Marvan Buren
Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2016
- Messages
- 79
- Reaction score
- 31
- Location
- New Jersey
- Gender
- Undisclosed
- Political Leaning
- Slightly Liberal
For Conservatives, 2016 looks hopeless. Ted Cruz was only half right when he said that Donald Trump is the only Republican who would lose to Hillary Clinton. The half that he got wrong is that Cruz is the other Republican who would lose. And while an open convention could theoretically nominate anyone, Trump and Cruz are currently the only two candidates who could be perceived as legitimate. Anyone else would have too big a hill to climb even to get most of his own party to support him.
But all of this could change if John Kasich, took the bold step TODAY, to announce that if he is nominated, Marco Rubio will be his VP. By himself, Kasich is far behind the two leaders but if, in the mind of the public, his delegates are added to the ones won by Rubio, he gets a lot closer. Now assume that with his new momentum, he wins several more states, including California. Suddenly, he is no less legitimate than the others.
A Kasich-Rubio ticket has always been the most obvious pathway to putting a Republican in the White House. Kasich’s experience and success combined with Rubio’s charisma, oratorical skills and life story is hard to beat. During the campaign Kasich can continue to take the high road in laying out his plans for the future while Rubio who has already proven that he knows how to attack, will have his back. And of course, they represent Ohio and Florida, the two purple states Republicans must win to be successful in November.
The reason this should happen is that neither has anything to lose. Kasich has no pathway to the nomination without Rubio and Rubio has no job to go back to from which he can build a 2020 campaign. Yes, he could hope that Cruz gets the nomination and selects him for VP, but what good would that do since Cruz is, after all, one of the two Republicans who would lose to Clinton.
Realistically, though, for the Kasich / Rubio ticket to have a chance, they would need to reach out to the Conservative wing which, to date, has opposed them. For this, Kasich will need to take a second bold step. That step would be to offer the Attorney General position to Ted Cruz with a promise that he will have a major say in the selection of Supreme Court justices. It would be an offer that Cruz, who needs something on his resume besides being an obstructionist Senator, couldn’t refuse - especially given the alternative of Hillary Clinton picking Antonin Scalia's replacement.
There is probably nothing that can be offered to Trump and his supporters but even without them, the Dream ticket, with Cruz campaigning hard for them, would be a very formidable opponent for Clinton.
Does Kasich have the courage to take these bold steps? If not, he doesn’t deserve to be President. If so, then Rubio’s suspension of his campaign will be seen by Republicans as the darkness before the light. And it will be seen by Hillary Clinton as her worst nightmare coming true.
But all of this could change if John Kasich, took the bold step TODAY, to announce that if he is nominated, Marco Rubio will be his VP. By himself, Kasich is far behind the two leaders but if, in the mind of the public, his delegates are added to the ones won by Rubio, he gets a lot closer. Now assume that with his new momentum, he wins several more states, including California. Suddenly, he is no less legitimate than the others.
A Kasich-Rubio ticket has always been the most obvious pathway to putting a Republican in the White House. Kasich’s experience and success combined with Rubio’s charisma, oratorical skills and life story is hard to beat. During the campaign Kasich can continue to take the high road in laying out his plans for the future while Rubio who has already proven that he knows how to attack, will have his back. And of course, they represent Ohio and Florida, the two purple states Republicans must win to be successful in November.
The reason this should happen is that neither has anything to lose. Kasich has no pathway to the nomination without Rubio and Rubio has no job to go back to from which he can build a 2020 campaign. Yes, he could hope that Cruz gets the nomination and selects him for VP, but what good would that do since Cruz is, after all, one of the two Republicans who would lose to Clinton.
Realistically, though, for the Kasich / Rubio ticket to have a chance, they would need to reach out to the Conservative wing which, to date, has opposed them. For this, Kasich will need to take a second bold step. That step would be to offer the Attorney General position to Ted Cruz with a promise that he will have a major say in the selection of Supreme Court justices. It would be an offer that Cruz, who needs something on his resume besides being an obstructionist Senator, couldn’t refuse - especially given the alternative of Hillary Clinton picking Antonin Scalia's replacement.
There is probably nothing that can be offered to Trump and his supporters but even without them, the Dream ticket, with Cruz campaigning hard for them, would be a very formidable opponent for Clinton.
Does Kasich have the courage to take these bold steps? If not, he doesn’t deserve to be President. If so, then Rubio’s suspension of his campaign will be seen by Republicans as the darkness before the light. And it will be seen by Hillary Clinton as her worst nightmare coming true.