the second most likely nominee, slightly behind Jeb Bush and slightly ahead of Walker.
He
is, for starters, the most talented politician in the race. Set aside
who has the most money and who has the best infrastructure. (Overrated
assets at this stage in
the race.) Set aside the ideological buckets we pundits like to divide
the candidates into. (Voters are not that attuned to factional
distinctions.) In most primary battles, the crown goes to the most
talented plausible candidate.
Rubio
gives a very good speech. He has an upbeat and pleasant demeanor. He
has a great personal story. His policy agenda is more detailed and
creative than any of his
rivals. He has an overarching argument — that it is time for a new
generation to reform and replace archaic structures.
The
circumstances of the race might benefit him. With such a big field,
nobody is going to lock up the race early. Republicans will likely be
beating each other up for
months while looking across the aisle and seeing Hillary Clinton
coasting along. At some point, they are going to want to settle on a
consensus choice.
That
point may come around March 15, when Florida holds its winner-take-all
primary. Rubio was virtually tied with Bush among Florida Republicans,
31 percent to 30 percent,
according to a Mason-Dixon poll conducted last week. If Bush is
bloodied in the earlier primaries, Rubio could win Florida and loom as a
giant.
Rubio’s
inexperience concerns everybody. But at least he was speaker of the
Florida House. As Jim Geraghty of National Review has detailed, his
record running that body
was pretty good. He was a tough but reasonably successful negotiator.
On his first day in office, he handed each legislator a book with the
cover “100 Innovative Ideas for Florida’s Future.” The pages were blank.
He was inviting his members to fill them in
— a nice collaborative touch.
Can
Rubio win a general election? Well, he believes more in expanding the
party than in just mobilizing the base. In his past races, he’s done
better than generic Republican
candidates because of his success with Hispanics. Youth is America’s
oldest tradition. Who’s to say that voters won’t side for the relative
outsider over the know-what-you’re-getting Hillary Clinton?
One
big test for Rubio is this: Are Americans disillusioned with government
or just disgusted? If they are disillusioned, they would likely want to
play it safe and go
with the experienced, low-risk candidates, Bush and Clinton. If they
are disgusted, then they would be more likely to take a flier on change.
The New American could be the guy.
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