FILE - In this Feb. 9, 2012, file photo, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington. Rubio endorsed Mitt Romney as the party's presidential nominee Wednesday, March 28, 2012, saying it's increasingly clear that Romney will win the nomination and that continuing the primary fight will only damage the effort to defeat President Barack Obama.
J. Scott Applewhite, File, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida endorsed Mitt Romney as the party's presidential nominee Wednesday night, saying it's increasingly clear that Romney will win the nomination and that continuing the primary fight will only damage the effort to defeat President Barack Obama.
Rubio, a freshman senator and tea party favorite, said he's convinced that Romney will govern as a conservative and will be superior to Obama as a president.
"The quicker we can get this campaign on that focus — focused on the president's record, on the alternative that we offer — the better off we're going to be as a movement but also the better off the country's going to be," Rubio said during an interview with Fox News.
Rubio had pledged to stay neutral in the race. On Wednesday he called a floor fight over the nomination at the party convention in August "a recipe to deliver four more years to Barack Obama."
Rubio's endorsement followed that of former Florida Gov. Jeff Bush and came a day before former President George H.W. Bush was to back Romney, another sign that more and more party leaders are falling in line behind Romney rather than support rivals Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich or Ron Paul. Gingrich has scaled back his campaign, saying he wants to focus on winning the nomination at the convention if Romney fails to win enough delegates during the primary race.
Rubio has been mentioned as a potential running mate on the GOP ticket. He told Fox News that his heart, mind and focus remain on the Senate and that he doubts he would be asked to join a Romney ticket.
- Photo gallery: Tornado rips Oklahoma suburb
- Fire chief says search almost complete in...
- Journalists criticize Obama administration,...
- Top scandals and controversies of each United...
- Should we let wunderkinds drop out of high...
- Mile-wide tornado churns through Oklahoma...
- World War II munitions with mustard agent...
- Oklahoma, other tornado-hit states brace for...
- Mitt Romney talks IRS, AP records,...
65 - Journalists criticize Obama...
36 - Associated Press CEO calls records...
23 - White House insists Obama was not...
22 - House chairman sees IRS targeting as...
16 - Supreme Court to weigh in on...
15 - More Obama aides knew IRS targeted...
15 - Tea party looks to take advantage of...
13



Well timed - however this will likely fall on deaf ears.
I find that the egos of Santorum and Gingrich have swollen so large they cover both their eyes and their ears and somehow crowds out the reasoning portion of their brains as More..
I agree with deep! Gingrich and Santorum demonstrate what is all wrong with politics and politicians. Ego, ego, ego! It's what President Obama suffers from and unfortunately, what most politicians suffer from. George H. W. Bush was the last More..
Mitt's a great candidate and I think he'll do a great job as president of the USA. I don't feel that way about any of the other options out there. Keep up the good fight, Mitt!