In his “About Rubio” post, Steve correctly says that I’m skeptical about Marco Rubio because of his dubious dealings with Democrats on immigration and the egregiously bad “Gang of Eight” bill. I’m also not convinced that Rubio is fully ready to be president, but the same reservation applies to Ted Cruz and Donald Trump (who I don’t think will ever be ready).
In defense of Rubio, Steve states that Rubio knows he screwed up big time on immigration, and isn’t likely to touch that hot stove again if he’s elected president. Steve goes on to argue that Rubio is quite conservative.
Rush Limbaugh says pretty much the same thing. He calls Rubio a “legitimate, full-throated conservative,” not a member of the Republican establishment. He adds that “nobody’s pure, and nobody is ever free of making mistakes.”
I agree with Steve and Rush that Rubio is a completely legitimate conservative. I also agree with Steve that Rubio probably won’t push for amnesty if he’s elected president. And it’s obviously true that anyone can make a mistake.
Why, then, am I so skeptical about Rubio?
For several reasons. First, in my view the Gang of Eight legislation isn’t a garden variety mistake. For me, immigration is a fundamental issue. To have been so wrong about it is a very big deal.
Second, I believe that Chuck Schumer, Dick Durbin, and company played Rubio. It’s one thing to be wrong about policy; everyone is at one time or another. It’s another to become the tool of liberal Democrats.
This, I think, is what happened to Rubio. His support was critical if comprehensive immigration reform was to pick up the bipartisan steam it needed to get through the Senate. What meaningful concessions did Rubio extract from Schumer and company in exchange for his support? What concessions did he even seek?
Ted Cruz, as Rubio likes to point out, offered an amendment to provide amnesty but no path to citizenship. Cruz’s purpose is a matter of dispute, but his amendment did highlight that the Gang of Eight was totally committed to its extreme, uncompromising vision of immigration reform. It was able to get away with this extremism because Schumer and company had Rubio in their pocket.
Third, Rubio has a history of flip-flopping on immigration. It predates the Gang of Eight and his time in Washington, D.C.
Fourth, Rubio’s tactics in pushing for passage of the Gang of Eight legislation were unsavory. He appears to have been involved with, and at a minimum refused to repudiate, demonizing opponents like Mark Krikorian — people he now seems to agree were right all along. I wrote about this here and here.
If Rubio was terribly wrong about one of the most important issues America faces; if he was outmaneuvered by liberal Democrats; and if he was a party to smear tactics against opponents in order to advance bad legislation, then skepticism about his presidential candidacy seems warranted.
ZitatFirst, in my view the Gang of Eight legislation isn’t a garden variety mistake. For me, [ILLEGAL] immigration is a fundamental issue. To have been so wrong about it is a very big deal.
The money quote in the article - except for leaving out the word "ILLEGAL" (surely an oversight)
The Ruling Class; The Party; The Establishment - call it what you will. I'll just call it THEM. The one thing that separates THEM from US is the issue of illegal immigration.
THEY want illegal immigration. Cheap labor for the R branch. Move votes and suckers of the government teat for the D branch. A win-win.
WE don't want illegal immigration. WE know that a country cannot long survive with wide open borders and free government stuff. WE know that the ruling class does not care about any of this, for they will not suffer its ill effects.
Trump has not been in the position to DO anything about illegal immigration, but he has certainly SAID the right things. Thus he has earned the hatred of The Establishment. If elected, would he actually DO anything about illegals? Honestly, we don't know for sure. But his supporters are willing to give him a chance.
Rubio on the other hand SAID the right things about illegal immigration. And enough voters believed him to result in his election to the Senate. What did he do once elected? He did what every other establishment R does - rolled over for the democrats.
It's what Boehner did. It's what McConnell does. It's what Ryan does. It's what every other establishment R does once he or she achieves office. It's "say whatever you have to say to the rubes" to get elected, then stab them in the back once there.
This isn't a case of "everyone makes mistakes". This is (for me, anyway) a deal breaker.
The county is out of time - we no longer have the luxury of tolerating these charlatans.
"If voting made any difference, they wouldn't let us do it" ~Mark Twain
ZitatFirst, in my view the Gang of Eight legislation isn’t a garden variety mistake. For me, [ILLEGAL] immigration is a fundamental issue. To have been so wrong about it is a very big deal.
The money quote in the article - except for leaving out the word "ILLEGAL" (surely an oversight)
The Ruling Class; The Party; The Establishment - call it what you will. I'll just call it THEM. The one thing that separates THEM from US is the issue of illegal immigration.
THEY want illegal immigration. Cheap labor for the R branch. Move votes and suckers of the government teat for the D branch. A win-win.
WE don't want illegal immigration. WE know that a country cannot long survive with wide open borders and free government stuff. WE know that the ruling class does not care about any of this, for they will not suffer its ill effects.
Trump has not been in the position to DO anything about illegal immigration, but he has certainly SAID the right things. Thus he has earned the hatred of The Establishment. If elected, would he actually DO anything about illegals? Honestly, we don't know for sure. But his supporters are willing to give him a chance.
Rubio on the other hand SAID the right things about illegal immigration. And enough voters believed him to result in his election to the Senate. What did he do once elected? He did what every other establishment R does - rolled over for the democrats.
It's what Boehner did. It's what McConnell does. It's what Ryan does. It's what every other establishment R does once he or she achieves office. It's "say whatever you have to say to the rubes" to get elected, then stab them in the back once there.
This isn't a case of "everyone makes mistakes". This is (for me, anyway) a deal breaker.
The county is out of time - we no longer have the luxury of tolerating these charlatans.