The politics surrounding Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) immigration pitch to Rush Limbaugh seemed straightforward enough, at least as of 24 hours ago. The far-right senator is part of a bipartisan group of lawmakers that supports comprehensive reform, while the far-right radio host is ready to use his power to “stop this” from advancing. Rubio presumably wanted to offer a persuasive defense of his own bill.
But during today’s on-air interview, both Republicans staked out interesting positions that were not altogether expected. Limbaugh, for example, wanted to kill the bipartisan reform plan yesterday, but today lauded Rubio’s efforts as “admirable and noteworthy,” and “recognizing reality.” And while Rubio was all smiles yesterday, today the GOP lawmaker seemed to be hinting at an exit strategy from the reform initiative he’s helped launch.
In an interview with Rush Limbaugh aired Tuesday, Sen. Marco Rubio said he wouldn’t support a bill granting a pathway to citizenship to undocumented immigrants unless it first addressed border security. […]
“To the point of them not wanting to do the security, look, all I can tell you is that that’s a big issue for me,” Rubio responded. “That’s why I’m involved in this process. I have no reason to believe it won’t happen. But if it doesn’t, I’ll come back to you and say look, it didn’t happen. We tried, they put that in the principles, but then they drafted a bill and I couldn’t support it.”
So, literally one day after Rubio threw his support to a bipartisan, comprehensive reform package, he told a right-wing radio show he’s prepared to walk away unless he gets what he wants. That doesn’t exactly speak highly of Rubio’s commitment to following through on a policy he claims to take seriously.
For that matter, whether Rubio understands this or not, President Obama has already delivered the “border security” measures the senator says he’s looking for. If, however, Rubio means giving folks like Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) veto power over federal reform efforts, that’s not going to happen, and Rubio might as well take his ball and go home now.
Specifically, what the senator claims to want is some sort of “trigger.”









