By David M. Drucker
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
Any sensible discussion about Marco Rubio and the race
for the 2028 Republican nomination
begins by addressing an essential question: Would a GOP base dominated by
populists who view President Donald Trump as their north star embrace the
secretary of state as the nominee and enthusiastically back his candidacy?
Accounting for some possible caveats, the answer is—most
likely—“yes,” key Trump allies connected to the president’s Make America Great
Again movement told The Dispatch this month, as Rubio’s White House
stock continued to soar in Republican circles. This crowd’s affection for Rubio
is a significant development. Although nearly a decade has passed since the
onetime free-market Reaganite converted to conservative populism (“common good capitalism”), the MAGA wing of the GOP was
sufficiently distrustful of Rubio in 2024 that its most prominent voices pushed Trump to make Vice President
J.D. Vance his running mate.
That was due partly to the secretary’s lingering
hawkishness. Rubio never abandoned his preference for projecting American power
abroad, fueling suspicions that he remained a so-called “neocon warmonger”—the
derisive label Trump and many of his supporters attach to Republicans who take
their cues from Ronald Reagan and who dominated the GOP coalition prior to the
president’s 2016 nomination. Ironically, it’s Rubio’s close working
relationship with Trump on military matters like the Iran War that has contributed
to the populist right warming to him as the party’s possible 2028 standard
bearer.
“He’s done such an impressive job, and he’s done it with
such good humor—which I think really helps. He’s just come through again and
again,” a conservative populist media figure and loyal Trump supporter told The
Dispatch, requesting anonymity to speak candidly. “If J.D. doesn’t go for
it, I think he’s the obvious choice. I think he’s the obvious veep if J.D. does
go for it.”
So why is the answer “most likely” instead of definitely
likely? A longtime Republican insider who has supported Trump since his first
campaign explained: “Rubio is at his apex. He’s at the point where he’s making
the most Republicans happy. The question is: If he moves out of this secretary
of state role, where he’s simply implementing the Trump policies, what happens
when he has to start speaking about all of this other stuff? Do the ghosts of
the past come out?”
Rubio, 54, and Trump, 79, have traveled far since the
2016 campaign for the Republican nomination.
On the trail, Trump belittled Rubio as “Little
Marco” while Rubio warned
that Trump was stoking anger and violence that threatened to unravel
American society. But Trump’s victory caused Rubio, then a senator from
Florida, to rethink his approach to domestic policy. And during the president’s
first term, Rubio’s staunch defense of Trump amid the federal investigation
into allegations he colluded with Russia in his race against Hillary Clinton
helped paper over their persistent disagreements over America’s role in the
world.
“Marco did something really good,” Trump told me in May
2021. “He went up, in my estimation, so much.” Fast forward past the 2024
campaign, during which Trump came close to choosing Rubio over Vance for the
Republican ticket, and their personal and working relationship appears
genuinely collegial and synergistic. That’s apparent, at least, from watching
the secretary effusively heap praise on the president in televised Cabinet
meetings as the commander in chief goes around the room soliciting progress reports
from his department heads.
From August 26: “You were elected as the president of working
Americans, and that’s why this Labor Day is so meaningful.” Also, referring to
himself and White House diplomatic envoy Steve Witkoff: “We both work for the
peacemaker in chief. Think about it. How fortunate we are to have a president
who’s made peace a priority?” December 2: “It’s also an honor to be involved in, and be a
witness to, what I believe is the most transformational year in American
foreign policy since the end of the Second World War—at least.”
And from just last Thursday: “The most important job any president has is
to keep the American people safe. And every president says it, but we have a
president that means it and does something about it.”
Rubio’s loyalty is paying dividends with Republican
voters, many of whom often place fidelity to Trump above any particular policy
agenda. Indeed, the secretary finished a healthy second to Vance in this past weekend’s straw poll of
grassroots conservatives who attended the annual Conservative Political Action
Conference.
Traditional polling also shows Rubio on the rise.
In a previously unreported survey conducted in March by
the GOP polling firm Deep Root Analytics and shared with The Dispatch,
the secretary narrowly trailed the vice president in a 2028 sweepstakes that,
granted, seems unlikely to unfold. Rubio has vowed not to challenge Vance should he run. But the
secretary’s performance in this poll, which gauges whom Republican voters would
consider for the nomination in a hypothetical primary, was impressive. He far
outpaced many prominent Republicans mentioned as possible contenders—though not
all. Among the survey’s findings:
·
Sixty-nine percent of all primary voters said
they would consider backing Rubio in a primary, just ahead of Donald Trump
Jr.’s 66 percent (82 percent said they would consider Vance).
·
Among voters who identify as “MAGA GOP” or
“Nationalist Conservative,” roughly one-third of the primary electorate in this
poll, Rubio would be considered by 80 percent of them, although he trailed
Trump Jr.’s 85 percent (Vance was at 93 percent).
·
In a simulated ballot test across all categories
of GOP voters, Rubio garnered 18 percent (he was tied with Trump Jr.), and
Vance received 27 percent.
But Rubio did hold one trump card.
According to this survey, the secretary has the highest
ceiling of potential support among all candidates, Vance included. This metric
is an “efficiency score,” or the percent of respondents who say they would
consider voting for a candidate versus the percent who say they would “never”
do so. Rubio’s score was 16.6; Vance’s was 11.6.
This is how veteran GOP strategist Brad Todd
characterized the growing appreciation for Rubio inside a Republican Party
remodeled and dominated by Trump: “The uniting thread to the group Trump
brought to the party is populism, but its animation is strength. Marco is
demonstrating he understands how to translate strength into action in a way
that has appeal inside Trump’s hardcore base, and beyond it.”
Populist operatives and media personalities in Trump’s
orbit interviewed for this story did not raise the bygone issue of Rubio having
once supported the legalization of illegal immigrants as part of a bipartisan
comprehensive immigration reform bill he helped negotiate as a senator. (The
2013 legislation cleared the Senate but died in the House.) And these political insiders agreed
that the secretary’s image is strong enough with grassroots Republicans to
withstand public revelations that wealthy GOP donors prefer Rubio over overtly
populist alternatives—reporting already making the rounds.
That’s significant and another example of how the
secretary is being viewed with fresh and adoring eyes by the GOP base as
currently constituted. But no politician’s trajectory is without potential
obstacles.
For Rubio, that could be the Iran War, not to mention the
president’s other foreign policy endeavors that, as secretary of state, he is
closely associated with. That includes a successful American military operation
to change the leadership of the government in Venezuela—and the as-yet
undetermined outcome of the squeeze Trump is putting on the communist regime in
Cuba. There’s zero indication at this point that these conflicts are
politically problematic for Rubio.
But there’s no guarantee the Iran War or the president’s
other overseas initiatives won’t turn into problems.
“Up until this war, he’s done a pretty good job,” Steve
Bannon, host of War Room, a podcast popular in right-wing populist
circles, told The Dispatch. “But this war could overshadow everything
else.” Bannon added: “A lot of people figured his strong neocon attitude and
direction had really kind of pulled back. He understood this is a populist,
nationalist movement. But apparently not.”
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