This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jan/03/marco-rubio-hillary-clinton-donald-trump-fight-struggling-americans
The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Rubio makes it personal against Clinton as candidates tour New Hampshire | Rubio makes it personal against Clinton as candidates tour New Hampshire |
(about 1 hour later) | |
As Republicans entered the home stretch of selecting a candidate to win back the White House, Marco Rubio asked voters to envision a general election in which Hillary Clinton could “lecture” him on the lives of struggling Americans. | |
Related: Donald Trump says Hillary Clinton is 'constantly playing the woman card' | Related: Donald Trump says Hillary Clinton is 'constantly playing the woman card' |
Speaking on Sunday before a crowd of roughly 200 on the first stop of a swing through New Hampshire, which will hold the first primary in just over a month’s time, Rubio underscored the importance of what he called “one of most important elections in a generation”. | |
Clinton was also in the state on Sunday. Regardless of criticism sent her way by Rubio, Donald Trump and more in the Republican field, she largely stuck to her stump speech. | |
Rubio, who is among the top three Republicans in most national and state polls, focused his fire on the Democratic frontrunner. | |
“How is Hillary Clinton going to lecture me about people living paycheck to paycheck?” he asked, reviving the case he made for his candidacy in the first Republican presidential debate last summer and has often referred to since. | |
“I actually lived paycheck to paycheck. I grew up living paycheck to paycheck. I want to know how she’s going to lecture me on student loans, since I had one up until four years ago. How is she going to lecture me on how to raise children in the 21st century, when my wife and I are actually doing that?” | “I actually lived paycheck to paycheck. I grew up living paycheck to paycheck. I want to know how she’s going to lecture me on student loans, since I had one up until four years ago. How is she going to lecture me on how to raise children in the 21st century, when my wife and I are actually doing that?” |
Rubio, 44, launched his presidential campaign in April with a pitch rooted in his youth and a denunciation of “names of the past”. The jab was aimed not only against Clinton, the former senator and secretary of state, but also Jeb Bush, the son and brother of US presidents who then stood as the Republican frontrunner. | Rubio, 44, launched his presidential campaign in April with a pitch rooted in his youth and a denunciation of “names of the past”. The jab was aimed not only against Clinton, the former senator and secretary of state, but also Jeb Bush, the son and brother of US presidents who then stood as the Republican frontrunner. |
But the run-up to the election year was fraught with unexpected twists. On the Republican side, that mostly meant the rise of Trump – the bombastic real estate mogul who remains the frontrunner with only 27 days to go before the Iowa caucuses. | |
On the Democratic side, Clinton holds a commanding lead nationally but has been forced to contend with an unexpected threat posed by Bernie Sanders. | On the Democratic side, Clinton holds a commanding lead nationally but has been forced to contend with an unexpected threat posed by Bernie Sanders. |
“None of our candidates is a socialist,” Rubio quipped of the Vermont senator on Sunday, to laughs. | “None of our candidates is a socialist,” Rubio quipped of the Vermont senator on Sunday, to laughs. |
He nonetheless paid most attention to the frontrunner. | |
“We can’t afford to elect Hillary Clinton,” he said. “We can’t afford another four years like the last seven.” | |
The emphasis on Clinton marked something of a departure from Rubio’s stump speech over the last year, which has been based on national security and his personal story as the son of Cuban immigrants who worked as a bartender and a maid. | The emphasis on Clinton marked something of a departure from Rubio’s stump speech over the last year, which has been based on national security and his personal story as the son of Cuban immigrants who worked as a bartender and a maid. |
Although he has consistently criticized the Obama administration’s foreign policy – and tied Clinton to it in her role as his first-term secretary of state – in recent days Rubio has painted a portrait of an American society where critical values are at stake. | Although he has consistently criticized the Obama administration’s foreign policy – and tied Clinton to it in her role as his first-term secretary of state – in recent days Rubio has painted a portrait of an American society where critical values are at stake. |
On Sunday, he called the election “a referendum on our identity as a nation and as a people”. | On Sunday, he called the election “a referendum on our identity as a nation and as a people”. |
“If you’re pro-life, you’re waging a war on women. If you believe in traditional marriage, you’re labeled a bigot,” Rubio said. | “If you’re pro-life, you’re waging a war on women. If you believe in traditional marriage, you’re labeled a bigot,” Rubio said. |
“We live in a world where Isis is beheading people; we live in a world where Isis is burning people in cages. And yet we have a president who says climate change is the biggest threat facing America.” | “We live in a world where Isis is beheading people; we live in a world where Isis is burning people in cages. And yet we have a president who says climate change is the biggest threat facing America.” |
Clinton, speaking later at a town hall in Derry, less than an hour away, also discussed the culture wars. She warned that Republicans were intent on “turning back the clock”. | |
“I will defend a woman’s right to choose. I will protect Planned Parenthood,” she said to thunderous applause, adding that she would also work to expand LGBT rights and to protect marriage equality. | |
The former secretary of state also mocked what she said was “a particular fixation” among Republicans “on blaming President Obama and me for everything that happens in the world”. | |
“They’re back to the Crimean War and they’re on their way to the Roman Empire,” she said, drawing laughter from an audience of roughly 750. “The fact is, if you don’t have a foreign policy, you don’t have much to say except to try to criticize the other people,” Clinton said, before launching into an assessment of the Republican view on international conflict and the rise of terrorism. | |
“No1, send American troops anywhere at any time to do something and, while you’re at it, bomb something – preferably carpet bomb, whatever that means,” she said, the latter a reference to the Texas senator Ted Cruz, who has said he would “carpet bomb Isis into oblivion”. | |
Clinton largely stuck to her stump speech, laying out her proposals for issues ranging from providing debt-free college and allowing students to refinance loans at lower interest rates to tackling substance abuse and combating climate change through clean energy policies. | |
Republicans, she said, refused to even acknowledge that global warming was real, because they were beholden to special interests within the fossil fuel industry. | |
Related: Marco Rubio vows US troops will inflict 'humiliating defeats' on Isis | Related: Marco Rubio vows US troops will inflict 'humiliating defeats' on Isis |
Rubio, meanwhile, is well-positioned in New Hampshire, holding the second-place position in most polls, and he was well received by a crowd which awarded his speech a standing ovation and applauded in particular his push for a stronger military. | |
One voter did, however, point out that a Rubio-Clinton presidential debate would require the elimination of a more immediate threat. | One voter did, however, point out that a Rubio-Clinton presidential debate would require the elimination of a more immediate threat. |
“You’re going to have to beat Trump to have a shot at Hillary,” the man said, invoking the reality TV star whose support is nearly double that of Rubio’s in New Hampshire. | “You’re going to have to beat Trump to have a shot at Hillary,” the man said, invoking the reality TV star whose support is nearly double that of Rubio’s in New Hampshire. |
Rubio, rather than criticizing Trump, acknowledged how his chief opponent has so successfully channelled anger among voters to top a crowded field, which has fallen from 17 to 13 candidates. | Rubio, rather than criticizing Trump, acknowledged how his chief opponent has so successfully channelled anger among voters to top a crowded field, which has fallen from 17 to 13 candidates. |
“I think it’s a legitimate thing to be angry about the direction of our country. You should be upset,” Rubio said, adding that many of his colleagues in Congress spend more time working toward their next elections than representing the people they serve. | “I think it’s a legitimate thing to be angry about the direction of our country. You should be upset,” Rubio said, adding that many of his colleagues in Congress spend more time working toward their next elections than representing the people they serve. |
“They fall in love with Washington. They fall in love with the institutions,” he said. | “They fall in love with Washington. They fall in love with the institutions,” he said. |
Rubio himself has been criticized by opponents for his long absences from the Senate, where he has the worst attendance record of all 100 senators. | Rubio himself has been criticized by opponents for his long absences from the Senate, where he has the worst attendance record of all 100 senators. |
Rubio nonetheless urged voters in New Hampshire – which prides itself on its record in “picking presidents” – to bring home an election that has until now been marked by chaos. | Rubio nonetheless urged voters in New Hampshire – which prides itself on its record in “picking presidents” – to bring home an election that has until now been marked by chaos. |
“That’s why I’m here. Ultimately the choice is up to you,” he said. “It’s not up to the polls, and it’s not up to the commentators.” | “That’s why I’m here. Ultimately the choice is up to you,” he said. “It’s not up to the polls, and it’s not up to the commentators.” |