Marco Rubio, needing a breakout performance going into Tuesday's
Florida primary, changed tactics and used substance during Thursday
night's GOP debate to attack Donald Trump on several fronts – while
Trump, subdued and trying to look more presidential, held steady to the
campaign-tested themes that have made him the front-runner.
At the end of the two-hour debate, Trump — coming off
a string of primary wins — summed up the reality that Rubio and rivals
Ted Cruz and John Kasich face: that only “two of us” can get the
delegates to win – meaning Trump and Cruz — and “two of us” cannot,
referring to Rubio and Kasich.
“That is not meant to be a criticism … that’s just a mathematical fact,” Trump said, urging the party to “be smart and unify.”
The reminder amounted to just about the toughest
criticism of the night, at a debate where personal attacks were replaced
by more substantive policy discussion.
But Rubio, in particular, who drastically changed his
campaign approach in recent weeks to turn up the heat on Trump and even
mock his physical appearance, dialed all that back onstage Thursday –
after having said he regrets some of those personal insults.
Instead, he hit Trump on his defense of his “Islam
hates us" remarks, Trump's suggestion he'd do a deal with the
Palestinians and his vow that he wouldn't touch Social Security —
despite warnings it would start running out of money in two decades.
Trump's rivals, though, did not criticize him after
he was asked about whether his tone is encouraging violence at his
rallies, a reference to a recent incident where a protester was
punched.
“I hope not, I truly hope not," Trump said, saying he
does not "condone" violence but also that some protesters are "bad
dudes."
One of the most pointed debate clashes came over the
diplomatic thaw with Cuba — a huge issue in Florida, host of the CNN
debate and next week’s critical primary. Trump tangled with his rivals
as he claimed he’s “in the middle” on the issue.
Trump said “something” should take place after a decades-long freeze, but, “I want to get a much better deal.”
“Here’s a good deal,” Florida Sen. Rubio snapped back. “Cuba has free elections. Cuba stops putting people in jail.”
Whether Rubio’s performance is enough is the big
question. Pressure was already mounting on him to drop out, and Texas
Sen. Cruz added to that pressure Thursday night.
“There are only two of us who have a path to winning
the nomination -- Donald and myself,” Cruz said, while also jokingly
referring to Trump as the “son of a businessman.”
Rubio entered the debate clinging to life in the GOP
primary race after a string of losses. He depends on winning his home
state of Florida on Tuesday – but polls show Trump well ahead there, and
even if Rubio wins Florida, it’s still unclear whether he would have
any path to the nomination.
But he – along with his rivals – did their best Thursday to draw distinctions between them and Trump.
Oftentimes, Trump seemed to lean on his “art of the
deal” to explain his approach to global challenges. But it earned him
criticism from the others on stage.
Cruz hammered Trump for suggesting he’d be able to re-negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran.
“I will rip to shreds this catastrophic Iranian nuclear deal,” Cruz countered.
Trump also took heat from Rubio and others as he defended his claim that “Islam hates us.”
The Republican front-runner said there’s “tremendous
hatred” in the Muslim world and called for new laws to confront the
threat.
“We better expand our laws or we’re being a bunch of suckers, and they are laughing at us,” Trump said.
But Rubio and Cruz both said “of course” they would
not want to allow the targeting of family members of terror targets, as
Trump has called for. And they chided him for his remarks.
“The answer is not scream all Muslims bad,” Cruz said.
“The problem is presidents can’t just say whatever
they want,” Rubio said. “I’m not interested in being politically
correct. … I’m interested in being correct.”
Trump’s rivals noted America must work with other Muslim nations to confront the ISIS threat.
Trump also took heat for saying he’d try to do a deal with the Palestinians, as well as the Israelis.
For the most part, Trump and his three Republican
presidential rivals held their personal fire Thursday night during their
last debate before next Tuesday's primary in Florida – which votes
alongside four other states.
Trump even remarked on the subdued tone: “So far I cannot believe how civil it’s been up here.”
"I think it was good that we had a substantive
debate," Cruz told Fox News' Megyn Kelly late Wednesday. "The last two
debates were pretty ridiculous [and] I was glad to see that nonsense
ending."
Ohio Gov. Kasich also stressed at the debate that he’s run an “unwavering positive campaign” all along.
But on the domestic front, they did battle on the
best way to save Social Security -- with Trump breaking from his
competition by saying he'd leave it alone despite warnings it would
start running out of money in two decades.
“I will do everything in my power not to touch Social
Security,” Trump said. He said he’d instead get rid of waste, fraud and
abuse — including by ensuring the government bids out contracts.
Rubio, though, said, “You’re still going to have
hundreds of billions of dollars of deficit that you’re going to have to
make up.” He called for gradually raising the retirement age to 70.
Cruz echoed that call, saying the program is “careening toward insolvency.”
“We need to see political courage to take this on and save and strengthen Social Security,” he said.
Kasich also called for changes, though not necessarily to the retirement age.
Trump, meanwhile, openly discussed his plan to hit pause on green cards.
“I would say a minimum of one year, maybe two years,” Trump said.
As Trump consolidates support and builds his delegate
lead, though, he kicked off the debate with a pointed message to the
so-called “Republican establishment,” effectively telling them to get on
board with his campaign.
He started his opening statement by claiming his
campaign is bringing in Democrats, independents and others in huge
numbers to the polls.
“The Republican establishment, or whatever you want
to call it, should embrace what’s happening,” he said, addressing
tension between his campaign and senior GOP leaders. “We are going to
beat the Democrats.”
The candidates faced off ahead of next week’s
critical primaries in five states – including the valuable contests in
Ohio and Florida, where the winner of each will take home all delegates
at stake. Front-runner Trump is riding high after notching three more
victories this past Tuesday, and is threatening to sideline his
remaining rivals next week.
Pressure is highest on Rubio and Kasich, who each
have vowed to win their home states; doing so widely is seen as
essential for them to stay in the race. Meanwhile, Cruz is positioning
himself as the best Trump alternative and the only candidate who could
still defeat him.
He was buoyed Wednesday by the endorsement of former candidate Carly Fiorina.
Trump, though, is set to receive a significant
endorsement of his own from an ex-candidate, Ben Carson – who, according
to sources, plans to announce his support for Trump on Friday.