Posted on 03/28/2015 3:43:44 PM PDT by Kaslin
Dan has been following the 2016 rumblings being made by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. Hes reportedly frustrated with the Senate, and doesnt plan to run for re-election. Polling shows the young Republican can be a formidable force next year. Hes also been courting Romney and his donor network, whichif successfulcould shift things in his direction.
Now, the Freedom Tower in Miami has been reserved for an event on April 13, which could be where Sen. Rubio makes his 2016 intentions official (via Tampa Bay Times):
A Rubio adviser stressed nothing has been nailed down for any kind of announcement, but the timing makes sense: Likely presidential candidate Rand Paul is expected to make things official April 7, to be followed by a five-day, five-state announcement tour, so Rubio presumably would not want to share the spotlight during that period.
All-but-announced candidate Jeb Bush appears to be in no rush to shift more formally into campaign mode, but Texas Sen. Ted Cruz made his announcement this week and Democrat Hillary Clinton is expected to make her campaign announcement in April as well, though nothing has been set.
Rubio, 43, has been preparing for a potential presidential run for at least a year. While behind in most early polls, he has generated considerable buzz as a top-tier contender who offers the party a fresh face, foreign policy experience, charisma and substance.
The Freedom Tower, a Mediterranean Revival landmark beside Biscayne Bay, is apparently one of several venues under consideration by Rubio, but it could be an ideal postcard setting to kick off a presidential campaign promoting the promise and greatness of America by the son of Cuban immigrants.
The building is reserved for 5:30 p.m. that Monday, which also happens to be Thomas Jefferson's birthday.
Over at FiveThirtyEight, Nate Silver wrote that Sen. Rubio has a path to the nomination, noting that his numbers in Iowa arent bad, and that his relative anonymity with the general electorate allows him to shape his image. He also has some of the best approval ratings in the 2016 field, which overall, arent good. At the same time, Gov. Scott Walker has many of the same qualities as Rubio:
Theres still plenty of room for Marco Rubio. Two years ago, I described the Florida senator as the electable conservative. While Rubio has taken fewer tangible steps toward officially running for president than rivals like Jeb Bush and Scott Walker, he still does reasonably well by that rubric. Perhaps along with Walker, he can make the most credible case for meeting William F. Buckleys standard as the most viable conservative candidate.
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Hes quite conservative, but not ultraconservative — instead hes close to the median of Republicans who have been elected to Congress in recent elections.
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Another way is to talk to Republican voters directly — or at least to poll them, as The Des Moines Register and Bloomberg Politics recently did in Iowa. That poll asked potential Republican caucusgoers whether they saw each of their candidates as too conservative, too moderate or just right. Ive re-created that data below, removing voters who said they werent sure about the candidate from the sample.
These numbers look really good for Walker. Among voters with an opinion about him, 85 percent rated his ideological views as just right, the highest in the Republican field. But Rubio isnt far behind; 74 percent of voters described him the same way, placing him in a tie for third place with Perry.
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Rubio and Walker, being lesser known, have more chance to shape their image. And they can make some electability arguments of their own. In Rubios case, its about being a Hispanic candidate from a swing state with a good life story; in Walkers, its about having been elected in a blue-leaning swing state three times in four years.
They also have vulnerabilities. Walker so far has not gotten a great reception from the mainstream media, which is fond of playing up the crazy tea partyer characterization of him. Pushing back against alleged or actual media bias is a part of the Republican playbook, but it requires some dexterity; it worked well for George W. Bush but not so well for Sarah Palin in the end, for instance. Rubio, for his part, has not shown a lot of political dexterity either, having lost more than he gained when he advocated for immigration reform.
Silver ends his analysis by saying that Republican primary voters could push Bush to the side easily in the primaries, leaving Rubio and Walker fighting for the nomination.
We shall see what happens. Then again, Rubio and Cruz running in 2016 undercuts the narrative weve been disseminating about Obama, which centered on him being a one-term senator with no experience before he ran and won in the 2008 election.
Regardless, with Cruz and the probable Rubio and Paul presidential announcements coming shortly next month, the Tea Party GOP is the point of the lance for the GOP in 2016for now.
Cruz to Victory. Enough with the pretenders, the lightweights...the flip floppers...Rubio is as underwhelming as they come.
Rubio supports RomneyCARE/ObamaCARE.
Nuff said.
Marco should spend his time and other people’s money to keep his Senate seat. He burned his bridges with conservatives when he Ganged up with Schumer to scheme against the American people.
Yawn.
Give me Cruz or I stay home on election night.
Perhaps he can tout his bipartisan amnesty and no borders bill that he put together with sleazy Chucky Schumer.
Schumer: "You are our chief RINO, Rubio.
The DNC will back you in every primary."
Rubamnesty is DOA.
Rubio is too far left for me. Cruz or death.
I’m Cruzing......Mr. Rubio!
Hope he runs.
Says he will not run senate and pres. at same time.
Disappear for a long time.
Flake, Chucky, Marco and Johnny seem to think selling out the citizens is real funny......
That’s an outcome I can live with.
Well, get ready for Charles Krauthammer to start promoting Rubio. He has been his pick from the start.
If anyone but Jeb gets the nomination, I could see Rubio getting the VP slot. We really need Florida.
Thank you for reminding me. I had forgotten the name of that senator who is appropriately located on the far left — Jeff Flake.
Don’t bother Rube.
No Thank You. I rather Cruz on to the White House with the real deal....TED CRUZ!!!
Since he can’t run for POTUS and his Senate seat at same time...His political career may be over if he does not get POTUS...so as a resident of Florida, he made a good senator, I don’t want him to be POTUS...but we now need someone to take his place...I am thinking our State Attorney General Pam Bondi...shes not a conservative she’s kinda a Romney moderate another possible would be perhaps Dr Carson...he moved to Florida after his retirement. He’s well known, far more conserative that Bondi. We shall see... I just hope Charlie Crist does not change his mind and run then we would end up with two Democrats which would not be good at all.
Freegards
LEX
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