IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Rubio: 'This Ride Has Got a Few More Tricks and Turns'

Down in the polls and lagging in results, Marco Rubio says there are "tricks and turns" left in the battle for the Republican presidential nomination.
Get more newsLiveon

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Marco Rubio on Tuesday predicted a drawn-out fight far beyond Florida for the Republican presidential nomination, telling reporters "this ride has got a few more tricks and turns."

"What we hear from people all over the country is ‘Please do not let Donald Trump be our nominee. He’s going to get crushed, and divide the Republican Party and re-define it in a negative way,’" he said during a campaign stop in Kissimmee, Fla.

"So this is just a very different election year. This is going to take a long time. I don’t think anyone has a clear path to 1237 delegates. So buckle up your seat belts — this ride has got a few more tricks and turns."

Rubio is currently trailing GOP front-runner Donald Trump in public polls of his home-state primary but dismissed those numbers, telling reporters that polls "have been all over the place" and "I'm not worried about polls right now." Still, Florida remains his last chance of reversing the downward trajectory of his campaign after disappointing showings in the last two rounds of primary votes that saw him losing to both Trump and Ted Cruz even in states where he campaigned aggressively.

Rubio's strategy in many of the states where he fell short relied on a last-minute boost of momentum to push him over the finish line, and he seemed to acknowledge Tuesday that strategy was too little, too late in some states — like Virginia, where he turned out thousands at a quartet of rallies the day before the state voted but still came in second to Trump. "We were 20 points down in Virginia basically had we had another day we would have beaten Donald Trump there," he said.

But it's clear Rubio won't make the same mistake in Florida — he's spending most of the two weeks leading up to the primary there barnstorming the state in hopes of securing an outright win and with it the state's 99 delegates.

Rubio told reporters he's confident he'll win Florida, and he'll be helped by voters realizing that Trump doesn't offer real solutions — and that he's the only one that can defeat him. "Donald Trump, people may like his reality show personality but he has no serious solutions to America’s problems, and in fact, I think many of his solutions are dangerous and reckless," he said. "And here in Florida, if you vote for John Kasich or Ted Cruz you are voting for Donald Trump. I am the only one that can beat him in Florida. I am the only one that can stop him here."