Political Hotsheet
By

Leigh Ann Caldwell /

CBS News/ August 31, 2012, 2:29 AM

Rubio: Romney will bring a new beginning

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, R-Fla., speaks during the final day of the Republican National Convention at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on August 30, 2012 in Tampa, Florida.

/ Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

(CBS News) TAMPA, Fla. - Florida Senator Marco Rubio introduced Mitt Romney at the Republican National Convention Thursday as the man who will ensure the United States continues to be the land of opportunity and that "new beginnings" are possible.

"Yes, we live in a troubled time. But the story of those who came before us, reminds us that America has always been about new beginnings," Rubio said to an attentive and packed arena.

Rubio took to the stage to rousing applause. He laid out the case for a Romney presidency, which he said would be about opportunity and progress. He said a Romney presidency would reverse the difficult economic times of the past three-and-a-half years under President Obama, whom he called a good person but "a bad president."

Invoking the president's current campaign slogan "forward," Rubio said the president's policies of government expansion, including the 2009 stimulus and the health care law, won't create economic potential. And turning the president's oft-spoken criticism against Romney against him, Rubio said the president's ideas would move the country "backwards."

"These ideas don't move us forward, they take us backwards," he said.

"These are old, big government ideas," argued the freshman senator, who won election in 2010 with Tea Party support. "Ideas that people come to America to get away from."

(Watch the full speech at left)

"Mitt Romney knows America's prosperity didn't happen because our government simply spent more. It happened because our people used their own money to open a business," he added.

Rubio is considered a rising star in the Republican Party and Romney said he was vetted as a potential running mate. His Cuban-American heritage represents the diversity the Republican Party seeks and needs as the Hispanic population continues to grow. Rubio detailed his background as a young immigrant child with parents who sacrificed to ensure his success.

Rubio did not discuss the topic of immigration, a divisive issue in the Republican Party that backs stricter immigration laws; Rubio did, however, talk about his family's immigration to the United States from Cuba. He also juxtaposed life in other countries that, he says, restrict upward mobility with possibility in the United States.

Rubio said his father, a native Spanish speaker, ingrained in him a message of opportunity. "In this country, you will be able to accomplish all the things we never could."

"Many nights I heard my father's keys jingling at the door as he came home after another 16-hour day. Many mornings, I woke up just as my mother got home from the overnight shift at K-Mart," he he added.

"That's not just my story. That's our story," Rubio said, adding that personal hardship leads to personal success and "an exceptional America."

Attempting to break down the perception that Romney is a wealthy man who had everything handed to him, Rubio said Romney's father "struggled through poverty and the great depression" but became successful. (Romney's father, George Romney, ran American Motors in the 1950s and was governor of Michigan in the 1960s. He also ran for president but failed to win the Republican nomination during the 1968 election.)

Rubio translated his childhood experiences into the experiences of many Americans who's mother "struggled to give you what she never had," the baby boomer who can't afford to retire or the college graduate who can't find a job. He said Romney can create a life that's "better than it's ever been."

"Do we want our children to inherit our hopes and dreams, or do we want them to inherit our problems?" Rubio asked. "And that is what we are deciding this election."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
38 Comments Add a Comment
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SeaHal says:
Anyone really want 4 more years of this mess and not even a plan to change direction!
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SeaHal says:
Anybody really want 4 more years of this mess. No plans for chance just the same path that got us here!
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hypnotoad72 says:
Specifics or forget it.

Americans are tired of fluff.
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baileycccc says:
Rubio lies about when his grandparents left Cuba will come back to bite him if he runs for national office. But lies is what the republican party is all about.
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AOCGUY replies:
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Rubio told the lie when he was running for national office. He is a US Senator you know? I'm not happy about it considering he is from my state but he already holds national office.
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AOCGUY says:
Rubio actually said "..we chose more government instead of more freedom.." Really Marco? God I'm so embarrassed he represents my state.
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Repubs_R_Fiscal_Liberals replies:
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TaxJoke requires chalkboard-aided education, AOC...
KnowerseekerReturns replies:
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Less government = more freedom to be dashed upon the rocks of Capitalism.
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bbglow says:
If as you say America is indeed "a place of extraordiary people", why has your party abandoned the American people by depriving them of meaningful employment through obstruction in favor of ideology?

An American Worker
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bbglow replies:
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The truth is often contained in the subtleties. Did I hear Gov. Romney correctly ... you're going to lose that $22/hr job and need to find two jobs to replace it? What exactly is the plan for replacing lost American employment and manufacturing?
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Filmguy870 says:
Let me trickle down on you! TRUST ME!!!!!
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steeepe says:
Romney has exactly the same economic plan as Bush. Both are former CEOs. We don't need a CEO as president. If you want a repeat of the Bush years, vote for "the fraud and the phony, both liars".
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steeepe replies:
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I didn't say we need a lawyer, only that the last businessman, Bush, failed miserably and almost ruined the country. Being a businessman doesn't mean you'll do better in government than anybody else. Romney's plan is exactly a replay of failed GOP economic policies -- the trickle-down, supply-side, voodoo BS. If you still think that's worked, I can't imagine what you've been doing for a decade. Living in the woods?
KnowerseekerReturns replies:
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USSAmerikan, oh, you mean the obstructing Republicans who have created those economic conditions?
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abbe91 says:
a new beginning ? the beginning of the end of the US, yes ...
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lloydbest1 says:
"Rubio: Romney will bring a new beginning."

And that's exactly what I am afraid of. The begining of the end for any of the semblence there is now for social and economic justice to the poor and lower middle class, women in general (and minority women in particular), non traditional families, unskilled and semi-skilled workers, the disabled, and all others deemed "disposable" by the modern GOP hierarchy.

It is also the beginning of the end of public education as we know it, social security and medicare, Obama's feeble attempt at healthcare reform, union representation in the workforce, the minimum wage, and nearly all legal policies now in place to provide the vestige of a safety net that is still exists for our most vulnerable.

I've looked at the platform the modern GOP has put together. H.P. Lovecraft and Dean Koontz couldn't put together a more nightmarish story line if they were both high on LSD. This is an ideology that has to die. Obama is no great shakes as a president himself and has shown himself to cave continuously to rightist oriented interests througout his administration. But "O's" reelection in 2012 and a clear Democratic majority in both houses will allow progressives to mount a full dress and agressive campaign to drive our country in the leftward direction it needs to go.
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Solarrays247 replies:
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Well said.
KnowerseekerReturns replies:
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"This is an ideology that has to die." -- That'll never happen, but I do agree that it can and needs to be minimized and marginalized. The ideology you are referring to is man's desire to rule over other men, which is *the* enemy of freedom, and but which people on both the left and the right are guilty of in their own ways. Too many leaders in this nation today holler about "freedom", when what they really want is the "freedom" to take away others' freedoms.
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