Today, we honor moms across the nation for being role models and for their contributions in careers as varied as public service, medicine, education and on the front lines of safeguarding our freedoms at home and abroad.
In my own life, my mother has been a powerful source of inspiration. Having come to the United States in the late 1950s with only her family and work ethic, my mom spent the next forty years working long hours to provide for our family and give my two sisters, brother and me the opportunity to thrive. I have always been in awe of her and people of her generation who lost their dreams in Cuba only to embrace America’s liberties and work hard to ensure their children could fufill their own dreams here. My mother’s selfless sacrifices – as a hotel maid, a Kmart stock clerk, and the work she did inside our household – taught me important life lessons about the value of hard work, empowering children and making sure they always understand that, in America, anything is possible. Everything I am and have today, I owe to my mother and father.
On this Mother’s Day, I also give thanks to God for my wife Jeanette. During our thirteen years of marriage, she has been the rock of our family and a daily source of inspiration. Her devotion to our four children – Amanda, Daniella, Anthony and Dominic – has enriched their lives and ensured they too can enjoy all the blessings and opportunities she and I enjoyed because of our own parents.
I also want to celebrate the inspiring example of Cuba’s Damas de Blanco (Ladies in White). As the mothers, wives and daughters of Cuban political prisoners, these women have spent years courageously exercising God-given freedoms that are outlawed in Cuba. Every Sunday after Mass, they have taken to the streets in peaceful marches to insist on the liberation of their loved ones. In recent months, they have come under attack by the regime for this. Undeterred and unafraid, they have only recommitted their efforts. Theirs is a courage driven by their commitment to freedom but also by the selfless love that mothers everywhere possess for their sons and daughters. Today, we honor that selfless love.
Happy Mother’s Day!
Marco Rubio
Celebrating Israel’s Independence, Honoring Our Special Relationship
By Marco Rubio
As we celebrate the 62nd anniversary of the establishment of the state of Israel, I add my voice to Israel’s millions of friends around the world in congratulating the nation and our Jewish friends. I also acknowledge that this day of celebration comes on the heels of Israel’s national day of remembrance for tens of thousands of fallen soldiers and victims of terrorism.
Israel’s footprint and impact on the world extends far beyond its borders. With less than one percent of the world’s population, Israel’s contributions to its own society and the world have been remarkable in such areas as medicine, science, defense, business, technology and education, among others.
Sadly, even as Jewish people around the world commemorate this day, the state of Israel continues its fight for survival and existence. On a daily basis, they struggle to build a homeland for all Jewish people, and for the right to live in peace.
Israel is a vigorous and true democracy, an anomaly in the Middle East, and one that has the right to secure and defend her borders. Israel and the United States have a long history of cooperation and friendship, but I have grave concerns about the direction of current U.S. policy towards Israel. The growing alienation of Israel has adverse consequences for the U.S., Israel and the world, as our mutual enemies are emboldened by any signs that Israel does not have our full support.
This is especially the case with the Iranian regime, which poses the most serious threats to global security today. In addition to being led by a maniacal tyrant who denies the Holocaust, Iran’s leaders continue pursuing nuclear capabilities in defiance of the international community. This threatens the very existence of Israel and threatens the security of the United States. Recently, the U.S. Department of Defense indicated that by 2015 Iran may have the ability to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile that reaches the United States. In addition, Iran continues to support terrorism targeting the people of Israel and our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. For example, the Hamas terrorist organization, with Iranian support, uses Gaza as a base to wage its campaign of terror against Israel.
And recently, Syria reportedly supplied Hezbollah terrorists with long range missiles. All of this threatens the existence of the nation of Israel and her people.
America’s leaders must commit to getting the United States back on a path of standing firmly alongside Israel. This means supporting Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state and its ability to defend its people against terror, including homicide bombings, rocket and mortar fire, and other attacks. Jerusalem should be the undivided capital of Israel, and the U.S. should work towards the goal of moving our Embassy there.
As Israel celebrates its independence today, we honor its proud history but also acknowledge the important challenges we must face together to ensure its lasting survival. I join millions around the world in expressing my solidarity with the Jewish people and wish them a joyful and blessed Yom Ha’atzmaut.
By Adam C. Smith
St. Petersburg Times
Thursday, April 8, 2010
When Marco Rubio announced Wednesday that he had raised a whopping $3.6 million over the past 90 days, it was another game-changer in the Republican U.S. Senate primary.
This just a day after Gov. Charlie Crist bucked fellow Republicans and vetoed an elections bill he was expected to sign — and the same day he reversed course and hinted he might veto a teacher tenure bill favored by Jeb Bush and other Republican leaders. On top of that, Crist plans to call the Legislature into special session this summer to overhaul state ethics laws — an issue Republican leadership has avoided this year.
It all fed a surge in speculation that Crist is positioning himself to drop out of the Republican primary and run instead as an independent.
“I tended to think, ‘he isn’t going to run as an independent.’ But with every passing day, I become more convinced he’ll run as an independent,” said Republican consultant David Johnson of Tallahassee. “You’ve got several more pieces of legislation. He vetoed the leadership funds (elections) bill. And if he vetoes teacher tenure and there are others he vetoes that his Republican colleagues want, then it’s clear which way he’s heading.”
Already trailing former House Speaker Rubio in the polls by double digits, Crist allies had long counted on him to have an overwhelming financial advantage. But money has started gushing into the Rubio campaign — 51,000 donors to date averaging contributions of under $100 — and Crist no longer can count on having a much bigger campaign account.
Crist has not reported how much he raised so far this year, though his totals have steadily dropped each quarter while Rubio’s have risen, with his latest fundraising tally more than double his previous quarter. At the start of the year, Rubio had about $2 million available for the primary compared with $5 million for Crist.
“I continue to be humbled and energized by the outpouring of support we’re receiving from voters who deserve leaders willing to defend the principles that have made America an exceptional nation,” Rubio said Wednesday, hailing grass roots supporters “stepping up to ensure we have the resources needed to promote this message throughout Florida.”
A growing number of political professionals are now doubting Crist’s ability to win the Aug. 24 Republican primary, and a number of polls have suggested his best shot could be running with no party affiliation, rather than for the GOP nomination.
Crist has previously denied he’s thinking about running as an independent, and on Wednesday he brushed off the question.
“I’m focused on the session,” the governor said. “I’m focused on these bills that are pending and coming up shortly. That’s where my focus is, there will be time for other things later.”
Under Florida law, Crist has to declare whether he’s running for the Republican nomination or as an independent by April 30. Unlike Sen. Joe Lieberman in Connecticut, Crist could not lose the GOP primary and then declare himself an independent or third-party candidate.
Under the independent-run scenario, Crist could remain a registered Republican but file paperwork declaring himself running as an independent or no party affiliation candidate. He could keep most of the money he has raised to date and use it for the general election, rather than a primary election. He wouldn’t even be required to comply with refund requests from donors.
Then the major U.S. Senate candidates would likely be Democrat Kendrick Meek of Miami, Republican Rubio and Crist. Garnering just 35 percent of the vote could be enough to win.
“I’m convinced he’s considering it,” said Democratic strategist Steve Schale, noting how Crist has certainly been fueling the speculation lately, bucking priorities of Republican legislative leaders and asking for the U.S. Attorney’s Office to investigate potentially illegal activity in the state GOP.
If anyone could win as an independent Crist could, Schale noted on his blog Wednesday, but it would be a tough path: “Even if Crist got 25 percent of the Republican and Democratic vote, and a whopping 60 percent of independents (with Meek/Rubio splitting the rest), he would only get to 31 percent, several points short of a win number.”
Running as an independent could also feed into the frequent criticism of Crist that he’s driven by self-interest rather than principle.
“It’s difficult this late in the game because I think you run the risk that even some independents and some Democrats would question how political the decision is,” said Republican strategist Sally Bradshaw. “We’re in a climate where voters are looking for people who do what they say and say what they mean.”
Republican state Sen. Mike Fasano of New Port Richey, a strong Crist supporter, said Crist running in anything other than the Republican Senate primary is “not even on the table and has never been on the table.”
“I don’t understand why people would have any second thoughts about Charlie Crist running for the Republican nomination just because he doesn’t support every idea or policy coming out of the Florida Legislature,” Fasano said. “Thankfully we do have someone challenging the Legislature at times.”
Johnson, the Republican consultant, said that if Crist decides to run as an independent, it would be the political equivalent of conquistador Hernando Cortez’s burning of his ships when he landed in Mexico.
“There is no turning back,” Johnson said. “This is Florida. Who would have thought six months ago that we would even be talking about this. He has three weeks to decide what he’s going to be. I’m not saying he can’t beat Marco. There’s a lot of ball to be played.”
Human Events
Scrap ObamaCare Today
By Marco Rubio
Monday, 3/15/2010
In the past year, citizens across America have made their opinions clear regarding ObamaCare. The President’s health care proposal is a deeply flawed plan that should be scrapped entirely in favor of a truly bipartisan approach that pursues step-by-step reforms. It’s absolutely alarming Charlie Crist disagrees and has said he would not scrap this bill and process.
Again and again, Governor Crist has clearly demonstrated he can’t be trusted to go to Washington and stand up to the agenda of President Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi. At this critical moment in the health care debate, Charlie Crist has said he would be doing exactly what he did with the stimulus – undercutting Republicans and looking to cut a deal. If I were in the Senate today, I would be a voice for scrapping this process altogether and starting anew. The differences between me and Charlie Crist can’t be clearer.
In terms of both policy and process, this health care bill has been fundamentally flawed since the start. Now, desperate to ram through a health care bill at any cost, President Obama and his allies are preparing to use reconciliation, which would prove once and for all their inability and unwillingness to fix Washington and responsibly manage the people’s business. Going down this road will also make clear that the poetry and promises of 2008’s campaign have completely evaporated and given way to the dark side of Washington’s politics as usual.
By using reconciliation as their final “Hail Mary” attempt, President Obama and Congressional liberals will show it doesn’t matter to them what the American people have said at ballot boxes in Massachusetts, Virginia and New Jersey, as well as town halls, tea parties and other forums during the past year. In Florida, my own travels have confirmed my thoughts and feelings that this health care bill and the process behind it has been misguided and would threaten high quality health care delivery and the long-term future of America’s free market system.
Free market principles have underpinned America’s success since our founding, which is why Washington’s assault on them is dangerous and must end. At this time of record unemployment, the first needed step towards creating jobs and lasting economic growth is for Washington policymakers to cease their assault on the free market, starting with a scrapping of the current health care proposal on the table.
Orlando Sentinel
Dockery, Rubio Win Big In Tea Party Straw Poll
Monday, 2/15/2010
The Orlando Tea Party attracted a decent crowd to its Saturday Hob Nob at City Hall Plaza, and their straw poll — overseen by Supervisor of Elections Bill Cowles — drew as many as 416 votes in the U.S. Senate race. …
U.S. Senator: Marco Rubio won big with 66.4 percent, compared to Gov. Charlie Crist’s 4.1 percent.
U.S. SENATE
Marco Rubio: 277 (66.6%)
Charlie Crist: 17 (4.1%)
BACKGROUND: RUBIO’S STRAW POLL RECORD (23-0)
-Pasco County REC: 73-9 (June 2009)
-Lee County REC: 60-11 (July 2009)
-Highlands County REC: 75-1 (July 2009)
-Bay County REC: 23-2 (August 2009)
-Jefferson County REC: 87 Percent (August 2009)
-Florida Federation of College Republicans: 19-6 (August 2009)
-Republican Women’s Club of Duval Federated: 65-4 (September 2009)
-Gilchrist County REC: 11-1 (September 2009)
-Hernando County REC: 46-0 (September 2009)
-Northwest Orange Republican Women Federation: 49-3 (September 2009)
-Marion County REC: 40-8 (September 2009)
-Palm Beach County REC: 90-17 (October 2009)
-Okaloosa County REC: 86-4 (November 2009)
-Republican Club of South Sarasota County: 70-17 Percent (November 2009)
-Orange County Republican Party Hob Nob: 211-27 (November 2009)
-Pinellas County REC: 106-54 (January 2010)
-Okeechobee County REC: 10-0 (January 2010)
-Florida Federation of College Republicans: 71 percent (January 2010)
-Republican Business Council of North Central Florida: 141-12 (January 2010)
-Capital Conservatives: 40-0 (February 2010)
-Capital City Republican Club: 71-15 (February 2010)
-Brevard County GOP: 321-45 (February 2010)
-Orlando Tea Party: 277-17 (February 2010)
With CPAC next Thursday, Rubio discusses the state of the race
National Review Online
Rubio Rises
By Robert Costa
2/11/2010
Marco Rubio’s Senate campaign is surging. In the past ten days, Rubio, the former Florida House speaker challenging Gov. Charlie Crist in the GOP primary, has raised $860,000. He is also building a lead in the polls — Rasmussen’s latest survey gives Rubio a twelve-point edge over Crist. And he’s doing it all without the support of the national party.
“We’re living in an unprecedented time where a large number of people that have never participated in politics are paying attention,” Rubio tells National Review Online. “They realize that we’re going to make some decisions over the next few years that will determine the very identity of our country. Given the environment, I think it has become a lot easier to get people to pay attention and to take action. That’s the great challenge of 2010: Can we take this motivation that exists out there to stand up to the agenda that’s coming out of Washington and turn it into action? Right now that action is contributing to campaigns like mine. We’ve tried to harness that and feel good about what we’ve been able to accomplish so far.”
Rubio says the stakes this year are high and about more than one party beating another. “This election is about more than Republicans versus Democrats or liberals versus conservatives. It is a choice about the very essence of what this country is going to be like. Are we going to continue to be a place of limited government, free enterprise, and personal liberty? Or, are we going to become a country like so many around the world where the government dominates every sector of society? The problem is that the people in charge right now in Washington don’t believe in limited government or in the free-enterprise system. They don’t support it. They see it as something that creates pockets of prosperity, but, by and large, think it is unfair and want to change it. They want the U.S. to move away from that. They won’t campaign on that, of course, because they know they won’t get elected if they say it, but that’s exactly what they want to do, and they’re using this downturn in the economy as an excuse.”
So is Rubio a man of the tea party? “I certainly identify with the movement and the energy that exists out there,” he says. “From the 9/12 movement to people showing up to marches across the country, there is a burst of energy out around America. There are so many different manifestations. The tea party is by far the most effective and highest profile example of that energy, but it’s just part of something much bigger — people engaging in the process because they disagree with the agenda in Washington and want an alternative.”
With all of his success as a conservative insurgent, has anyone from the GOP establishment offered a mea culpa? “Not really,” Rubio says. “At the time, when they decided not to endorse me, the sentiment in the party was that the way for Republicans to win in the future is to behave more like Democrats. They looked at Charlie Crist and saw that he fit that mold. Famous people who had won statewide always win, they thought, so they lined up with him. Looking back, a lot of things would be different if they knew then what they know now.”
Next week, Rubio will travel to Washington to speak at CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference. He says his speech will introduce his campaign to voters across the country, and “help to motivate other conservatives running for office.” He’ll also do some fundraising and is planning to sit down for numerous television interviews. Fox News, he notes, has already agreed to host a debate between him and Crist in March, but Crist has not yet responded to the invitation.
St. Petersburg Times
A Straw Poll That Matters More Than Most?
By Adam Smith
Monday, 2/8/2010
The Brevard County GOP held a straw poll Friday night that arguably is more reflective of the overall GOP electorate than other GOP straw polls in recent months, where voting was limited to executive committee members. In Brevard’s case, we’re told only about one in four voters were executive committee members. The results only include the top two vote-getters:
U.S. SENATE: Marco Rubio: 321, Charlie Crist: 45
Marion County, Fla. – The Republican Business Council of North Central Florida is very pleased to post the results of their January 27th, 2010 written ballot Straw Poll presented at their Luncheon Event in Ocala.
Sam McConnell, President of the organization, noted: “It was certainly an intriguing result, considering how lopsided the voting was in every State Office. The voting results between Rubio and Crist for the U.S. Senate Seat were the most astounding at 141 to 12, respectively. The RBC organization leadership was pleasantly surprised with the response by our attendees.”
The vote was impartially conducted to have a beginning of the year measurement from our meeting attendees. The RBC will be conducting other Preferred Election Polls all throughout the 2010 Election Year as well as a Statewide Debate Forum for Republican Candidates on July 31st.
The results are as follows:
U.S. Senate race:
- Marco Rubio: 141 votes
- Governor Charlie Crist: 12 votes
Not all of the luncheon’s 232 attendees voted, and 153 was the largest number of votes cast in any one category. The Republican Business Council’s January luncheon featured Randy Berridge, president of the Florida High Tech Corridor Council and Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottcamp, candidate for Florida Attorney General.
For more information on the Republican Business Council, please visit the website.
Tallahassee Democrat
Leon Republicans Back Rubio In Latest Straw Poll
By Bill Cotterell
Wednesday, 2/3/10
Republican Marco Rubio scored another straw-ballot victory today at a luncheon of the politically savvy Capital City Republican Club.
Rubio got 71 votes to 15 for Crist in a test of support in the GOP primary for the U.S. Senate nomination. Rubio campaign spokesman Alex Burgos called it “more good news from the grass roots.”
Crist earlier today said he puts little stock in straw ballots. He expressed confidence about the Aug. 24 primary.
What, Crist was asked, did he think of the string of straw polls around the state that have overwhelmingly supported Rubio?
“Not a lot, as I’ve said before,” Crist said. “You know, the only poll that matters is Election Day, and I can’t wait for it.”
The primary is Aug. 24.
Rubio has run up a long, unbroken string of straw-ballot wins in county Republican meetings and GOP luncheon clubs across the state.
Crist has not won any. Last week, a statewide poll showed Rubio in the lead 47-44 in the GOP race. That’s a huge reversal from the early days of the race. In June, the same pollster had Crist ahead 54-23. The change has come as Florida’s unemployment has worsened and Rubio’s more-conservative-than-thou message has resonated.
Early this week, the non-partisan Capital Conservatives club gave Rubio a 40-0 win in another straw ballot.