Posted on 04/15/2015 8:03:22 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Marco Rubio announced his candidacy for president yesterday. He may be half of the makings of the 2016 GOP dream ticket.
The Republicans have two big problems to solve if they hope to win the White House next time around. No, I am not talking about cracking the Latin American ancestry vote. It would be good for the party to do that, though probably more essential in the long run than right away. And there are questions about whether putting a Cuban-American on the ticket does that anyway.
Cubans are already among the countrys highest turnout populations (67.2% in 2012, according to Pew Research Center) and are a strongly GOP group. All the talk about the GOP needing to win Hispanics has missed that the so-called Latino vote is actually a collection of national groups. The two biggest blocks are Mexicans and Central Americans. These voters have similar concerns and cast their ballots in similar ways, that is, heavily Democrat. They see Cuban-Americans as entirely different from themselves and Cuban-Americans agree. So while Rubios parentage may help the GOP cut into that the Hispanic vote, dont count on a huge movement to the party from those quarters just because he is on the ticket.
No, the real Rubio effect (if there is one) will be for reasons that are completely different. Rubio helps fix problems rooted in geography and what you might call mood.
For the geography question, think back on election night 2012. Remember how Karl Rove on the Fox Election Night desk could not believe that Ohio had gone for the president. Remember the camera following him down the Fox corridor to the statisticians office to challenge the call. So long as the party is shut out of California and New York, it must crack two regions. The Midwest is one. Thats why Rove was so shocked. With the rest of the Midwest (except Indiana) lost, Ohio was half of the game. The other half was Florida. With Rubio on the ticket, it is hard to imagine the GOP losing Florida.
The mood question is something else. I use the term as an alternative to what people mean when they say ideology. I do not believe that the divisions in the party have much to do with ideology.
If you press them, almost all Republican are for a significantly smaller Federal government presence in the economy and daily life, a stronger national defense (Rand Pauls move to the center on security matters reflects his recognition of this), and greater fidelity to the original intent of the Constitution. But the reform wing of the party is intensely impatient to turn the government in that direction; the so-called establishment is more focused on the obstacles that must be overcome.
This is not a new division for the GOP. From Lincolns election in 1860 to Reagans in 1980, the party has had to cope with recurring divisions between reform and old guard factions. And when split that way, the winning tickets have been composed of one candidate from the reform wing who was acceptable to the establishment and another closer to the establishment wing who was acceptable to the reformers. This is why I say that Rubio could be half the making of a dream ticket.
In Rubio and Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, the party now has a pair of candidate(s) who together (bring) both Florida and the Great Lakes states. Both come from the partys reform wing but establishment leaders like and respect both. And to add to that both have family histories that speak of universally shared American aspirations in Rubio the immigrant family that made their way up; in Walker the hard working parents of modest means (father a Baptist preacher; mother a bookkeeper) whose son did the same.
Could any pair provide a starker or more appealing contrast to Hillary Clinton than would they?
Clark S. Judge: managing director, White House Writers Group, Inc.; chairman, Pacific Research Institute
I see there are other Rubio threads around, so thought this was "safe" to post w/o being accused of stepping on Ted Cruz's thunder.
fwiw - Other Clark S. Judge articles
Cruz and Walker
Conservatives will reject any pro-amnesty candidate. And that description fits Rubio.
Cruz or lose.
/johnny
Rubio and Paul both voted to allow Corker’s Traitorous Treaty Trick to go for a full Senate vote.
They have essentially given the go ahead for Iran to have nukes in ten years.
No way. No how. No Rubio.
.
Rubio smells like week-old fish.
No Illegal immigrant amnesty cave-in can be acceptable.
F___ Rubio and all the traitors that love him.
.
Rubio calls himself a conservative; as such he is inclined towards treason.
So Walker makes me nervous, Jeb makes me sick, and Christie might be the most obnoxious person on earth.
What's my point? Rubio is better than hillary, so I can't discount voting for him.
Certainly not my dream ticket.
Let me save Rubio the time. You’re done.
You’ve been tainted by the establishment.
We remember.
>> "They have essentially given the go ahead for Iran to have nukes in ten years 18 months." <<
.
Cruz and Walker
Cruz and Bachmann
Cruz and Palin
?
I see there are other Rubio threads around, so thought this was “safe” to post w/o being accused of stepping on Ted Cruz’s thunder.
...well it’s always amusing to hear from romneybot gopE albino rino Hugh as he pushes the “anyone but a real conservative” candidate. Will he write another book on why we should support his gopE environmental practice and another big gov candidate...the gravy train rolls on.
ymmv
Don't be so "nervous."
: )
BUMP
I was hoping to get some comments on electoral college concerns.
Also, it would be good to discuss the primary election calendar and cross-over voting by Dems.
I know that some FReepers are very good with this analysis.
So what are the strengths of each of the announced/possible candidates for POTUS? I went through the list of Cabinet Secretaries and put the candidate I thought best suited for that position, using a candidates name only once. No one looked remotely good for Defense and worries me if one of them becomes C in C. Here it is:
Department of State: Marco Rubio
Department of the Treasury: John Kasich
Department of Defense:
Department of Justice: Ted Cruz
Department of the Interior: Rand Paul
Department of Agriculture: Rick Perry
Department of Commerce: Carly Fiorina
Department of Labor: Scott Walker
Department of Health and Human Services: Bobby Jindal
Department of Housing and Urban Development: Donald Trump
Department of Transportation: George Pataki
Department of Energy: Bob Ehrlich
Department of Education: Mike Huckabee
Department of Veterans Affairs: Ben Carson
Department of Homeland Security: Peter King
Chaplain: Rick Santorum
Cruz is my first choice among the likely candidates. Walker is probably acceptable, although I don't entirely trust him on Amnesty. As for Rubio, I trust him 100% to stab Americans in the back on Amnesty, just like Jeb Bush, and I will not vote for him under any circumstances. If it's Rubio v. Hillary in 2016, America is dead and it's time to look elsewhere for my future plans. There are others I'd consider besides Cruz, but those who are pro-Amnesty don't make the list.
Cruz and Walker
Too many departments!
: )
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.