Sen. Marco Rubio, a potential Trump vice presidential pick, has a strong foreign policy background and has been an outspoken critic of Beijing.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) joined former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Doral, Florida, just days before the 45th president is expected to announce his vice presidential pick.
Former President Trump referred to Mr. Rubio more than a dozen times throughout his speech, at times hinting that the senator could be his choice.
“I think they probably think I’m going to be announcing that Marco is going to be vice president, because that’s a lot of press,” the former president said, referring to the large press contingent on site.
When speaking about his proposal to no longer charge taxes on tips, he suggested that Mr. Rubio might not still be a senator when the bill comes up for a vote.
“Marco, you’re going to vote for it I hope,” he said.
“Well, you may or may not be there to vote for it, but you’ll be involved.”
Mr. Rubio, meanwhile, speaking in both English and Spanish at the rally, praised the former president’s economic, energy, and foreign policy positions.
“We elect this man as president, we will make, together, America greater than it has ever been,” Mr. Rubio told the crowd.
The former president also referred to Mr. Rubio when he mentioned communism.
“We want our freedom,” the former president said. “And we have a lot of people, Marco, from Cuba, from Venezuela, from all over, and they don’t want to hear about socialism or communism.”
Former President Trump described Mr. Rubio—who ran against him during the Republican primary election in 2016—as “a man who’s become really a friend of mine.”
“We had a vicious campaign for a while, and he was tough and he was smart, and I got to really know him well over the years, and he’s a fantastic guy,” he said.
“Probably a little before the convention, but not much. It could even be during the convention that we’d do it,” former President Trump said.
He confirmed that Sens. Rubio (R-Fla.), J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), and Tim Scott (R-S.C.), along with North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, are all “under consideration.”
At 53, the Florida senator is one of the youngest on the Republican vice presidential shortlist. A son of Cuban immigrants, he could help the former president solidify support among Hispanic voters, while his foreign policy skills mark another draw.
Mr. Rubio, more than other candidates, has drawn a tough-on-China approach.
“The United States must hold the CCP accountable for these savage crimes.”
As the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Mr. Rubio has frequently placed countering communist China as a top priority, noting the Chinese regime’s ambition to topple America and dominate the world through theft and coercion.
“The leverage China potentially has over America and the West is extraordinary,” he said in 2022.
Mr. Rubio said the Chinese regime has “the ability to disrupt our economy right now, because we depend way too much on them for both basic raw materials and also finished production of goods, and that’s only growing.”
In the new Republican Party platform released on Monday, Republican delegates call for revoking China’s preferred trade status with the World Trade Organization.
The draft proposal also pledges to “phase out imports of essential goods” and stop China from acquiring U.S. real estate or taking over industries.