Powered By Blogger

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Marco Rubio, maybe see you in four years

Four years ago, at the Republican convention in Tampa, a young senator from Florida took the stage.
Marco Rubio won his Senate seat after initially going up against the state's sitting Governor Charlie Crist in the Republican primary.
At one point, he was 20 points behind, but harnessing the support of the right wing Tea Party, he forced Crist out of the race.
There were huge expectations on the son of Cuban immigrants. If there was a next generation of conservative politicians, Rubio was close to the front of the line.
And he delivered.
His 2012 convention speech was widely cheered in the Tampa hall. People spoke enthusiastically of his performance, and at the time, I wrote that the only thing that seemed to be missing was the phrase, "I'm Marco Rubio and I'm running for president".
Flash forward three years and that announcement came.
Rubio jumped into a crowded race, believing his youth, his background and his charisma would be enough, even though he was what Republicans had spent eight years accusing Obama of being: a one-term senator with little experience.
Still, he was Hispanic, a group the Republicans knew they had to reach after their defeat in 2012, and he was conservative enough to appeal to the base of the party. And he was articulate.
But for all of his strengths, there were two moments which damned his presidential campaign.
The first came after a respectable finish in the first nominating contest in Iowa, where he finished third, exceeding expectations and gathering vital momentum. He, and many analysts, painted that result as a "win".
And he moved on to New Hampshire.
But there on the debate stage, in just 90 seconds, he unravelled.
He was attacked by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie who accused him of repeating himself - of using the same consultant-approved, focus-tested sound bites. And Rubio responded by repeating himself. He looked and sounded like a robot.
He went from a potential second place finish in New Hampshire to fifth. He told his supporters the loss was down to him and it would never happen again. And to be fair, on the debate stage it didn't.
But his campaign took the strategic decision that if it was going to win, it had to go after Trump.
And the political adage is: If you go to kill the king, you better succeed. He went on the attack and he got personal. He criticised the way Trump looked, suggesting his "little hands" meant other parts of his anatomy were small.
But there on the debate stage, in just 90 seconds, he unravelled.
He was attacked by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie who accused him of repeating himself - of using the same consultant-approved, focus-tested sound bites. And Rubio responded by repeating himself. He looked and sounded like a robot.
He went from a potential second place finish in New Hampshire to fifth. He told his supporters the loss was down to him and it would never happen again. And to be fair, on the debate stage it didn't.
But his campaign took the strategic decision that if it was going to win, it had to go after Trump.
And the political adage is: If you go to kill the king, you better succeed. He went on the attack and he got personal. He criticised the way Trump looked, suggesting his "little hands" meant other parts of his anatomy were small.

No comments:

Post a Comment