Rubio: The American Dream ‘Is Dying’

Earlier today in Saraosta, Florida, Marco Rubio gave a speech to supporters outlining his views on economic policy, and contrasting himself with Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton.

Rubio opened by claiming that the media obsesses over the wrong polls: political polls. Rubio, who is rising in some polls but still trailing Donald Trump in nationwide polls, says the real polls to look are of citizens’ views on the economy.

It’s a recent poll that asked, “Is the American Dream alive or dead?” Almost half of millennials, meaning young Americans, replied that the American Dream was dead. Other polls have shown even higher numbers, across all generations. This is a warning sign for America – a sign that what’s at stake in this election is our identity as a special nation. That identity has long been tied to the belief that here, anything is possible.

Rubio went on to say that he, too, feels the American Dream is dying. Why? “It’s not dying because our people have changed. They haven’t. It’s dying because both parties in Washington have let us down.”

This is a common refrain for Rubio: times have changed, and we need leaders who understand that. It’s a subtle way to paint some of his opponents as, well, old. It’s a clever technique, as it conjures up images of Hillary struggling to answer basic technological questions. (“Like with a cloth, or something?”)

Here, Rubio then attempts to tie his framing of old leaders to failed ones, linking President Obama with Hillary Clinton.

Here’s what Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton don’t understand about free enterprise: In a free enterprise system, the president does not run the economy. The president’s job is to ensure policies are in place that allow the private sector to succeed, because it is the private sector that creates jobs and opportunity. Today, we don’t have those policies in place. Under Barack Obama, Washington borrows an average of more than a trillion dollars a year. It forces our private sector to spend almost two trillion dollars a year to comply with regulations. It imposes the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world. It thinks its job is to make your health care decisions, to bailout big businesses, and even to control the weather. As president, I will put Washington in its place. It will once again stand behind our people, not in their way.

Rubio is against a Value Added Tax, or VAT, which is easy to attack as European, and the long-stalled “Internet Sales Tax” being pushed by Sen. Mike Enzi and Rep. Jason Chaffetz.

On tax reform, Rubio wants “to simplify and reduce taxes on both individuals and businesses.” He says his plan is “pro-growth and pro-family” — meaning it will likely keep tax credits for children, popular among social conservatives, less so among tax reform warriors. On corporate taxes, Rubio wants to lower them so the U.S. is “globally competitive” but no mention of reforming the U.S.’s rare worldwide system of taxation on foreign-earned corporate profits.

Much of the speech is Rubio defending the free market system, which he calls:

the greatest economic system in history – the only system where poor people can become richer without rich people becoming poorer. The only system where everybody can be better off.

And pleasing GOP tax godfather Grover Norquist, Rubio all but verbally re-signed the ATR pledge (which he already signed):

Let me be clear: I do not support new taxes of any kind, because what our country needs is economic growth, and there is no new tax that leads to economic growth.

You can watch the whole thing below:

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