On ABC yesterday, George Stephanopoulos said Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) seems to be “rising to the top” of the Republican heap right now. Former Bush/Cheney aide Nicole Wallace responded, “Yeah, look, he’s everything we need and more. He’s modern. He knows who Tupac is. He is on social media.”
It’s probably worth noting that Tupac Shakur died nearly 17 years ago, and knowing who he is doesn’t necessarily make someone “modern.” Neither is being “on social media,” a step already taken by nearly every member of Congress and governor in America.
But the train has nevertheless apparently left the station. The far-right senator has been labeled the Republicans’ “savior” by Time magazine; he’ll deliver one of his party’s State of the Union addresses tomorrow; and the Washington Post has a lengthy, front-page-above-the-fold feature on Rubio this morning, lauding the Republican as “a politician of unusual gifts.”
The D.C. establishment wants a fresh Republican star and it has obviously made its choice.
I have a hunch I’m tilting at windmills, but I’d like to point out three simple truths that the Beltway crowd may want to at least consider before joining the Rubio fan club.
First, if the senator has “unusual gifts,” they haven’t translated into meaningful policy successes. As Rubio begins his third year on Capitol Hill, his most notable legislative accomplishment has been sponsoring “a resolution designating September 2011 as National Spinal Cord Injury Awareness Month.”









