“Break that Cycle”: Rubio’s must-see response to race & poverty will make you rethink 2016 [VIDEO]

At a rally in South Carolina Monday, Senator Marco Rubio was asked a question from an African-American man about race in America and the Republican Party, and Rubio’s answer is going viral. Radio host Erick Erickson said, “The Rubio camp should get this video out everywhere. No robot there.”

The man had talked to his pastor, who was skeptical of the GOP:

“I was talking to my pastor. We go to a pretty large church here, predominantly African-American. He said to me on the phone yesterday, ‘I’m having my doubts about the Republican Party. Because it just seems they really don’t want people that look like me in the Party.'”

Instead of denying racism exists or delivering a canned answer, Rubio spoke for more than eight minutes. He shared true personal stories, combined with his personal thoughts about improving race relations and “breaking the cycle” of poverty in poor communities.

“That fact that your pastor feels that way, and the fact that there are people from minority communities who feel treated differently or left behind by the American Dream — that alone is an issue. If you have a significant percentage of the American family that feels as though they are treated differently or left behind, that is an issue, and we need to confront it…”

Confronting race in America is a topic most Republican politicians run from. Rubio didn’t. He touched on both school choice and criminal justice reform, but mentioned that solutions only ” have a little bit to do with government.”

His answer won’t only resonant with minority voters, it will also make normal Republican voters rethink these topics.

“I don’t know if a president can fix it, but we better acknowledge it’s true. We also have to acknowledge challenges that you find in minority communities — you see in the hispanic community, you see it in the African-American community.

“Here’s a fact: If you  are born into a dangerous neighborhood, living in substandard housing. You’re being raised by your grandmother because your father has never been around and your mother is working two jobs or moved in with her boyfriend… the school you’re forced to attend by the government is failing, and you — because you don’t have money — you can’t choose a better setting.

“Those kids have five strikes against them. Statistics will tell you, a kid that’s facing five strikes against them at two or three years of age is going to struggle to succeed unless something happens to break that cycle. And there are things that help break the cycle, and there are examples of things that help break that cycle — and they have a little bit to do with government — but a lot to do with the community around it.”


Rubio also used relatable situational examples that are real to Americans in poverty — and followed them up with conservative solutions.

“That’s how you see a mom, with her kids in the car, on the laptop, using the free wifi at McDonalds. That’s a real impediment. That’s why I believe in school choice… the only people in American who do not have school choice are poor people.”

Breaking the cycle of poverty needs to be a fundamental Republican platform — not only because it will help Republicans win younger and more diverse voters — but because it’s also the right thing to do to help the most people and make America greater than it’s ever been.
Can anyone imagine Rubio delivering this message in the church the questioner mentioned? Republicans should hope he gets the chance.

“Ultimately, the country I want my kids to inherit is a country where no one feels the way your pastor feel right now. We’re going to change that. We’re going to work everyday to change that, because we cannot fulfill our destiny if we don’t.”

 

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLCgeRN_FAE]

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