The Arizona Republic

Trump, Rubio set insults aside, find common ground

Relationsh­ip turns pragmatic as president, Florida senator cooperate on issues abroad

- Ledyard King Sen. Marco Rubio walks with President Trump after Trump announced policy changes toward Cuba in June. Despite campaign insults, Rubio has become a key Trump ally in the Senate.

WASHINGTON Marco Rubio was on Air Force One flying into Miami on June 16 for an important announceme­nt on Cuba when he directed President Trump’s attention to the marshy expanse below.

“You have a chance to go down as the Everglades president,” Florida’s Republican senator told Trump as they flew over the River of Grass undergoing a multibilli­on-dollar restoratio­n. “What a great legacy.”

The moment underscore­d Rubio’s ascendant role as a confidant of Trump’s. Here he was with the president, heading to his home state to help the leader of the free world unveil a tough policy the senator played an instrument­al role in shaping on the country his parents once called home. That he had the opportunit­y to personally pitch Florida’s most ambitious public works project was an added bonus.

It might seem odd that Rubio has found fellowship with someone he once called a “con artist” and traded raunchy insults with on the campaign trail last year. Trump dubbed Rubio as “little” and accused him of having a sweating problem.

Even after Rubio endorsed Trump for president following his exit from the race, the senator punctuated the divide by not appearing with Trump during Florida visits in the general election campaign.

But the two have put aside difference­s to forge a pragmatic relationsh­ip. They’ve found common ground on foreign policy issues involving Cuba, China and Venezuela.

When he announced his revamped policy toward the Castro regime in June, Trump expressed his “deep gratitude” to Rubio, calling him “a man who has really become a friend of mine.”

While other Republican senators such as John McCain of Arizona, Ben Sasse of Nebraska and Susan Collins of Maine have freely criticized the president, Rubio has kept his powder relatively dry on a president who prizes loyalty.

At an Intelligen­ce Committee hearing in June featuring FBI Director James Comey, Rubio bemoaned the volume of leaks “left and right” stemming from the agency’s probe into alleged Russian meddling in last year’s election and any connection­s between Moscow and the Trump campaign.

“Ever wonder why of all the things in this investigat­ion, the only thing that’s never been leaked is the fact that the president was not personally under investigat­ion despite the fact that both Democrats and Republican­s in the leadership of Congress knew that and have known that for weeks,” the senator told Comey.

Rubio, who had dined at the White House with Trump that week, went on Twitter after criticism of his aggressive questionin­g surfaced, saying, “I didn’t defend or attack anyone.”

Rubio says he has grown to enjoy the Senate after he declared his frustratio­n with the job and skipped dozens of votes when he was running for the White House. He decided to return to the Senate after pledging last year he would not seek a second term.

A key reason for his optimism is that he has an ally in the Oval Office.

“Now I come back with six years of experience, access to the White House, better understand­ing of how the process works,” he told CBS 4 Miami in an interview that aired last week. “And I feel good about the progress we’ve made. I’m enjoying and fulfilled by the work we’ve been doing.”

Brian Ballard, a Tallahasse­ebased lobbyist who supported Rubio for president before becoming Trump’s state finance chairman, said the two men have a genuine affection for each other that made it easier to get past the verbal volleys they lobbed at each other.

“When the election goes the right way, it cures a lot of things,” he said.

Rubio has forcefully countered Trump’s claim that Russia did not meddle in the U.S. election. And he voted for a bill to make sure the president could not dial back economic sanctions against Moscow without congressio­nal approval. And he’s publicly wished that Trump would take a harder stance on global human rights.

But Rubio hasn’t gone out of his way to personally slam the president, keenly aware that his agenda on Florida issues and foreign affairs has a better chance of success with Trump in the fold.

“If I have an opportunit­y to influence the administra­tion’s policy in a positive direction, I’m going to seek that,” he said in a recent human rights interview.

Rubio’s been a frequent visitor to the White House, having dined or personally met with Trump or Vice President Pence several times. Tuesday, he and two other lawmakers met with Pence to discuss geopolitic­s in the Western Hemisphere.

“I can’t think of a more valuable ally the administra­tion has had in the Senate than Marco,” Ballard said. “I think the relationsh­ip’s only going to grow stronger.”

Message to President Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s: Stop trying to scuttle the Obama administra­tion’s health care law, and try to make it more effective.

That’s the resounding word from a national poll released Friday by the non-partisan Kaiser Family Foundation. The survey was taken after last month’s Senate derailment of the GOP drive to supplant much of President Obama’s Affordable Care Act with a diminished federal role in health care.

About four in five poll respondent­s say they want the Trump administra­tion to take actions that help the law function properly, rather than trying to undermine it.

Congress sent the president a bill aimed at trimming a rapidly growing backlog of veterans’ disability claims.

The House of Representa­tives approved the bill by voice vote Friday during a brief session, sending the measure to President Trump, who is likely to sign it. The House is on recess, but a handful of lawmakers gaveled the chamber in and out of a session in less than five minutes.

The bill, approved Aug. 1 by the Senate, would reduce the time it takes for the Department of Veterans Affairs to handle appeals from veterans unhappy with disability payouts.

A hairstylis­t suffered more than 40 stab wounds to his upper body in a fatal attack last month in the high-rise Chicago condo of a Northweste­rn University professor.

The since-fired professor, Wyndham Lathem, and Oxford University financial officer Andrew Warren were arrested in the San Francisco area eight days after Trenton James Cornell-Duranleau, 26, was found dead last month.

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JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES

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