Critics may think Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., has some explaining to do
over an old Republican Party-issued charge card with a load of his
personal expenses on it, but whether this rises to the level of
“scandal,” is still up for debate.
It’s more like a tempest in a teapot, argue campaign strategists who spoke with FoxNews.com on Friday.
“If this is all (the other campaigns) are coming at him with, then he
is going to be in good shape,” offered Republican media analyst Pete
Snyder.
This week, Donald Trump raised the question of Rubio’s finances in a
scrum with the press, calling out his old “credit card” with the Florida
GOP specifically.
“All you have to do is look at his credit card. I mean, he is a
disaster with his credit cards,” Trump said during a news conference in
New York. “And I’ll tell you what: I love Florida. I’m in Florida all
the time, and for years I’ve been hearing that his credit cards are a
disaster.”
Trump is referring to claims that Rubio charged thousands of dollars
worth of personal expenses on his Republican Party-issued American
Express card during the time he was a GOP leader in the Florida House of
Representatives from 2005 to 2009. The party released detailed records
of his expenses from 2007 to 2009 years ago, but there remains a gap in
what he expenses he might have put on the party’s tab in 2005 and 2006.
His campaign has promised to release those records in the coming weeks,
according to
The Washington Post.
For his part, Rubio has told the press that the party “never paid a
single personal expense of mine,” noting that since it was an American
Express card, he was required to pay the balance of his personal charges
back each month.
“If there was a personal expense, I paid it. If it was a Party
expense, the Party paid it. Now I recognize in hindsight I would do it
different to avoid confusion. But the Republican Party never paid a
single personal expense of mine,” he told Good Morning America Nov. 4.
Those charges, according to the
Tampa Bay Times,
which reviewed the available records in 2010, ranged from meals and
beverages to “supplies” at the local Apple store and a lumber company.
Rubio was questioned in 2010 about the $1,000 charge to fix his family’s
minivan -- he said it had been damaged at a political event. He was
also asked about charging travel expenses for a family reunion on the
card -- he explained he paid with the American Express by accident.
In total, records show he made $16,052 in personal charges.
The Florida Ethics Commission, looking into his expenses in 2012,
found no cause to charge him with a violation, but one inspector had
strong words. "The level of negligence exhibited by Respondent's
confusion between the (Republican Party of Florida) American Express
card and his personal MasterCard, together with his failure to recognize
the error when reviewing the months' statements, and his signature on
the reimbursement requests, is disturbing," the commission’s prosecutor
wrote.
It is not entirely clear whether Rubio’s spending ways were
sanctioned by the party or not. As the Washington Post’s Fact Checker
points out, the Florida GOP has made conflicting statements over the
years. On one hand, party spokesman Katy Gordon told the Tampa Bay paper
in 2010 that, "the RPOF American Express card is a corporate card and
is meant to be used for business expenses" and not personal expenses,
but a month later, she seemed to dial back, saying that personal
expenses were expected to be “paid through a reimbursement, or in some
cases directly to American Express."
Which is exactly what Rubio did, he claimed this week, lashing out at
Trump in the process. “I find ironic,” he said to Fox Friday morning,
“Donald Trump had four bankruptcies in his businesses … who is he to
talk to anyone about finances?”
Former Republican Rep. Joe Scarborough, who also served in the
Florida state house, said Friday that there were no “clear lines” in the
way Republican leaders were spending taxpayer money and the party’s
money in Florida in those days. Lawmakers were investigated, and at
least one of his friends went to jail. However, he doesn’t think the
Rubio story has legs in 2015.
“I’ve been hearing since 2010 that the other shoe was going to fall,”
Scarborough said in regards to Rubio’s charge card. “If the other shoe
is even going to fall, I have to say this is the longest five-year step
I’ve ever seen in my life. There is a lot of smoke but you never really
find the fire.”
That doesn’t mean that Rubio should ignore his critics, says Craig Shirley, conservative strategist and Reagan biographer.
“It will hurt him if he allows it to hurt him,” Shirley told
FoxNews.com. “Questions about your finances are inevitable. So if he
allows it to define him that is a problem. If he changes the subject and
mounts a counter offensive, it won’t become an issue.”
GOP strategist Mark Corallo says short of Rubio spending the party’s
money on luxuries, or worse, not repaying it, he doesn’t think the
voters will care much. If anything, they may empathize with Rubio as
another American debt holder.
“This is just typical political opposition research stuff,” said
Corallo. “And it’s being dumped early enough that it won’t have much
chance of hurting his chances of winning the nomination.”