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Is Rubio the one?


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Unlike last month’s contentious GOP debate on CNBC, the event staged by the Fox Business Network and The Wall Street Journal was thankfully less about the moderators and more about the candidates. It was about content, not about which moderator could ask the best “gotcha” question.

Republican voters are now moving beyond the “who won” stage in these debates into the “who would you be most comfortable with as president” and “who is best equipped to defeat Hillary Clinton?” The answer to both questions for Republicans seems to be Sen. Marco Rubio.

The Florida Republican reminds me of John F. Kennedy’s line in his 1961 inaugural address: “The torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans.” JFK was 43 when he became president. Rubio would be 46.

As the cyber columnist Rich Galen wrote on his Mullings blog: “[Rubio] was either the smoothest politician on the stage, the best rehearsed, or both. He is comfortable on foreign policy, economic policy and fiscal policy. Best answer was on ISIS in a back and forth with Rand Paul. ‘Either they win or we win,’ Rubio said. ‘We better take this risk seriously; it is not going away on its own.’”

There was another answer that was Kennedy-esque. It came in response to a question by moderator Maria Bartiromo. She said that Hillary Clinton has more experience than almost all of the Republicans running for president, as if a résumé equals accomplishments, of which Clinton has few to none. Bartiromo phrased her question this way: “Why should the American people trust you to lead this country even though she has been so much closer to the office?”

Rubio treated the question like a home run slugger seeing a fastball out over the plate.

First the vision: “This election is about the future and what kind of country this will be in the 21st century.” He called it a “generational choice,” contrasting Clinton’s age (she would be 69 on Inauguration Day 2017) with his own energetic youth.

Next came the diagnosis of where he thinks we are: “A growing number of Americans feel out of place in their own country. We have a society that stigmatizes those who hold cultural values that are traditional.” He lamented the number of people who live “paycheck to paycheck,” because “the economy has changed under their feet.” Students with crushing student loans, he said, are graduating from college with “a degree that doesn’t lead to a job.” He added, “For the first time in 35 years we have more businesses dying than starting.”

Rubio then flashed a dagger he will clearly use against Clinton and her “experience” when he said, “Around the world every day brings news of a new humiliation for America, many the direct consequence of decisions made when Hillary Clinton was secretary of state.”

Rubio then indicted not only Clinton, but her party: “The Democratic Party and the entire political left has no ideas about the future. All their ideas are the same tired ideas of the past: more government, more spending. … If I am the nominee, they will be the party of the past; we will be the party of the 21st century.”

In an opinion piece for CNN.com, former White House communications adviser Dan Pfeiffer wrote, “There is no question that Rubio is the Republican that Democrats fear most.”

After Rubio’s four debate performances, and especially the one Tuesday night, they should.

© 2015 Tribune Content Agency LLC.

Listen to Cal Thomas’ commentary on The World and Everything in It.


Cal Thomas

Cal contributes weekly commentary to WORLD Radio. Over the last five decades, he worked for NBC News, FOX News, and USA Today and began his syndicated news column in 1984. Cal is the author of 10 books, including What Works: Commonsense Solutions to the Nation's Problems.

@CalThomas

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