Las Vegas — There were big fights on Tuesday night in Las Vegas, some meaty policy exchanges and a much-anticipated conflict that never materialized. Here are the big takeaways from the last Republican debate of the year.
Jeb made the most of it
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush may look down and out in the polls, but on Tuesday he at least boasted a solid debate in which he tangled repeatedly with Donald Trump and lived to tell the tale. The turn toward national security seemed to suit Bush, whose core message was that Trump was a “chaos candidate” who would be a “chaos president.”
“Donald, you’re not going to be able to insult your way to the presidency,” Bush said at one point.
Trump got in his usual barbs about Bush’s poll numbers and energy level, and some surely stung. “You’re a tough guy, Jeb, you’re real tough,” Trump told his rival. “Well let’s see, I am at 42% and you’re at 3, so, so far I’m doing better.”
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But Bush didn’t seem fazed and stuck to a consistent strategy of attacking Trump’s proposals on raw efficacy, rather than principle. Most notably, he argued that a Muslim travel ban would alienate Muslim allies abroad who are needed to fight ISIS rather than raise concerns about discrimination or religious freedom.
Trump, for his part, helped make Bush’s case by stumbling on a question about how he would manage the nuclear triad(America’s land/sea/air nuclear strike capability). Trump appeared not to recognize the phrase and started talking about Iraq and Syria before finally responding, “I think, for me, nuclear is just, the power, the devastation is very important to me.”
That type of ignorance has never hurt him with his supporters before, but it surely was satisfying for Bush to watch.
Rubio forced Cruz to the right
The dominant – and likely most consequential – rivalry of the night was between Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.
The two have been battling on the campaign trail for weeks over national security and those arguments carried over to the debate. But by far the most significant exchange was over immigration.
Cruz, as he has done recently, laid into Rubio for supporting “amnesty” through his bipartisan immigration bill. Rubio shot back that their current positions were similar given that Cruz had for months refused to rule out eventual legal status for undocumented immigrants (although not citizenship).
“Does Ted Cruz rule out ever legalizing people that are in this country illegally now?” Rubio asked, trying to corner his rival.
“I have never supported legalization,” Cruz said. “I have never supported legalization, and I do not intend to support legalization.”
That was the furthest Cruz had gone and it appeared to tie him decisively in the “self-deportation” strategy Mitt Romney backed in 2012 en route to a 27% showing with Latino voters.
Rubio’s team accused Cruz of hedging again, focusing on the word “intend,” but Cruz’s campaign chair Chad Sweet confirmed to the press afterward that the issue was settled.
“Sen. Cruz unequivocally — unequivocally — does not support legalization,” Sweet said. Instead, Cruz favored “attrition through enforcement,” a concept virtually identical to self-deportation.
“We don’t choose to use that phraseology,” Sweet said when asked about the comparison.
Cruz defused Trump
If there’s one thing Trump’s good at it’s confounding conventional wisdom. Much of the pre-debate coverage focused on an expected conflict between Trump and Cruz, who Trump attacked as a “maniac” in the Senate this week and criticized for talking behind his back at a fundraiser in which Cruz questioned his “judgment” on foreign policy.








