Return to Washington Examiner Homepage
May 21, 2013 | 09:00 AM
politics
Washington D.C. weather
Politics

Marco Rubio to Rush Limbaugh: I can convince Hispanics that conservative ideas are better

January 29, 2013 | 2:17 pm | Modified: January 29, 2013 at 2:40 pm
Leave a comment
Photo -

During an interview with Rush Limbaugh today, Sen. Marco Rubio R-Fla. outlined some of his ideas on immigration reform ahead of President Obama’s speech on the issue in Las Vegas.

Rubio explained that he was involved in the conversation about immigration reform because it was important to spread the message of conservatism to Hispanic Americans.

“I am confident, that given a fair chance, I can convince most Americans – including Americans of Hispanic decent that limited government and free enterprise is better for them and better for their upward mobility than big government is,” Rubio said, reminding Limbaugh that most Hispanics were choosing the American dream over foreign dictators.

Limbaugh was skeptical of the idea that Hispanics were illegally immigrating to America to participate in the American dream, citing a study that showed that they were more interested in programs offered to them by the federal government.

“Our argument for limited government is always harder to sell than a government program, it always has been,” Rubio admitted. “It’s easier to sell cotton candy than it is to sell broccoli to somebody – but the broccoli is better for you.”

Rubio added that the conservative argument was more “enduring, more permanent and better for the country.”

From WeeklyStandard.com

  • He’s No Nixon

    The thoughtful Carl Cannon has written a piece, " Richard Milhous Obama ," concluding that our current president has more in common with our 37th than President Obama's partisans would like to...

    Read More...

  • All Politics Isn’t Local

    The state of the union today is uneasy, at best. Washington is crippled by gridlock while Americans across the country feel alienated from their government, so much so that the president feels...

    Read More...

  • The Next Scott Brown?

    Gabriel Gomez is an ambitious guy. In January, with Massachusetts senator John Kerry all but certain to be confirmed as secretary of state, the 47-year-old Gomez wrote a letter to Governor Deval...

    Read More...