Marco and Ted’s excellent adventure
by digby
This story got buried because of the Trump lunacy but I wrote about it for Salon this morning:
A lot of people were surprised when the Fox Business moderators on Tuesday night’s GOP debate failed to ask Marco Rubio a question about immigration. It’s not as if the topic was off limits. The most contentious exchange of the night was between Donald Trump and John Kasich on the subject of mass deportation. Both Bush and Cruz jumped on the topic even though they weren’t asked. Marco Rubio, however, played dead during the whole thing, obviously hoping that nobody would address him directly so he could avoid having to explain some horrible mistakes from a past life.
No, Rubio doesn’t have any skeletons in his closet of the same variety Ben Carson claims. If he did, it would surely have been a major redemption theme in his oft-repeated story of his humble beginnings. (If Carson’s popularity is any guide, it could only have helped him if he admitted to once attempting a drive-by shooting.) Actually, Rubio’s youthful errors are far more damning, at least as far as Republican base voters are concerned: He was a member of the Gang of Eight, a group of Senators so villainous that they actually got together and hammered out a Comprehensive Immigration reform bill, which included — dare I even say it — a path to citizenship for undocumented workers.
And Rubio wasn’t just a passive participant. The other members loved him so much he was charged with recruiting his fellow Republicans to the cause. This Washington Post article from last April examined his involvement with the gang in detail:
Rubio’s parents were born in Cuba, and he spoke movingly about their experience as immigrants. But Rubio was also beloved by the very sort of small-government conservatives who had blocked immigration reform in the past. With a foot in both those worlds, Rubio held enormous leverage, even with the veteran senators.That was clear in one meeting, described by four lobbyists in the room, where the GOP senators were being asked to agree to more “guest workers” in the bill. Without more of these temporary immigrants, the lobbyists said, some low-skill jobs would go unfilled. McCain, they said, suggested an answer. Couldn’t the children of illegal immigrants do those jobs?
Rubio, the son of immigrants, spoke up. “He says, ‘Pardon me, Senator, but I have to say that the children of those illegal immigrants will be doctors and lawyers,’ ”one lobbyist recalled. “In my mind, I was like, ‘Thank God somebody said it.’ Because nobody else could say that to McCain.” […] “People would talk, talk, talk. And he’d say, ‘I can’t sell that.’ And that would be it,” one Democratic staffer recalled. If Rubio said that conservatives wouldn’t go for a particular idea, the group believed him.
He was the chief salesman in the conservative media as well. He went on every talk radio show and even appeared one Sunday morning on all five political shows. He went on Telemundo and Univision and made his pitch in Spanish too. But the right wing radio hosts were having none of it and they turned on him hard. He found himself in the middle of a typical conservative media conspiracy feedback loop with bogus charges that the bill contained “amnesty phones” and car subsidies and in the end he quietly voted for the bill and then dropped out of the gang forever, hoping that nobody would remember his role in it.
The mainstream media have very assiduously avoided bringing any of this up until now although it’s doubtful they are trying to protect him. They just have short memories. Fox Business was nice enough not to bring up that bit of unpleasantness and none of his rivals had the presence of mind at the time to do it either. But that’s all changed now. With Bush and Kasich cratering, Rubio is the desperate GOP establishment’s new “it boy” — and the right wingers, led by the conservative Sith Lord Ted Cruz, are circling.
Cruz appeared with hardocre anti-immigrant crusader Laura Ingraham on Thursdayand unctuously quoted the Bible as he stuck the shiv in Rubio’s back and slowly twisted it:
There’s more at the link. This battle between Cruz and Rubio isn'[t quite a sexy as the one between Trump and Carson but it may be more important in the long run.