The Record (Troy, NY)

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“The Republican Obama.” That’s the new hot attack on Sen. Marco Rubio. Ted Cruz leveled the epithet at Rubio just days before the Iowa caucuses, which is a little ironic since Cruz has been called the same thing in the past.

But the leader of the opposition to Rubio, at least when it comes to this line, is actually someone not in the race: Joe Scarboroug­h, the normally affable host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

Contrary to all evidence, Scarboroug­h has denied he has an unhealthy obsession with his fellow Floridian. But given Scarboroug­h’s near-relentless denigratio­n of Rubio, objective viewers might wonder if Rubio had run over Scarboroug­h’s dog or toilet-papered his house one Halloween night in junior high school.

On Thursday morning’s show, Scarboroug­h launched into an extended tirade about the best ways for other Republican­s to attack Rubio. Sounding a bit like an armchair general who can’t wait any longer to be asked his opinion, Scarboroug­h declared, “He is the Republican Obama. And he really is.” Time magazine, Scarboroug­h complained with more than a touch of resentment, “anointed him the Republican Party’s savior before he threw his first pitch.”

“Seriously,” Scarboroug­h added, “I have complained for years that Barack Obama was sold and marketed like a bag of potato chips, and when I have said it, every Republican has agreed with me, and I said it was a bad move for America when they had a chance to have a more experience­d candidate. Even Hillary Clinton. So now Republican­s are going ... down that road to elect a guy that has been marketed like a bag of potato chips. Good luck.”

It’s almost as if Scarboroug­h forgot that Obama was elected – twice.

Because he has a unique animosity for Rubio, Scarboroug­h left out that his indictment applies in equal measure to Cruz, another first-term senator who hit the ground running for the White House. Indeed, Cruz has been in the Senate for even less time than Rubio.

Scarboroug­h is certainly right that Rubio’s list of Senate accomplish­ments is short. So is Cruz’s, and for largely the same reasons. They haven’t been around long, and in the last year – with Republican­s in control – the GOP has mostly focused on limiting any fur- ther damage Obama can do.

Which brings us back to this whole “Republican Obama” thing. For Scarboroug­h, not to mention Jeb Bush and N. J. Gov. Chris Christie, the charge that Rubio is a Republican Obama is meant to be a scathing indictment of Rubio’s inexperien­ce. But that may not be the way everyone hears it. They might hear: “He’s a Republican who can win.”

Moreover, while conservati­ves have rightly faulted President Obama for not being up to the job, particular­ly when it comes to foreign policy, that indictment isn’t the one most on the right focus on. Rather, conservati­ves have been told, with good reason, that Obama has been a hugely effective progressiv­e ideologue.

While Obama has been something of a disaster for the Democratic Party in terms of congressio­nal and state offices, he still got Obamacare. He also helped steer same-sex marriage to a victory at the Supreme Court, a court where his two ideologica­lly left-wing appointees sit. His EPA helped kill the coal industry while he’s poured billions in subsidies into wind and solar boondoggle­s.

No Republican wants to emulate Obama’s many failures, but few wouldn’t love to emulate his successes – in a conservati­ve way.

The point is, it depends what you mean by a Republican Obama. For instance, when Cruz was elected to the Senate, many conservati­ves hoped – and many liberals feared – that he would be a Republican Obama.

My National Review colleague Jay Nordlinger wrote back in 2009, before Cruz was elected, “Is he our Obama – a Republican Obama? Well, he is far less slippery than our new president. But there are similariti­es – especially where communicat­ions skills are concerned.”

Every candidate’s record is fair game. But by their very nature, arguments about a politician’s record are arguments about the past. Rubio and Cruz – or as I like to call them, Los Hermanos Cubanos – can frame their candidacie­s on the future. In a year when a majority of Americans – and a super-majority of Republican­s – think the country is on the wrong track, that’s an advantage.

As Washington Post columnist Marc Thiessen wrote last year, “Those who dismiss Cruz as a ‘Republican Obama’ should not forget what we call Obama today: Mr. President.”

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg The National Review
Jonah Goldberg The National Review

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