Friday, August 31, 2012

Rubio revs up Republicans, Romney

Speaking occasionally in Spanish, Sen. Marco Rubio branded himself as a national Hispanic leader in the Republican Party, played up the best of Romney’s biography and kept the focus on President Barack Obama.

        
Rubio: Obama is a 'bad president'
Marco Rubio introduced the leader of his party to the nation Thursday night, but judging by the roar of the crowd, some initially wished it was the other way around at the Republican National Convention.
The freshman Florida senator had just 15 minutes as the warm-up act for Mitt Romney, and Rubio made the most of them.
Speaking occasionally in Spanish, Rubio’s address served three purposes: It branded him as a national Hispanic leader in the Republican Party. It played up the best parts of Romney’s biography. And it kept the focus on President Barack Obama.
 

TAMPA, FL - AUGUST 30:  U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (FL) speaks during the final day of the Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on August 30, 2012 in Tampa, Florida. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was nominated as the Republican presidential candidate during the RNC which will conclude today.  (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
 
“Our problem with President Obama isn’t that he’s a bad person,” Rubio said. “By all accounts, he, too, is a good husband, and a good father … and thanks to lots of practice, a pretty good golfer.”
The crowd laughed.
The killshot followed the punch line.
“Our problem is that he’s a bad president,” Rubio said.
The crowd roared.
Short on policy specifics, Rubio’s speech was long on biography, rhetorical flourishes, references to God and paeans to the dreams of America that helped put the convention crowd in a swoon. A few grew misty-eyed, especially Cuban Americans moved by his opening line to remember the tyranny in Cuba.
Some murmured that Rubio or Romney’s running mate, Congressman Paul Ryan, should headline the ticket — a refrain heard frequently in Republican circles during the primary.
But Romney’s speech — crisp, clear and sometimes emotional — put an end to that talk at the Tampa Bay Times Forum.
Rubio’s speech made clear that he’s unequivocally behind Romney, who almost chose him as a running mate. The address came at the close of three days of re-branding by a Republican Party and a presidential ticket that has taken a beating from Democrats over Romney’s likability.
Rubio’s mere presence in primetime was a rebuttal to Democratic charges that the GOP’s policies — chiefly over immigration — are bad for Hispanics, who overwhelmingly back Obama, polls show.
Rubio never mentioned immigration.
Instead, he spoke of the immigrant experience, of how he’d sit and listen to his Cuban grandfather puffing on Padron cigars and holding forth on history, politics and baseball.
“I don’t recall everything we talked about, but the one thing I remember, is the one thing he wanted me to never forget. The dreams he had when he was young became impossible to achieve,” Rubio said.
Rubio said his father, a bartender, worked 16-hour days and that his mother, a maid and K-Mart stock clerk, often worked overnight shifts.
“My Dad used to tell us: ‘ En este pais, ustedes van a poder lograr todas las cosas que nosotros no pudimos,’ ‘In this country, you will be able to accomplish all the things we never could,’ ” Rubio said.
Rubio compared his family’s struggles with those of Romney’s family, which had briefly fled to Mexico.
“His family came to America to escape revolution. They struggled through poverty and the Great Depression. And yet he rose to be an admired businessman, and public servant,” Rubio said.
“And in November, his son, Mitt Romney, will be elected President of the United States,” Rubio said.
The attempt to re-fashion Romney as the heir to immigrants and the scion of a family with once-humble roots comes after months of withering assaults from Democrats on Romney’s business background. At issue: Bain Capital, a private-equity firm run by Romney that sometimes shuttered factories and laid off workers. But Bain also helped turn companies around.Earlier in the evening, a founder of Staples office company roused the crowd as he credited Romney with boosting his business and creating jobs. Another business man, who founded a steel company, said Bain made it possible to expand and hire more workers.
A third speaker, Ray Fernandez, credited Bain for ultimately helping him build his company, Vida Pharmacy, in Hialeah.
“Mitt Romney knows America’s prosperity didn’t happen because our government simply spent more,” Rubio said. “It happened because our people used their own money to open a business.”
Rubio, echoing the candidate’s wife and other speakers, also played up Romney’s personal side, which has also taken a beating from Democrats over his refusal to release multiple years of his tax returns.
“Mitt Romney’s success in business is well known. But he’s more than that,” Rubio said.
“He’s a devoted husband, father, and grandfather — a generous member of his community and church.”
Rubio faulted Obama for all the attacks, which stood in stark contrast to the president’s hope-and-change themed campaign in 2008.
“Hope and change has become Divide and Conquer,” Rubio said. “Under Barack Obama, the only ‘change’ is that ‘hope’ has been hard to find … instead of inspiring us by reminding us of what makes us special, he divides us against each other.”
But Rubio made sure the speech didn’t end on sour and bitter notes. “The story of our time will be written by Americans who haven’t yet been born. Let’s make sure they write that we did our part,” he said. “And because we did, the American Miracle lived on for another generation to inherit,” Rubio said.
But Rubio made sure the speech didn’t end on sour and bitter notes (though he flubbed a line, accidentally calling for “more government instead of more freedom”)
“The story of our time will be written by Americans who haven’t yet been born. Let’s make sure they write that we did our part,” he said. “And because we did, the American Miracle lived on for another generation to inherit.”

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/08/30/2977737_p2/rubio-revs-up-republicans-romney.html#storylink=cpy

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