Posted on 05/10/2015 10:59:13 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Greenville, S.C. Senator Marco Rubios presidential-campaign strategy assumes that he can overcome financial disadvantages by converting voters who see him in person. At the South Carolina Freedom Summit on Saturday, that didnt happen. Rubios was one of the speeches that was not the best. His was not the worst, either, but, just kind of meh compared to anybody else, says Hannah Hill, a tea-party activist from nearby Anderson County.
Hes good by himself, Cheryl Cuthrell, a Greenville County Republican activist who supports Senator Ted Cruz, says of Rubio. But when you put him up to someone who just goes right back to the Constitution . . . I just dont think Marco is going to be strong enough to knock him out.
Those are uncharacteristically tame reviews of Rubios oratory. Hes one of these [candidates] who can bring grown men to tears very quickly, Senator Mike Lee (R., Utah), the original tea-party hero, recently said.
Saturdays Freedom Summit had the makings of an important early bout in the Republican presidential primary campaign. Governor Scott Walker (R., Wis.) used the Iowa Freedom Summit in January as a springboard to the top tier of GOP hopefuls, but Rubio who is regarded as analogous to Walker insofar as both men appeal to both establishment and activist Republicans turned in a brief, low-key performance here, leaving Walker and Cruz to delight the activists.
Cruz and Walker are head and shoulders above everybody else, says John Steward, a North Carolina GOP district chairman who attended the event. The audience made that clear from the outset. When Citizens United president David Bossie mentioned that the next speaker hailed from the state of Wisconsin, the audience at the Summit got the hint and started to cheer. When Bossie mentioned Texas during an introduction later in the day, the whistles started up again and continued when Cruz shook hands with attendees in the front row as his introductory music played.
Rubio received a warm welcome but none of the same anticipatory applause. His cheers came later, when he told the military-heavy crowd how he planned to approach the fight against ISIS and other jihadists.
Have you seen the movie Taken, with Liam Neeson? Rubio asked, referring to the movie about a retired CIA agent whose daughter was kidnapped in France. He has a line, and this is what our strategy should be: We will look for you, we will find you, and we will kill you.
There was an early warning sign that Rubio might struggle to outshine his counterparts. When Bossie kicked off the event by introducing Heritage Foundation president Jim DeMint, he reminded the crowd of the former senators role in defeating immigration-reform legislation introduced by thenmajority leader Harry Reid in 2007.
On the other hand, Representative Mick Mulvaney (R., S.C.), intentionally or not, may have prepared the audience to embrace Rubio when he offered his own suggestion for how they should select a presidential nominee. Mulvaney noted that young people and Hispanics constitute the largest and fastest-growing voting blocs in the country, respectively. Look around you in this room. Convincing you is not the issue, he said, to murmurs of assent, including more than one Amen. Who can convince somebody else?
Even so, Rubios work on the Senates Gang of Eight immigration bill remains a problem for conservative activists, despite his assurances that hes learned they were right to oppose the legislation. You can forgive people for making one or two mistakes in politics, but when they make a mistake in the big things that you send them up there to put a stop to begin with, people dont tend to forget that, says Hill.
They dont forget it when you vote for TARP, they dont forget it when you vote for the bailouts, and they dont forget it when you vote for amnesty.
If any candidate has a political team that could restore him to the affections of South Carolina voters, its Rubio, who has some of the most experienced GOP operatives in the state on his team. J. Warren Tompkins, who was the chief strategist behind George W. Bushs South Carolina primary win in 2000, is running a super PAC backing Rubio. Terry Sullivan, a former business partner to Tompkins, is running the campaign. Another Bush 2000 veteran from the state, Heath Thompson, is advising Rubio. They are smart and have lots of SC experience, a rival South Carolina consultant concedes. They didnt approach this speech as a flag-planting event, though.
An aide to Rubio told reporters before the event that he would focus chiefly on introducing himself to voters in his first trip to the state as a presidential candidate. Ill be here a lot to ask for your vote, Rubio promised. To win, hell need subsequent conversations to go better than this one.
Marco’s personal story is inspiring and motivational and I’ve already heard about six or eight times. Turned his speech off yesterday when he began his story once again. Not sure what the political shelf life of such personal stories is.
And there are more substantive reasons he’s not inspiring many conservatives.
Maybe they want him to play Robin to Jeb’s Batman. Or vice versa.
Rubio is the backup to Bush if he flames out entirely.
I still say Jebster is this cycle’s designated loser.
The RNC will get their amnesty candidate.
they couldn’t understand him with his foot in his mouth
"Gee, Marco. I didn't mean to damage your rep. (...ya, right...)"
It is early. It is the time for meh speeches. Testing what works and what does not. Meh is valuable to find in live audience so silent TV audience meh can be avoided.
Early for the rest but it was too late for Rubio once he schemed with Schumer against the citizens and then lied about it.
I happened to catch Jindal’s presentation when I was channel surfing. I had not really listened to him since the time he had the rebuttal to SOTU.
In his recent appearance, he was impressive. He, like Walker and Cruz, was able to ‘talk’ to the audience without referring to notes or reading from a teleprompter.
I am now more open to hearing his positions on various issues.
A Cruz/Jindal ticket might be the thing.
Many are not buying his sudden conversion away from amnesty. His I-saw-the-light is only for political purposes.
Per some threads, he still supports amnesty — when he is speaking to Hispanic audiences and concerns.
That duplicity is not winning others over to his camp.
Who has the worse comb-over at this point—Trump or Rubio?
Cruz/Walker
Getting a whale of a ride using Cruz control.
Rubio has a slight comb over, trump has a hay stack on a head.
I met Trump 20 years ago and his soul hair style has stayed with him for all these years.
I'm convinced that he wears it like that for spite because he can afford to fix it.
Yeah, but at least Trump’s biggest selling point isn’t his youth and representing the generation of the future.
“A Cruz/Jindal ticket might be the thing.”
I have to agree that is too “southern” a ticket. Now, I think a Cruz/Fiorina ticket might be worth a look.
Why? If a VP nominee can’t bring his/her home state to the table, he/she is worthless. No ticket wins the presidency without the VP bringing their home state. Fiorina can’t win CA.
For VP, people who can bring an in-play state to the table include:
Walker (good choice)
Rubio (fair choice)
Martinez (meh)
Kasich (barf)
Christie has won state-wide in Jersey, but anyone who thinks he can bring NJ to the table in a presidential election is smoking something.
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