Will Rubio run? (user search)
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  Will Rubio run? (search mode)
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Poll
Question: Will Marco Rubio run in 2016?
#1
Yes
 
#2
No
 
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Partisan results

Total Voters: 58

Author Topic: Will Rubio run?  (Read 2421 times)
Blair
Blair2015
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« on: February 28, 2015, 03:43:18 AM »

Can't see the spot for him, all the other candidates have their own selling points e.g Cruz Government shutdown, Paul non-interventionist, Walker anti-unions. Rubio is the guy everyone liked in 2010, but then he flipped flopped on immigration reform because he's spineless. His foreign policy credentials are weak. He's just a comprise candidate I suppose 
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Blair
Blair2015
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« Reply #1 on: February 28, 2015, 04:42:49 AM »

I'd love to see him run for POTUS in 2016, lose the GE and then try a Nixon in 2018 only to lose again
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Blair
Blair2015
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« Reply #2 on: March 01, 2015, 03:03:24 AM »

I haven't read Double Down yet, is there any reason that Romney skipped him for VP in 2012?
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Blair
Blair2015
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« Reply #3 on: March 02, 2015, 10:47:12 AM »

Poll is 52.4% no. That's kind of how I feel.

Florida's open gubernatorial election in 2018 gives him a comeback, and the Senate race would be competitive anyway. However, his odds of being on a winning national ticket are probably fifty percent lower, and he loses his bully pulpit as a Senator, when he became a member of the majority party very recently.

He might be well positioned in the Republican primary. Walker could be knocked on intellect, and Bush represents the past, so there is a sweet spot for a young guy with foreign policy chops. But I doubt his odds of winning the nomination would be higher than 20 percent. With a credible run, he might also be an ideal running mate for several other potential presidential nominees, but there are others who are unlikely to pick him. Rand Paul probably won't go for a hawkish southern Senator. Jeb's unlikely to pick someone from Florida.

My hunch is he'll opt for another term. But he could also decide he has no problem gambling at national office, with lucrative corporate positions as a fallback.

That's because he is constitutionally barred from doing so.

I think he'll run, but he'll be in the upper bracket of the second tier of candidates.

Not really, Cheney and Bush got round it by changing Cheney to Wyoming from Texas.
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