The rivalry between Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio flared Tuesday at the
final Republican primary debate of the year, as all the leading GOP
candidates battled to show their tough-on-terror credentials.
Donald Trump, as in past debates, sparred sharply with his rivals on
stage over his controversial proposals, notably his call to ban Muslims
from entering the country. But the changing dynamics in the race
appeared to drive frequent clashes between the senators from Texas and
Florida – who are now battling to be the Trump alternative in the race
as Ben Carson slides in the polls.
With the terror attacks in
Paris and San Bernardino, Calif., refocusing the race squarely on
security issues, Cruz from the outset tried to sound a tough message
against radical Islam.
“We will utterly destroy ISIS,” Cruz
vowed, later adding: “ISIS and radical Islamic terrorism will face no
more determined foe than I will be.”
But he repeatedly was
challenged by Rubio over his Senate positions – including for
legislation reining in NSA metadata collection. Rubio accused Cruz of
helping take away a “valuable tool” for security officials, while Cruz
said: “Marco knows what he’s saying isn’t true.”
Rubio later
cited a budget vote by Cruz to say: “You can’t carpet bomb ISIS if you
don’t have planes and bombs to attack them with.”
New Jersey
Gov. Chris Christie used the arguing to contrast his own executive
experience against the senators’ legislative history. He described their
jobs as “endless debates about how many angels on the head of a pin
from people who have never had to make a consequential decision.”
But Rubio and Cruz returned to the fray later on as they tried to cast
each other as soft on illegal immigration. “I led the fight against
[Rubio’s] legalization-amnesty bill,” Cruz charged.
Some
analysts had expected the tensions Tuesday to flare between Trump and
Cruz, as the Texas senator surpasses Trump in Iowa polls and is surging
nationally. But Cruz avoided taking on Trump in favor of Rubio – he even
jokingly backed Trump’s plan to build a border wall.
“We will build a wall that works, and I’ll get Donald Trump to pay for it,” Cruz said.
Later on, Trump backed off comments where he said Cruz acted in
Congress like “a bit of a maniac.” Trump said Tuesday, “He’s just fine,
don’t worry about it.”
Instead, Trump took heat mostly from
former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who slammed Trump’s plan to ban Muslims
from entering the United States as “not a serious proposal.”
“He’s a chaos candidate, and he’d be a chaos president,” Bush said.
Trump fired back that “Jeb doesn’t really believe I’m unhinged” and only went after him because he’s “failed in this campaign.”
The Trump-Bush acrimony simmered throughout the debate, with Bush later
telling Trump he can’t “insult your way to the presidency,” and Trump
once again reminding Bush that his poll numbers have plummeted while
Trump is leading.
Whether Bush’s attacks will help the
struggling candidate remains to be seen. Perhaps more consequential is
whether Rubio or Cruz can present himself as more capable of taking on
the country’s security challenges.
All the leading candidates,
though, focused on the terror threat throughout the CNN-hosted primary
debate Tuesday night in Las Vegas – an event held just hours after Los
Angeles closed its school system over a terror threat.
Citing
that closure, which is now thought to have been prompted by a hoax
threat, Christie said children will be going back to school filled with
anxiety. And he said the country’s overall security environment has been
hurt by President Obama and Hillary Clinton’s policies.
“America has been betrayed,” he said.
Christie cited his experience as a federal prosecutor, and governor, in
saying that under a Christie presidency, “America will be safe.”
Carson also dismissed “PC” concerns about some of his own plans for taking on the terror threat.
“We are at war … We need to be on a war footing,” Carson said, while
later making an argument against toppling foreign dictators. He compared
the situation to being on a plane, where passengers in an emergency are
advised to use oxygen masks themselves before helping others.
“We need oxygen right now,” Carson said, adding the government needs to
think of the needs of the American people before solving everyone else’s
problems.
Trump also sparred at times with other lower-polling candidates.
As before, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul questioned Trump’s policy proposals,
including to restrict the Internet to clamp down on ISIS’ social media
use. “Do you believe in the Constitution?” Paul said of Trump
supporters. Trump clarified he’s only talking about restricting the
Internet in parts of Iraq and Syria.
And when Trump suggested
that the money spent toppling Mideast dictators could have been better
spent on building America’s roads and bridges, former HP CEO Carly
Fiorina compared him to Obama.
“That’s exactly what President Obama has said. I’m amazed to hear that from a Republican presidential candidate,” she said.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich also took issue with suggestions from Cruz and
Trump that the priority in Syria is not to remove Bashar Assad.
“We can’t back off of this,” Kasich said. “He must go.”
CNN also hosted a debate Tuesday for the second-tier GOP candidates --
former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick
Santorum, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and former New York Gov.
George Pataki. Graham was particularly critical of Trump’s Muslim ban
plan at that debate, accusing him of declaring war on Islam and
delivering a “coup” for ISIS.