03/30/2026 / By Cassie B.

The battle to define the future of the Republican Party after President Donald Trump has its first frontrunner. Vice President JD Vance secured a majority in the 2028 presidential preference straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Texas this weekend, but the dramatic surge of Secretary of State Marco Rubio signals a brewing contest for the heart of the MAGA movement.
Vance captured 53% support from the more than 1,600 attendees who voted at the annual gathering in Grapevine. Rubio finished a strong second with 35%, a massive leap from his mere 3% showing in the same poll a year ago. No other potential candidate broke 2%, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Donald Trump Jr. each receiving 2%, and figures like Sens. Ted Cruz and Rand Paul registering just 1%.
This CPAC survey is a coveted early barometer of sentiment among the party’s most active conservative base. Although it is not a scientific predictor, it reveals where the energy currently lies within the coalition that has propelled Trump to two terms in office. The results show Vance, Trump’s chosen running mate in 2024, remains the heir apparent in the eyes of many. Yet Rubio’s meteoric rise cannot be ignored, suggesting a shifting landscape as the party looks toward a post-Trump era.
The numbers tell a story of momentum. Vance’s support, while still commanding, actually dipped from a dominant 61% last year. Rubio’s 32-point surge is the headline, reflecting his elevated profile as Secretary of State during a period defined by international conflict and diplomatic challenges. Attendees cited his forceful public persona and his handling of high-stakes foreign policy as key factors in his growing appeal.
Paul Empson, an accountant from Fort Worth, told Reuters he voted for Vance due to the Vice President’s alignment with MAGA principles and his public embrace of Christian faith. “I’ve seen everything he’s done,” Empson said. “He’s a real, genuine person.” Other attendees, however, were drawn to Rubio. James Schaare, a political activist from Texas, praised Rubio’s conservative consistency and said he was won over partly by the Secretary’s speech at the memorial for activist Charlie Kirk. “Over the last couple of years, everything he says and does is 100% conservative,” Schaare said.
Despite their one-two finish in a poll that frames them as potential rivals, both men have publicly dismissed any notion of a personal competition. In a November interview with Fox News, Vance addressed the speculation directly. “People have asked me, ‘Do you see Marco as a rival?'” Vance said. “First of all, if either of us end up running, it’s a long ways in the future, and neither of us is entitled to it. So I think it would be ridiculous for me to say Marco is a rival. No, Marco is a colleague.”
Rubio has expressed similar collegiality. In comments to Vanity Fair in December, he said he would be “one of the first people to support” Vance if the Vice President chose to run for the White House in 2028. This public harmony underscores a shared understanding that the actual campaign is a few years away and that current unity is paramount for the administration and the party’s near-term electoral goals.
The historical context here is critical. The Republican Party is navigating the complex transition from a period defined by a singular, dominant figure in Trump. CPAC straw polls have previously highlighted flavors of the month who later faltered. The consistency of Vance’s top-tier positioning, combined with Rubio’s explosive growth, suggests the party base is beginning to coalesce around two distinct but connected visions: Vance’s populist, hillbilly-elegy-informed brand of Trumpism, and Rubio’s more traditionally conservative, yet fiercely pro-Trump, statesman profile.
For now, the message from the grassroots is clear. JD Vance remains the man to beat. But Marco Rubio is now firmly in the race, and his trajectory shows that the contest to lead the next generation of Republicans is already underway. The coming years will test whether this early snapshot solidifies or if new contenders emerge from the shadows. The fight for the soul of the GOP after Trump has officially begun, and it starts with these two men.
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