
Senator Ted Cruz (Texas), Senator Marco Rubio (Florida), and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson took questions at CNN’s Town Hall, hosted by Anderson Cooper. Meanwhile, MSNBC gave Donald Trump his own (pre-recorded) event, co-hosted by Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski of Morning Joe. (CNN will hold a second Town Hall event for the remaining three candidates, Trump, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, and Ohio Governor John Kasich, on Thursday in order to give equal time.)
Marco Rubio rebuked claims that he is “the GOP’s Obama,” calling Obama a “failed president.” Talking up his own 15 years of civil service experience “turning conservative ideas into conservative action,” Rubio also bolstered his foreign policy experience: “No one running for president, especially on the Republican side, has more experience on national security or foreign policy as I do. As both a member of the Intelligence Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee, over the last five years, I have been dealing with every major issue this country confronts, and I understand these issues well. I have a record of good judgment on these issues.”
Ben Carson took a question from the audience about reconciling his Christian values with the GOP’s anti-government, anti-welfare stances. “My stance is that we, the people, have the responsibility to take care of the indigent in our society. It’s not the government’s job. You can read the constitution all you want; it never says it’s the government’s job,” said Carson. "By the time we got to the '60s, LBJ was saying, we, the government, are going to eliminate poverty. How did that work out? More poverty," Carson said. CNN’s Reality Check promptly debunked Carson’s reasoning behind his answer: Actions taken to reduce poverty by President Lyndon B. Johnson actually did reduce poverty, from 19% in 1964 to 11.1% within the decade. The poverty rates have remained below 15% since.
New national front-runner Ted Cruz touted his pro-life record and shrugged off Donald Trump’s insinuations about his eligibility for presidential office. Regarding Trump's lawsuit threat over a Cruz campaign ad that suggests the real estate developer is pro-choice and a supporter of Planned Parenthood, Cruz said, “You can never write off the possibility of Donald Trump suing you. He is welcome to file whatever lawsuit he wants. That lawsuit would not succeed.”
“I'm a common-sense conservative,” Trump said, in response to another claim from the Cruz camp that he “flip-flops” on the issues. On each hot-button issue, Trump said he is “very strong” or “very conservative,” but failed to give any specifics of the means to his intended ends.
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