A Rubio Rebuke

Senator Marco Rubio, the Republican presidential candidate from Florida, may be frustrated that his campaign is lacking traction, but there is no excuse for him to say that the president has "no class." His comment is a feeble attempt to get attention because he is lagging behind.
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AMES, IA - JULY 18: Republican presidential hopeful Senator Marco Rubio Florida fields questions at The Family Leadership Summit at Stephens Auditorium on July 18, 2015 in Ames, Iowa. According to the organizers the purpose of The Family Leadership Summit is to inspire, motivate, and educate conservatives. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
AMES, IA - JULY 18: Republican presidential hopeful Senator Marco Rubio Florida fields questions at The Family Leadership Summit at Stephens Auditorium on July 18, 2015 in Ames, Iowa. According to the organizers the purpose of The Family Leadership Summit is to inspire, motivate, and educate conservatives. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Senator Marco Rubio, the Republican presidential candidate from Florida, may be frustrated that his campaign is lacking traction, but there is no excuse for him to say that the president has "no class." His comment is a feeble attempt to get attention because he is lagging behind the frontrunners, especially Donald Trump.

Rubio made the comment on Fox News this week in the context of an answer about Donald Trump's campaign. "It's important we have--to conduct the presidency, it has to be done in a dignified way, with a level of class," he said. "I don't think the way he's behaved over the last few weeks is either dignified or worthy of office he seeks."

But then Rubio continued with an attack on President Barack Obama. "We already have a president now that has no class," Rubio sputtered. "I mean, we have a president now that does selfie-stick videos, that invites YouTube stars there, people who eat cereal out of a bathtub... he goes on comedy shows to talk about something as serious as Iran. The list goes on and on."

Rubio sounded more like a high school freshman with an inferiority complex, or, at least, a candidate who is deeply discouraged with his poor performance among Republican presidential candidates in recent polls. The fact that he would say such an outrageous thing about President Obama shows that he is only interested in scoring political points.

When it comes to scoring political points among Republicans, nothing is an easier target than the nuclear deal with Iran that Congress is in the process of reviewing. At a hearing on Capitol Hill Thursday, Rubio took an aggressive tone with the lead U.S. negotiator, Secretary of State John Kerry. Rubio said that a new president would be in his or her rights to rip up the whole agreement.

"It's important for the world and especially Iran to understand that this is a deal whose survival is not guaranteed beyond the term of the current president," Rubio said--clearly threatening what he may do should he become president. "Even if this deal narrowly avoids congressional defeat, the Iranian regime and world should know this deal is your deal with Iran, meaning yours -- this administration -- and the next president is under no legal or moral obligation to live up to it," Rubio continued. "The deal can go away the day president Obama leaves office."

The Iran nuclear deal, agreed to on July 14 by the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, France, plus Germany (P5 Plus 1), calls for Iran to roll back its existing nuclear program in exchange for relief from sanctions. The UN Security Council approved the agreement last week, which puts in place a rigorous verification process. If Iran violates the agreement, an automatic "snap back" provision kicks in that would reinstate sanctions on Iran.

While Americans are skeptical about Iran, a majority of those asked in a recent Washington Post/ABC poll support the agreement. But in calling for Congress to vote against the agreement Rubio has repeatedly said that a majority of Americans are against it. Oops. Congress may vote the agreement down, but the President has said he will veto such a congressional action. In the end, it is likely the president will eke out enough votes to uphold the agreement.

Rubio's position that "The deal can go away the day President Obama leaves office" is silly, presuming Iran lives up to its side of the bargain. Why would a President Rubio cancel an agreement that is working and risk alienating the U.S. from its allies? It would be far better for him to take the position that, if elected president, he would do a better job of enforcing the agreement than his Democratic opponent. Of course, saying he'd rip it up makes a better soundbite that appeals to the conservative base of the party.

Rubio has stumbled before. In March of this year he told Fox News that it was not a mistake to invade Iraq in 2003, noting, "the world is a better place because Saddam Hussein doesn't run Iraq." But when asked in a May interview at the Council on Foreign Relations if he would have favored the Iraqi invasion if he knew there were no weapons of mass destruction, Rubio replied, "not only would I have not been in favor of it, President Bush would not have been in favor of it." Two different audiences, two different answers. And Rubio has also changed his position on immigration under pressure from conservatives.

Perhaps realizing that his ridiculous slander that President Obama has "no class" was a bit too much, Rubio backtracked a bit in an interview Thursday with Fox News' Bret Baier. After Rubio noted that the president is a great father and husband but was divisive, Baier asked, "So you stand by that statement that the president has no class?"

Rubio responded, "I think, on the major issues of our time, he has not conducted himself of the dignity of worthy of that was office. Demonization of political opponents and divisions in America which have made it harder for us to solve our problems, and have poisoned the political environment as a result." Does Rubio think most Americans are fools?

Republican leaders met on the day of President Obama's first inauguration and plotted how they were going to make him a one-term president. Republican Congressman Joe Wilson, of South Carolina, yelled "you lie" to the president in a speech before a joint session of Congress nine months after he took office. For years Republicans questioned whether the president was born in the United States. Republicans attacked the president's health care law with distortions and lies, like saying it called for death panels. In 2009, former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich denounced what he called Obama's "Kenyan anti-colonial behavior." Tea Party inspired Republican members of Congress shut the federal government down in 2013 because they wanted deeper budget cuts and the repeal of Obamacare. Arizona's Republican Governor Jan Brewer waved her finger at President Obama on an airport tarmac in early 2012.

Throughout his tenure President Obama has been subject to disrespectful, and sometimes racist, attacks from the right. A recent example is Rubio's swipe against the president that he has "no class." But all this attack does is reveal that Rubio is a sanctimonious hypocrite who will say anything to get ahead.

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