Someone to watch. If history is any guide, though, I fear he will do something 
idiotic in the next three years. :-(



Marco Rubio: The Electable Conservative? - NYTimes.com
http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/marco-rubio-the-electable-conservative/

Some commentators have expressed surprise upon learning about the very 
conservative voting record of Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who delivered the 
Republican response to the State of the Union address last week.

Since winning his Senate seat, Mr. Rubio has generally sided with other 
Republicans as part of a party that has steadily grown more conservative over 
the last three decades. (Mr. Rubio’s recent support for immigration reform is 
more of an exception than his usual rule of sticking to the party line.)

Being reliably conservative, however, is hardly a liability for someone who 
might hope to win the Republican presidential nomination in 2016. Indeed, one 
reason to watch Mr. Rubio carefully is that, among the candidates who will be 
deemed reliably conservative by Republican voters and insiders, he may stand 
the best chance of maintaining a reasonably good image with general election 
voters.

How does Mr. Rubio’s conservatism compare to the other men and women who might 
seek the Republican nomination in 2016 — and to other candidates, like Mitt 
Romney, that the G.O.P. has nominated recently?

There are several statistical methods that seek to rate candidates’ ideology on 
a left-right scale. FiveThirtyEight uses three of these methods in evaluating 
the ideology of Senate candidates as part of our technique for forecasting 
those races. The same methods can be applied to presidential candidates.

The first of these systems, DW-Nominate, is based upon a candidate’s voting 
record in the Congress. The second method, developed by Adam Bonica, a Stanford 
University political scientist, makes inferences about a candidate’s ideology 
based on the groups and individuals who have contributed to his campaign. The 
third method, from the Web site OnTheIssues.org, works by indexing public 
statements made by the candidate on a variety of major policy issues.

Not every rating system is available for every candidate: those who have never 
served in Congress have no DW-Nominate score, for example. And the methods 
sometimes disagree. The libertarian-leaning Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky is 
rated as being extremely conservative by DW-Nominate and by Mr. Bonica’s 
method, which tend to give more emphasis to a candidate’s record on economic 
issues. But he is rated as fairly moderate by OnTheIssues.org, which also 
evaluates his stances on social policy. Sarah Palin is also rated as extremely 
conservative by Mr. Bonica’s system, but as relatively moderate by 
OnTheIssues.org. (Keep in mind that before being selected as John McCain’s 
running mate, Ms. Palin had some history as a reform-minded governor of Alaska.)

Nevertheless, we can usually get a reasonably good objective measurement of a 
candidate’s ideology by essentially taking an average of the three approaches. 
(Because the measures are not on the same scale, I normalize Mr. Bonica’s 
scores and the OnTheIssues.org scores to give them the same mean and standard 
deviation as DW-Nominate.) The higher the score, the more conservative the 
candidate.

DW-Nominate scores normally run on a scale that goes from negative 1 for an 
extremely liberal candidate to positive 1 for an extremely conservative one. To 
make the result more legible, I have multiplied all scores by 100 — so that, 
for instance, a moderate Republican might have a score of 25 rather than 0.25. 
Mr. Rubio achieves a score of 51 by this method. What does that mean, exactly?

The last two Republican presidential nominees, John McCain and Mitt Romney, had 
a score of 39 by comparison, meaning that they were more moderate than Mr. 
Rubio. Mr. Rubio is also rated as being to the right of Ronald Reagan, who had 
a score of 44, and George W. Bush, who had a score of 46. Among Republican 
presidential nominees since 1960, in fact, only the extraordinarily 
conservative Barry Goldwater, who had a score of 67, rates as being more 
conservative than Mr. Rubio.


But Mr. Rubio stands out less when compared to Republicans of today. Whereas in 
1980 the average Republican member of Congress had a score of 30, the average 
Republican in the most recent Congress had a score of 48, very close to Mr. 
Rubio’s. Thus, my contention that Mr. Rubio is a good representative of the 
Republican Party as it stands today.

This is a potentially advantageous position for a Republican competing in the 
presidential primaries. In both parties, nominees have usually come from the 
center of their parties, rather than from the moderate or the “extreme” wings. 
There are exceptions: Mr. Reagan, although he would fit right into the 
Republican Party today, was much more conservative than most of his 
contemporaries in 1980. But in general, Mr. Rubio is pretty close to the sweet 
spot of where a presidential nominee might want to be.

There are some viable candidates to Mr. Rubio’s right. The 2012 Republican 
vice-presidential nominee, Representative Paul D. Ryan, rates a score of 55, 
slightly more conservative than Mr. Rubio. Scott Walker, the governor of 
Wisconsin, rates a 57.

Mr. Rubio, however, has had net-positive favorability ratings among the general 
electorate in the most recent surveys, whereas the Republicans to his right 
usually have not. Mr. Ryan’s favorability ratings, for example, wound up being 
about break-even after the 2012 campaign.

This is not to say that Mr. Rubio is extraordinarily popular. Gov. Chris 
Christie of New Jersey has favorability ratings that are much stronger than Mr. 
Rubio’s, for example. Mr. Christie rates as being far more moderate by these 
statistical methods, however, having broken with his party not just on 
immigration, but also on issues like gun control and environmental policy, 
which could be a problem for him with Republican primary voters. (If nominated 
by the Republicans in 2016, he might possibly be the most moderate major-party 
nominee since Dwight D. Eisenhower).

Other potential candidates, including former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida and Gov. 
Susana Martinez of New Mexico, are close to Mr. McCain and Mr. Romney on the 
ideological spectrum.

Isn’t it premature to draw attention to a candidate’s popularity so far in 
advance of the primaries? Certainly, a great deal will change between now and 
2016.

But long before Republican voters in Iowa and New Hampshire cast their ballots, 
the potential nominees will be competing against one another in the so-called 
“invisible primary.” In this stage, which is already under way, they hope to 
persuade party insiders that they represent the best path forward for 
Republicans in 2016. The more successful they are at doing so, the more they 
will be rewarded with money, endorsements and the talent to run their 
campaigns, giving them a huge advantage once voting actually does begin three 
years from now.

Mr. Rubio’s most persuasive pitch to Republican Party insiders may well be that 
he is more popular than other, ideologically similar candidates. Some of those 
candidates, like Mr. Ryan, can probably offer a richer intellectual defense of 
conservatism, or can claim to have been better vetted. Several others, like 
Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, have more executive experience. Mr. Rubio’s 
relatively favorable public image represents his comparative advantage. (There 
are also the facts that Mr. Rubio is Hispanic and is from Florida, but these 
advantages boil down to electability as well: the possibility that he might 
help Republicans make gains with Latinos, and that he could give them a lift in 
an especially important swing state.)

What makes matters tricky for Mr. Rubio is that, at the same time he is hoping 
to persuade Republican party insiders that he deserves their support, he will 
also need to maintain a reasonably good image with the broader electorate lest 
his electability argument be undermined. This may lead to some strange 
positions, such as when Mr. Rubio recently critiqued President Obama’s 
immigration proposal despite its many similarities to his own.

When the wider electorate learns that Mr. Rubio’s positions are in fact hard to 
differentiate from those of other conservative Republicans, will his 
favorability ratings turn mediocre, as Mr. Ryan’s now are?

This is not meant as a rhetorical question. One measure of political talent, 
and something that characterized both Mr. Reagan and Mr. Obama, is the ability 
to sell ideas to voters across a wide range of the political spectrum. Perhaps 
Mr. Rubio will prove to be such a talent. Otherwise, if Mr. Rubio holds a 
fairly ordinary (and conservative) set of Republican positions, his popularity 
ratings may wind up being ordinary as well.

(via Instapaper)



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