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Rubio's 'pioneer' boasts crumble under scrutiny

Rhetoric vs. reality: Marco Rubio's boasts often fall apart upon closer inspection.
Marco Rubio (Photo by Michael Reynolds/EPA)
Republican Senator from Florida Marco Rubio delivers remarks on his reaction to US President Barack Obama's announcement of plans to restore diplomatic and economic ties with Cuba, on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C. on Dec. 17, 2014.
When Marco Rubio recently spoke to the Jewish Republican Coalition's presidential forum, he joined all of his GOP rivals in saying nice things about Israel. But the Florida Republican went a little further than most, making a specific claim about his state legislative record. The Tampa Bay Times took a closer look.

"As Speaker of the Florida House," he said, "I pioneered what became a national effort by requiring the Florida pension program to divest from companies linked to Iran's terrorist regime." It was groundbreaking, but Rubio had nothing to do with creation of the legislation.

There was, in fact, a divestment bill that passed Florida's legislature, but it was written by a Democrat before passing unanimously. Rubio, as the Republican leader in the House, allowed the bill to come to the floor, but he didn't "pioneer" the policy. He doesn't appear to have had anything to do with its creation at all.
 
Whether the Florida Republican was trying to deceive his audience or whether Rubio simply exaggerated the story in his mind is unclear. But errors like these are emblematic of two problems that represent a distraction for the senator's presidential campaign.
 
The first is that Rubio, despite his background as a career politician -- he won his sixth election the year he turned 40 -- has no real accomplishments to his name. This creates an awkward dynamic in which the GOP lawmaker struggles to brag about his own record, and in the case of the Jewish Republican Coalition's event, it apparently led him to embellish that record with an accomplishment that was not his own.
 
The second problem is that this is not the first time Rubio delivered a speech in which he flubbed substantive details in a brazenly misleading way. The week before his "pioneering" fib, for example, Rubio misled an audience about the scope of U.S. surveillance powers.
 
Around the same time, he misstated his record on "killing Obamacare" and misstated some key details about national security. A month prior, Rubio was caught making claims about his economic plan that were simply untrue.
 
I don't know whether this is the result of sloppiness, laziness, or a deliberate attempt to mislead, but Rubio wants to be perceived as some kind of wonky expert who not only speaks the truth, but also understands policy matters in great detail.
 
If he's going to start living up to his own hype, Rubio has a lot of work to do.