Rubio Confides Vance Is 2028 GOP Front-Runner
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has reportedly told allies that he believes Vice President JD Vance is the Republican Party’s clear frontrunner for the 2028 presidential race—and that he would stand aside to back him if Vance enters the contest, according to Politico.
“Marco has been very clear that JD is going to be the Republican nominee if he wants to be,” a source close to Rubio told the outlet. “He will do anything he can just to support the vice president in that effort.”
Rubio, who has long been seen as a potential contender himself, has publicly praised Vance in the past. In July, he declared that the Ohio vice president would be “a great nominee.”
Within the White House, Politico reported, the prevailing assumption is that the 2028 Republican ticket could feature “JD as [nominee] and Rubio as VP.”
Vance himself has leaned into that speculation with humor. During an interview last week on “Pod Force One,” he said, “I mentioned it to the secretary in jest, but it feels so premature, because we’re still so early,” referring to the possibility of running alongside Rubio. He also revealed that President Donald Trump “mentioned” the idea months ago.
Polls appear to back Rubio’s assessment. A recent Politico survey found that 35% of Trump’s 2024 voters want Vance to run for president in 2028, while only 2% named Rubio as their preferred choice.
For Rubio, the conversation marks a full-circle moment from his own presidential ambitions nearly a decade ago. The Florida senator’s 2016 campaign emphasized “a next generation of conservative leadership,” branding him as a youthful, optimistic alternative to both establishment figures like Jeb Bush and anti-establishment challengers such as Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
After launching his campaign in April 2015, Rubio gained momentum with strong debate performances and respectable early finishes — third in Iowa and second in South Carolina. But Trump’s commanding dominance in the primaries soon overshadowed his rise.
When Rubio lost his home state of Florida to Trump by almost 20 points in March 2016, he ended his campaign. Trump went on to secure the Republican nomination and ultimately defeated Hillary Clinton in the general election.
Now, nearly a decade later, Rubio appears ready to play a different role — as a loyal ally helping to shape the next phase of Trump-era Republican leadership, with JD Vance at its helm.
{Matzav.com}
