Video: Marco Rubio delivers on Democrats’ worst fear of 2010
remember more than three years ago, in early 2009, when my good friend Val Prieto at Babalu Blog began sending me insistent messages that I needed to talk with a state legislator in Florida that wanted to run for the Republican nomination for Senate. It was easy to scoff at that time; Charlie Crist had been rumored to want the nomination, and his 60%+ approval rating as Governor made him look unbeatable. After a few back-and-forth exchanges — Val is not exactly a shrinking violet — we arranged to get Marco Rubio on my afternoon show. He blew me away with his poise, his clear comprehension of conservative principles, and his eloquent manner of weaving his life story around them as a way to bring them to life. There wasn’t a question Rubio couldn’t answer, and there was not an issue on which Rubio had not prepared. I came away from that interview convinced that we had just found perhaps the most naturally gifted leader in the Republican Party of this generation.
Democrats sensed it, too. When Rubio began gaining traction against Crist, they began to panic. If they didn’t stop him in 2010, they surely thought, Rubio would one day stand at a Republican national convention and apply all of his talents on the broadest political stage and begin undermining all they done to convince Hispanic voters that their natural home was the Democratic Party. Rubio, though, was unstoppable — and last night he delivered the address yhat Democrats had feared all along.
Marco Rubio will be President of the United States. The only question is when. Val knew it, and then he let me in on the secret early. Now the rest of the nation knows it, too.
Bonus: Here’s my first interview with Senator Rubio in June 2009, which starts in the second half of the show.
remember more than three years ago, in early 2009, when my good friend Val Prieto at Babalu Blog began sending me insistent messages that I needed to talk with a state legislator in Florida that wanted to run for the Republican nomination for Senate. It was easy to scoff at that time; Charlie Crist had been rumored to want the nomination, and his 60%+ approval rating as Governor made him look unbeatable. After a few back-and-forth exchanges — Val is not exactly a shrinking violet — we arranged to get Marco Rubio on my afternoon show. He blew me away with his poise, his clear comprehension of conservative principles, and his eloquent manner of weaving his life story around them as a way to bring them to life. There wasn’t a question Rubio couldn’t answer, and there was not an issue on which Rubio had not prepared. I came away from that interview convinced that we had just found perhaps the most naturally gifted leader in the Republican Party of this generation.
Democrats sensed it, too. When Rubio began gaining traction against Crist, they began to panic. If they didn’t stop him in 2010, they surely thought, Rubio would one day stand at a Republican national convention and apply all of his talents on the broadest political stage and begin undermining all they done to convince Hispanic voters that their natural home was the Democratic Party. Rubio, though, was unstoppable — and last night he delivered the address yhat Democrats had feared all along.
Originally posted by Marco Rubio Speech
Bonus: Here’s my first interview with Senator Rubio in June 2009, which starts in the second half of the show.
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