MIAMI — Pledging to “capture the promise of this new century,” Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fl.) launched his presidential campaign Monday evening in his hometown of Miami.
“Today, grounded by the lessons of our history, and inspired by the promise of our future, I announce my candidacy for president of the United States,” Rubio told a cheering crowd of supporters.
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With his relative youth and immigrant background, Rubio positioned himself as the candidate of the new millennium, an explicit contrast with likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, the wife of a former president, and an implicit contrast with Republican rival and fellow Floridian Jeb Bush, son and brother of presidents.
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“Just yesterday, a leader from yesterday began a campaign for president by promising to take us back to yesterday,” Rubio said, referring to Clinton’s own campaign launch on Sunday. “Yesterday is over, and we are never going back. We Americans are proud of our history, but our country has always been about the future.”
It was one of several shots at the previous generation of boomer politicians he hopes to leapfrog to the White House. In another passage, Rubio complained America’s leaders “were busy looking backward” and “put us at a disadvantage by taxing and borrowing and regulating like it was 1999,” when Hillary Clinton’s husband, Bill Clinton, was in office.
“The final verdict on our generation will be written by Americans who are not yet born,” Rubio said. “Let us make sure they record that we made the right choice, that in the early years of this century, faced with a rapidly changing and uncertain world, our generation rose to face the great challenges of this time.”
As Rubio noted in his remarks, he kicked off his campaign at the Freedom Tower, which served as a processing center for many of the Cuban exiles who fled Fidel Castro’s communist regime. Rubio, whose parents left Cuba shortly before Castro took power, offered up his working class roots as an idyllic example of the American dream he sought to preserve.
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“I live in an exceptional country where even the son of a bartender and a maid can have the same dreams and the same future as those who come from power and privilege,” Rubio said.
Turning to policy, Rubio pledged to “reform our tax code,” “reduce regulations and reduce spending,” “modernize our immigration laws” and reform higher education so that students no longer graduate with “a mountain of debt and degrees that no longer lead to jobs.”
On foreign policy, he pledged to confront “aggression” from China and Russia, decried human rights abuses in Cuba and drew wild applause decrying the White House’s “outrageous concessions to Iran and its hostility to Israel.”
Rubio’s pitch as the messenger of a new generation of conservatives resonated with supporters at the event. Barbara Rodriguez, 62, told msnbc she was “neck-and-neck” in choosing between Rubio and Bush, who she considered a highly successful governor, but decided the senator was “the future, not the same old.”
“People don’t want a Clinton or a Bush again,” she said.








