PURCELLVILLE, Virginia – What’s wrong with Donald Trump? Let the newly emboldened Marco Rubio explain it to you.
Trump, Rubio said on Sunday, has a spray tan, lousy hair and “small hands” (wink wink). But more importantly, Trump is a “con artist” who preys on the gullible and “friends do not let friends vote for con artists.” As evidence, the Florida senator pointed to Trump University, the defunct non-accredited program whose alumni are now suing, claiming they received little more than a graduation photo with a Trump cutout while racking up large debts to pay for it.
“What he did to them is what he’s doing to voters now,” Rubio told an eager crowd of thousands at Patrick Henry College.
Rubio has never looked better since last Thursday’s raucous Republican debate, where he finally confronted Trump after weeks avoiding a showdown. He sounds less canned, more confident and, at times, genuinely funny. His crowds are much bigger and far more fired up than the Iowa and New Hampshire audiences that were still struggling to decide between a dozen candidates. Now more have settled on Rubio as their champion and Trump panic has created a powerful demand for candidates who will stand up to him before he takes the nomination.
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That doesn’t mean Rubio is winning, though. The limited polling available on Virginia, an important target for Rubio where he made four stops in on Sunday, show Trump with a double-digit lead. Trump also looks strong in Super Tuesday states in general, from Massachusetts to Alabama, with only Sen. Ted Cruz’s native Texas leaning away from him in recent surveys.
But Rubio is finally putting up a fight and his supporters couldn’t be happier.
At the first of his rallies on Sunday, he used the “con artist” theme to tie together a host of related attacks: Trump talks tough on illegal immigration, but he used undocumented Polish workers to build Trump Tower. Trump talks tough on wages, but he applied to hire hundreds of foreign workers at his hotel when Americans wanted the job. Trump talks tough on trade, but makes “those tacky ties” in China and Mexico.
Those riffs laid the groundwork for some improvised one-liners later when a protester waved a “MARCO RUBIO: EMPTY SUIT” sign.
“My suit wasn’t made in China — it’s not a Trump suit!” Rubio said as audience members grabbed at the sign.
“Ladies and gentleman, the valedictorian of Trump University!” he followed up as the person was removed. It was a pivot from portraying Trump U. “students” as sad victims to portraying them as dumb rubes, but the audience loved it.
Then the senator turned to the big news of the morning: Trump’s refusal to disavow support from David Duke and the Ku Klux Klan in a live CNN interview, the latest in a long line of nods, winks, and high fives to extremism.
“We cannot be a party that nominates someone who refused to condemn white supremacists and the Ku Klux Klan,” Rubio said. “Not only is that wrong, it makes him unelectable.”
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“Never Trump!” one man called out. It was a reference to the #NeverTrump hashtag, which Republicans use to pledge never to support the front-runner under any circumstances. The movement gained its most high-profile member on Sunday night in freshman Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE), a rising GOP star.
The crowd of thousands booed at Trump’s name and exploded every time Rubio stuck the landing on his Trump lines. This is what they had all been hoping to see. They just wished it came sooner.
“I’m glad he’s doing it, but I worry it’s too late,” Scott Tyskowski, 39, said as he waited for the event with his wife and two boys. “I wish he started a month ago. Jeb is the only one who did go after him, and he wasn’t strong enough to sustain it.”
“I think it was just way too many candidates attacking each other before Trump and now it’s too late,” said Mike Kober, a proud 31-year old Rubio supporter who drove in from West Virginia with his Cuban-born grandmother. “I don’t know if it makes a difference, but I like it.”
Part of the problem is that by waiting so long to go after the front-runner, Rubio now has so many pent-up Trump attacks that it’s hard to give any one enough attention to break through. Super Tuesday is one day away and March 15, which includes crucial winner-take-all Ohio and Rubio’s must-win home state of Florida, is right around the corner.









