Author Topic: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio  (Read 3554 times)

Benny B

  • Time Out
  • Getbig V
  • *
  • Posts: 12405
  • Ron = 'Princess L' & many other gimmicks - FACT!
10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« on: May 02, 2012, 09:31:36 AM »
10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
DC is all abuzz about the wunderkind Florida senator and possible Mitt veep. But does he help Romney's flip-flop problem?
—By Adam Weinstein
Fri Apr. 27, 2012



When it comes to Veepstakes 2012, one name towers above them all: Marco Rubio. The freshman Florida senator vaulted to national prominence when he rode the tea party wave to power two years ago. Team Romney sees a lot to like in Rubio: He's Latino, young, fiercely conservative, from a battleground state, and backed by powerful political and corporate allies with names like Bush.

In recent weeks, Rubio has endorsed Romney, tagged along on the presidential campaign trail, and delivered a high-profile Brookings Institution speech calling for "a more forceful foreign policy." (Apparently, wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya and sanctions on Iran and Syria aren't forceful enough.) The Rubio-a-go-go has gotten so feverish that he consistently leads all vice-presidential hopefuls among Intrade oddsmakers and has even been called "this election's Sarah Palin."

But how well do you know the fresh-faced Floridian? Turns out he's got a lot in common with Romney: He'll say anything to pander to the right, even if it contradicts what he's said before. Here are 10 facts about Rubio that might surprise you:

1) He is not the son of Cuban exiles. He thinks. Maybe? Up until last year, Marco Rubio described his parents as exiles from Fidel Castro's communist regime in Cuba: "In 1971, Marco was born in Miami to Cuban-born parents who came to America following Fidel Castro's takeover," his Senate biography stated. But it turns out his parents actually arrived in the US in 1956, before the revolution, and even made multiple trips back to the communist island. Rubio insisted he hadn't known his family's actual history, but polls showed most of his constituents thought he'd "embellished" his account.

Things get even messier: According to a Rubio biography due out in June by Washington Post reporter Manuel Roig-Franzia, Rubio's grandfather Pedro Victor Garcia was an illegal immigrant to the United States. Disillusioned by his financial prospects, Garcia reportedly left the United States for Cuba two weeks after Fidel Castro took power in 1959. He flew back to the States two years later without a visa...and was booked by a US immigration official, who stated: "[Y]ou do not appear to me to be clearly and beyond a doubt entitled to enter the United States." Garcia was ordered deported, but instead he hung out illegally in Miami, resurfacing in 1967 to petition for permanent residency. Even though Garcia had been in the US since 1962, "The form he filled out then states that he had been a Cuban refugee since February 1965," according to Roig-Franzia.

2) His immigration policies are...complicated. Rubio's own vacillating positions on immigration parallel his grandfather's back-and-forth homeland tryouts. He was one of the first Republicans nationwide to criticize Arizona's SB1070, saying it would "unreasonably single out people who are here legally." A week later, after some cosmetic changes were made to the law, Rubio said he would have voted for it. "Arizona's going to do what’s in the best interest of the people of Arizona," he said. "They have a right to do that, and I respect that."

He also has spoken out against "blanket legalization" of undocumented immigrants and opposed President Obama's DREAM Act: "People in the United States who are here without documents should not benefit from programs like in-state tuition." But earlier this month—after joining Mitt on the campaign trail, and after being attacked in a political ad that stated 91 percent of Hispanics favor the DREAM Act—Rubio vowed to write on his own version of the legislation. (My colleague, Adam Serwer, has a rundown here on the Rubio DREAM Act's weaknesses...and why it's basically a canard.)

3) He's Mormon. And Catholic. And Protestant. And…Like most Cuban-American Floridians, Rubio identifies himself as Catholic. But on moving with his family to Las Vegas in 1979, he converted to Mormonism. According to Roig-Franzia:

    Marco attended LDS youth groups and often walked to chapel with his family because his mother could not drive. The cousins idolized the Osmonds…"Marco, his sister, Veronica, and their cousin, Michelle, liked to perform Osmond songs at family get-togethers. [Rubio] was so entranced by the Osmonds that he joined [a]…trip to Provo, Utah, to tour the pop group's recording studio.

Rubio claims he returned to the Catholic church as a teen, on his family's return to Miami. But since his Senate run, he's also been a regular parishioner at a non-denominational Baptist-affiliated megachurch—and he's been happy to let both churches embrace him and his "faith journey."

In recent months, though, he's denied that Mormonism was ever an influence in his life: "When you're eight years old you do what your parents tell you to do." In a separate interview, his cousin Michelle Denis told Buzzfeed, "He could convince his mom to do anything," adding, "He was totally into [Mormonism]."

4) He's a climate denier. Or an environmentalist. Or...As speaker of the Florida Legislature, Rubio shepherded a landmark bill to limit greenhouse gas emissions, voiced caution about drilling off the Sunshine State's coast, and argued that climate change was real. "Global warming, dependence on foreign sources of fuel, and capitalism have come together to create opportunities for us that were unimaginable just a few short  years ago," he told his House colleagues in 2007. Of drilling, he said it should only be done if it could be proven environmentally safe, and it wasn't a silver bullet: "Even if we started drilling tomorrow morning, it could take close to 10 years before we start seeing the benefits."

But as soon as he jumped into the US Senate race, his love for Mother Earth faded. He stumped for a Palinesque pro-oil campaign called "Drill Here, Drill Now." He ridiculed cap-and-trade emissions plans as "European-style" or "California-style" social engineering. And he attacked his Senate opponent, the moderate Republican-turned-independent Charlie Crist, as "a believer in man-made global warming." "I don't think there's the scientific evidence to justify it," he told the Tampa Tribune.

5) He charged a $134 haircut—or back wax?—to the GOP. Along with $109,000 of swag.
For a fiscal conservative, Rubio's pretty liberal with money. When he was state House speaker, the Republican Party of Florida issued Rubio and a few other party insiders corporate American Express cards...which they proceeded to burn up like a fresh can of Sterno...to the tune of $7.3 million. Rubio's charges included a $134 bill from Churchill's, a tony Miami hair salon "barbershop with $20 haircuts"; some critics have suggested Rubio used his card to pay for some special depilatory treatments.

Rubio insists he repaid American Express for personal expenses amounting to $16,000, but that leaves $94,000 that the party picked up—including repairs to his family minivan, thousands for a personal car rental, a Disney World vacation, tons of air travel, and repeat trips to a convenience store around the corner from the Rubio homestead. Politifact tried to parse out what the party paid for—a full listing of the charges is here—but the GOP's paperwork was in disarray. It doesn't help that the state party chairman at the time is currently in jail for skimming off the top from GOP accounts.

6) He's got friends in low places.
Throughout his political career, Rubio's been called a corrupt wheeler-and-dealer by everyone from the Florida Democrats to Mitt Romney's press secretary (see No. 8 below). Perhaps it's the company he keeps. He's been something of a mentor to Rep. David Rivera (R-Fla.) since they came up together in the state Legislature—they went in together on a house in Tallahassee, which went into foreclosure when they failed to pay the mortgage. Rivera—who once forced an opponent's campaign truck off the side of an interstate highway with his car—is now under state and federal investigations for a spate of financial corruption allegations, mostly focusing on nepotistic lobbying.

That's something Rubio would know about from his days running Floridians for Conservative Leadership, a political committee that at one time or another employed Rubio's mother-in-law and three other members of Rubio's wife's family. His wife was the treasurer; between them, they failed to report $34,000 of contributions in an 18-month period.

He's also enjoyed a cozy relationship with state Rep. Esteban Bovo, who's a lobbyist by day, and Bovo's wife, also a lobbyist, who ended up on a couple of air trips with Rubio that were charged to that GOP credit card. Another young health care lobbyist, Amber Stoner, also shows up as a recipient of 10 paid flights with Rubio on his Republican Amex.

It goes deeper, but trying to untangle Rubio's lobbyist and dark-money connections is like trying to flowchart Whitewater and Iran-Contra while eating spaghetti with chopsticks outside, at night, in the middle of a hurricane.

7) He had 100 bright ideas to fix Florida, which mostly fixed his friends' finances. In making his 2006 bid to be the No. 1 Republican in Florida's statehouse, Rubio touted a book he'd written, 100 Innovative Ideas for Florida's Future, as a blueprint for legislative action. Rubio later claimed that 57 of his ideas were made into law by the Florida Legislature; Politifact found only 24. Some, like whistleblower protection for prostitutes who snitch on their pimps, never saw the light of day in the Legislature.

Rubio also started a nonprofit foundation and website, 100ideas.org, to solicit more ideas, though it's unclear what the organization accomplished, beyond padding the pockets of a few political allies. Much of 100ideas.org's roughly $100,000 a year of funding went to the political consulting firm that set up and ran the nonprofit: Frontline Strategies, a boutique outfit run by the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign's Florida director. 100ideas.org's president, William Holly, is a Miami real estate developer who got his start working for the Codina Bush group, a firm co-owned by Jeb Bush. Holly's and Bush's business interests benefited greatly from Rubio's anti-tax "ideas" in the statehouse. (After Rubio left for Washington, it seems Holly's fortunes soured; he declared bankruptcy just last month, after creditors won more than $40 million in foreclosure judgments against him.)

8) Mitt's spokeswoman has called Rubio "a wheeling and dealing Miami lobbyist and politician, always trying to scam the system for his personal benefit." Before stumping for Romney, national press secretary Andrea Saul was the communications director for Crist, Rubio's Senate opponent, and she assailed Rubio as "another typical politician." Her biggest knock against the Florida House speaker: "With each passing day, voters are beginning to see the real Speaker Rubio, a tax raising Miami lobbyist-politician who has used public office for personal gain and political donations as a personal slush fund." Asked by ABC's Jonathan Karl about her comments, Saul declined to respond.

9) He called Barack Obama a socialist before it was cool. Back in early September of 2008—before the presidential election, and before the economy fell off a cliff—Rubio said "Marx would be pleased" by Obama's fiscal proposals. "I love what Barack Obama's candidacy says about America. I just fear what his candidacy would do to America," he said. "To leave our children with a centrally planned socialist economy is not a better plan."

10) He endorsed Huck in 2008. And Huck endorsed him in 2010. And 2012. Seeking to raise his profile, Rubio (and buddy David Rivera) threw their support behind populist conservative Mike Huckabee's unsuccessful bid for the GOP presidential nomination. Huckabee returned the favor, endorsing Rubio for Senate—and, more recently, for vice president. What's the source of the synergy? Huckabee was a real genuine guy, Rubio said in '08, and "people are looking for genuineness and sincerity in politics."

UPDATE: Great minds think alike! For more tidbits on the Florida senator's collegiate football career, cheerleader wife, and hatred of disco, check out The Week's "8 Surprising Facts About Marco Rubio."
!

Benny B

  • Time Out
  • Getbig V
  • *
  • Posts: 12405
  • Ron = 'Princess L' & many other gimmicks - FACT!
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #1 on: May 02, 2012, 09:35:11 AM »
8 surprising facts about Marco Rubio
Two years ago, most Americans had never heard of Rubio. Now, the eloquent, Tea-Party-backed, disco-despising Florida senator is a top contender for Mitt Romney's VP slot
Published April 26, 2012


Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and his wife during the rising GOP star's victory speech in 2010: Rubio used to play college football, and his wife is a former Miami Dolphins cheerleader.   Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images


Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who's been campaigning with Mitt Romney, continued to raise his national profile this week, delivering a major foreign policy speech that was interpreted as a tryout for the vice presidential spot on the Romney ticket. Rubio is unquestionably a rising star on the Right. In 2010, he became a capital-N "name" with a landslide victory in Florida's Senate race, literally chasing the once-popular former Gov. Charlie Crist out of the party. (Crist, worried about losing a GOP primary to Rubio, ran as an independent, and got crushed.) So who exactly is this Tea Party-backed freshman senator from Florida? Here, eight things you might not know about him:

1. Rubio's parents fled Cuba... before Castro

In campaign speeches, and on his Senate website, Rubio has described himself as the son of "exiles from Castro's Cuba." But he had to backpedal when reporters discovered that his family actually left Cuba for Florida in 1956, while Fidel Castro was still plotting his revolution from Mexico. Rubio's family history has since been picked through by the media.

2. His grandfather was ordered deported

Another wrinkle in Rubio's family history emerged on Wednesday: According to a book excerpt published by Politico, U.S. authorities wanted to deport his maternal grandfather, Pedro Victor Garcia in 1962, but Garcia stayed in the U.S. anyway. The upcoming biography on Rubio by Washington Post reporter Manuel Roig-Franzia says Garcia's legal status was murky for years — a potentially problematic biographical detail in a political party dominated by conservatives who want to crack down on illegal immigration.

3. Rubio was baptized a Mormon...

When Marco Rubio was 7 or 8, his family moved to Las Vegas. After the move, Marco, his mother, and sister Veronica, who were Catholics, were baptized as Mormons, encouraged by an aunt who had already converted. Marco was an active participant in his new church. "He was totally into it," cousin Michelle Denis tells BuzzFeed. But Rubio's father, a bartender, "couldn't embrace a faith that wouldn't let him drink and smoke," according to Roig-Franzia's biography.

4. ...Then embraced Catholicism again
When Rubio's family returned to Miami, Rubio, his mother, and sister converted back to Catholicism. The future senator received his first communion at 13. "He really convinced the whole family to switch religions," Michelle Denis tells Buzzfeed. "He's very vocal so he convinced them all to become Catholic."

5. He loved the Osmonds ...

"The absolute scariest aspect of Marco Rubio's biography," says Peter Schorsch at SaintPetersBlog, "is his fondness for [the] Osmonds." It came with the territory when the family lived in Nevada. The Osmonds were the most visible Mormons in the country at the time, and Rubio and his cousins were wild about them. In elementary school, Marco formed a tribute singing group with his sister and cousin to entertain relatives. "It was just the same Osmonds song at every family function," Michelle Denis said.

6. ...And hated disco
The Osmond fascination goes hand in hand with another detail about Rubio's taste in '70s music: He hates disco. From Politico: In a speech recently, Rubio said the decade was a "very frightening time" when "we had to overcome disco, and bell bottoms, and the Bee Gees."

7. Rubio played football in college

Rubio got his undergraduate degree from the University of Florida in 1993, but he started his college career on a football scholarship in Missouri at Tarkio College, which went bankrupt in the early 1990s. Rubio once caught a football thrown by legendary former Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino on the floor of the Florida House of Representatives, where he was speaker before being elected to the U.S. Senate. Rubio also has caught a pass from Tim Tebow. The lifelong football fan described those moments as the coolest things he's done in his political career.

8. His wife was a Miami Dolphins cheerleader
No stranger to a football field, Rubio's wife, Jeanette Dousdebes Rubio, was once a Miami Dolphins cheerleader. Mrs. Rubio joined the squad along with her younger sister, sometimes practicing dance moves four nights a week and posing for the squad's first swimsuit calendar. On game days, the future senator shouted encouragement from the stands. "He seemed like a supportive, really nice boyfriend," Dorie Grogan, the team's senior director of entertainment, tells the Tampa Bay Times.
!

Coach is Back!

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 61608
  • It’s All Bullshit
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #2 on: May 02, 2012, 09:38:25 AM »
I could name a 1000 things about Obama....but these would be already proven true.

G_Thang

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 19757
  • The World South of the USA isnt for pussies!
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #3 on: May 02, 2012, 09:47:28 AM »
my parents are cuban , so who should i support?  obama who is a black man like my father before me (that sounds like something from star wars?) or rubio who is a corrupt white cuban like my mom's family.  wow, it's latino vs black again.   ::)

Just support Foz and Coke because Brasilians are the perfect combo of black and latin. brazil, the country of the future and it always will be.




Coach is Back!

  • Competitors
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 61608
  • It’s All Bullshit
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #4 on: May 02, 2012, 09:56:52 AM »
Make that a 1001 things..  I told you from the day he started running for office, he's a pathological liar.


Obama: 'New York girlfriend' was composite


By DYLAN BYERS |
5/2/12 12:08 PM EDT

One of the more mysterious characters from President Obama's 1995 autobiography Dreams From My Father is the so-called 'New York girlfriend.' Obama never referred to her by name, or even by psuedonym, but he describes her appearance, her voice, and her mannerisms in specific detail.

But Obama has now told biographer David Maraniss that the 'New York girlfriend' was actually a composite character, based off of multiple girlfriends he had both in New York City and in Chicago.

"During an interview in the Oval Office, Obama acknowledged that, while Genevieve was his New York girlfriend, the description in his memoir was a “compression” of girlfriends, including one who followed Genevieve [Cook] when he lived in Chicago," Maraniss writes in his new biography, an excerpt of which was published online today by Vanity Fair.

Though Dreams From My Father is an autobiography, and hence non-fiction, Obama makes no mention of this "compression," nor is their any note by the publisher, Broadway Books. In fact, Obama only acknowledged the "compression" after Maraniss learned that Cook had no recollection of some of the events at which Obama said she was present.

"In Dreams from My Father, Obama chose to emphasize a racial chasm that unavoidably separated him from the woman he described as his New York girlfriend," Maraniss writes, before offering a passage from the book in which they go to see a play by a black playwright. He continues:

    None of this happened with Genevieve. She remembered going to the theater only once with Barack, and it was not to see a work by a black playwright. When asked about this decades later, during a White House interview, Obama acknowledged that the scene did not happen with Genevieve. “It is an incident that happened,” he said. But not with her. He would not be more specific, but the likelihood is that it happened later, when he lived in Chicago. “That was not her,” he said. “That was an example of compression I was very sensitive in my book not to write about my girlfriends, partly out of respect for them. So that was a consideration. I thought that [the anecdote involving the reaction of a white girlfriend to the angry black play] was a useful theme to make about sort of the interactions that I had in the relationships with white girlfriends. And so, that occupies, what, two paragraphs in the book? My attitude was it would be dishonest for me not to touch on that at all … so that was an example of sort of editorially how do I figure that out?”

http://www.politico.com/blogs/media/2012/05/obama-ny-girlfriend-was-composite-character-122272.html

240 is Back

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 102387
  • Complete website for only $300- www.300website.com
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #5 on: May 02, 2012, 09:58:22 AM »
This is Obama's DREAM Act with a slightly longer wait for paperwork.   Dream issues the papework immediately - this makes you wait a bit - but you get to stay if you're illegal, period.
I hope ROmney chooses a better running mate.

Your wet-dream veep wants to open up the borders!

it would legalize undocumented children brought to the United States at an early age provided they have no criminal record and have completed high school. It would grant them “non-immigrant” visas, allowing them to stay in the country and access the existing immigration system through which they could eventually become green card holders or naturalized citizens.




A year ago Rep. Luis Gutierrez, the Chicago-born son of Puerto Rican immigrants, called Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) an “extremist” on immigration.
 
But after hearing Rubio’s pitch last week on his version of the so-called DREAM Act, the liberal Illinois Democrat sang a more positive tune — so much so that some of his colleagues are beginning to rib him about it.

“I was catching all this grief from Democrats: ‘Oh, now you’re Rubio’s best friend.’ ‘Hey, does he have a little office for you when he’s VP?’” Gutierrez recalled in an interview. “There’s no meanness to it — it’s part of the politics of this place.”
 
The meeting with Gutierrez and top Hispanic Democrats was one of many stops on a Rubio charm offensive as the Florida Republican has engaged in a behind-the-scenes lobbying blitz to sell his proposal that would help children of illegal immigrants gain a more-permanent legal status.
 
Rubio is working an odd-bedfellows coalition, ranging from hard-line anti-illegal immigration groups like Numbers USA to progressive leaders in the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. And as he meets with Democrats, he is actively moving to head off a conservative rebellion, trying to curry support from the influential Heritage Foundation, religious leaders like Richard Land and tea party favorites like Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Jim DeMint of South Carolina, and Rep. Steve King of Iowa.
 
But the rookie senator is already finding that building a coalition on a hot issue like immigration — in an election year, no less — is an incredibly tough slog.
 
If his proposal is too tough on enforcement, he’ll lose support from Democrats and Latino advocacy groups. If he softens his proposal too much, he risks turning off conservatives who are approaching Rubio, a rising star in the party, with an open mind. For now, both sides are reluctant to fully embrace his proposals.
 
“There are significant obstacles,” Rubio, a potential Mitt Romney running mate, told POLITICO. “I’m not saying this is going to be easy and this issue comes with a long history and things that happened before I got here. So I’m dealing with that a little bit, too.”
 
For now, Rubio’s strategy is to solicit input from key conservatives in his party, who could influence a significant number of Hill Republicans. At the same time, Rubio’s team is trying to woo groups representing children who could be affected by his proposal, a move that would pressure Democrats who claim they’re worried about young people brought to the country illegally through no fault of their own.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0412/75766.html#ixzz1tfwOj6G7

240 is Back

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 102387
  • Complete website for only $300- www.300website.com
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #6 on: May 02, 2012, 10:54:28 AM »
Rubio is like Palin was in 2008.   This 'breath of fresh air" - someone who has been on the national scene exactly ONE YEAR.

Obama was elected to national senate in what, 2004?  And it was Jan 2008 that he announced a run for prez.  Most people believed he was woefully unprepared for office, with 3+ years of being on the national stage.  Rubio has been in the spotlight for just over a year now.  And this new DREAM bill is an 80% version of the Obama bill that even dems hated.  Sucking up to that hispanic voting block.

There are plenty of good governors who have been on the national level 6, 8, 10, or 12 years.  Safer picks.  Rubio just seems like such a potential train wreck as veep.  By 2016 he'll have a wealth of legislative experience and know his way around.  He's only 40 and I bet nobody here can list 5 things he's done this year to improve the govt.  You know, other than giving speeches?  He reminds me a lot of obama 2008.  Not ready.

tommywishbone

  • Competitors II
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 20535
  • Biscuit
Re: 10 Things You Need to Know About Marco Rubio
« Reply #7 on: May 02, 2012, 10:58:48 AM »
Also, in southern Cal he has a chain of tasty taco joints.  Fish tacos on "taco Tuesday" are pretty good.
a