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Debate: 9th Republican Presidential Candidate Debate - February 13, 2016

12:00 AM
John Dickerson 00:00:54-00:00:56 (2 sec)

Good evening. I'm John Dickerson. This holiday weekend, as America honors our first president, we're about to hear from six men who hope to be the 45th.

John Dickerson 00:00:56-00:01:04 (8 sec)

The candidates for the Republican nomination are here in South Carolina for their ninth debate, one week before this state holds the first-in-the south primary. George Washington wrote that the truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains taken to bring it to light. We hope to shed some light on the candidates' positions tonight to help voters make up their minds.

John Dickerson 00:01:04-00:01:07 (3 sec)

So gentlemen, please join us on stage. [Applause] With us tonight -- with us tonight are retired neurosurgeon, Ben Carson of Florida, Senator Marco Rubio of Florida. [Applause] Businessman Donald Trump of New York.

John Dickerson 00:01:07-00:01:10 (3 sec)

[Applause] Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. [Applause] Former governor, Jeb Bush of Florida. [Applause] And Governor John Kasich of Ohio.

John Dickerson 00:01:10-00:01:40 (30 sec)

[Applause] Now, as most of you have heard by now, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia died today at the age of 79. He was the longest serving member of the court, appointed by President Reagan in 1986. Justice Scalia was the court's leading conservative, and even those who disagreed with his opinions regarded him as a brilliant legal scholar. Please join us and the candidates on our stage in a moment of silence for Justice Antonin Scalia. Thank you. We will talk to the candidates about Justice Scalia and the road ahead when the debate begins in a moment. [Commercial Break]

John Dickerson 00:01:40-00:01:50 (10 sec)

Before we get started, candidates, here are the rules. When we ask you a question you will have on minute to answer, and 30 seconds more if we ask a follow-up. If you're attacked by another candidate you get 30 seconds to respond.

John Dickerson 00:01:50-00:01:56 (6 sec)

And, here's how we keep time. After we ask a question, you'll get a green light. The yellow light means you have 30 seconds left to finish you answer, and when time is up, the light turns red.

John Dickerson 00:01:56-00:02:07 (11 sec)

That means please stop talking. If you keep talking you'll hear this. [Bell Rings] You don't want to hear that.

John Dickerson 00:02:07-00:02:41 (34 sec)

Joining me in the questioning tonight, my CBS News colleague, Chief White House correspondent, Major Garrett, and Kimberly Strassel who is on the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal. And, you can participate in the debate to through our partnership with Twitter. Tweet us your questions and comments using the hashtag, "#GOPDebate".

John Dickerson 00:02:41-00:03:13 (32 sec)

So, let's begin. First, the death of Justice Scalia, and the vacancy that leaves on the Supreme Court. Mr. Trump, I want to start with you. You've said that the President shouldn't nominate anyone in the rest of his term to replace Justice Scalia. If you were President, and had a chance with 11 months left to go in your term, wouldn't it be an abdication to conservatives in particular, not to name a conservative justice with the rest of your term?

Donald Trump 00:03:13-00:04:44 (91 sec)

Well, I can say this. If the President, and if I were President now I would certainly want to try and nominate a justice. I'm sure that, frankly, I'm absolutely sure that President Obama will try and do it.

Donald Trump 00:04:44-00:05:11 (27 sec)

I hope that our Senate is going to be able -- Mitch, and the entire group, is going to be able to do something about it. In times of delay, we could have a Diane Sykes, or you could have a Bill Pryor, we have some fantastic people. But this is a tremendous blow to conservatism. It's a tremendous blow, frankly to our country.

John Dickerson 00:05:11-00:05:15 (4 sec)

So, just to be clear on this Mr. Trump, you're OK with the President nominating somebody...

Donald Trump 00:05:15-00:05:24 (9 sec)

... I think he's going to do it whether or I'm OK with it or not. I think it's up to Mitch McConnell, and everybody else to stop it. It's called delay, delay, delay. [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:05:24-00:06:01 (37 sec)

Governor Kasich, I want to get your thoughts on this. Justice Scalia was a real believer, obviously, in the strict word of the constitution. Now, Harry Reid says that a failure to fill his vacancy would be, quote, "Shameful abdication of one of the Senate's most essential constitutional responsibilities." Where do you come down on this?

John Kasich 00:06:01-00:06:24 (23 sec)

Well, John, first of all if I were president we wouldn't have the divisions in the country we have today. I do want to take a second as we reflected on Judge Scalia, it's amazing -- it's not even two minutes after the death of Judge Scalia, nine children here today, their father, didn't wake up. His wife sad, but, I just wish we hadn't run so fast into politics.

John Kasich 00:06:24-00:06:31 (7 sec)

Here's my concern about this. The country is so divided right now, and now we're going to see another partisan fight take place. I really wish the president would think about not nominating somebody.

John Kasich 00:06:31-00:06:46 (15 sec)

If you were to nominate somebody, let's have him pick somebody that's going to have unanimous approval, and such wide spread approval across the country that this could happen without a lot of recrimination. I don't think that's going to happen, and I would like the President just to for once here put the country first. We're going to have an election for President very soon, and the people will understand what is at stake in that election.

John Kasich 00:06:46-00:06:56 (10 sec)

And, so I believe the President should not move forward, and I think that we ought to let the next President of the United States decide who is going to run that Supreme Court with a vote by the people of the United... [Bell Rings]

John Kasich 00:06:56-00:06:59 (3 sec)

... States of America. [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:06:59-00:07:08 (9 sec)

Dr. Carson. Dr. Carson, you, like others, put out a statement after the death was announced, and you said the president should delay. You've written a book on the constitution recently. What does the constitution say about whose duty it is here to act in this kind of a situation?

Ben Carson 00:07:08-00:08:23 (75 sec)

Well, the current constitution actually doesn't address that particular situation, but the fact of the matter is the Supreme Court, obviously, is a very important part of our governmental system. And, when our constitution was put in place, the average age of death was under 50, and therefore the whole concept of lifetime appointments for Supreme Court judges, and federal judges was not considered to be a big deal. Obviously that has changed, and it's something that probably needs to be looked at pretty carefully at some point.

Ben Carson 00:08:23-00:09:12 (49 sec)

But, we need to start thinking about the divisiveness that is going on in our country. I looked at some of the remarks that people made after finding out that Justice Scalia had died, and they were truly nasty remarks. And, that we have managed to get to that position in our country is truly a shame. And, we should be thinking about how we could create some healing in this land. But, right now, we're not going to get healing with President Obama. That's very United Nationsclear. So, I... [Bell Rings]

Ben Carson 00:09:12-00:09:17 (5 sec)

... Fully agree that we should not allow a judge to be appointed during his time.

John Dickerson 00:09:17-00:09:20 (3 sec)

Senator Rubio, you're a... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:09:20-00:09:40 (20 sec)

Senator Rubio, you're a lawyer. Quickly, can you address the issue of whether the Constitution tells us who has the power to appoint Supreme Court justices? And then, also, the Senate Republicans last year floated an idea of removing the filibuster for Senate -- excuse me, for Supreme Court nominations. You seemed open to that. What's your feeling on that now?

Marco Rubio 00:09:40-00:09:53 (13 sec)

Well, let me first talk about Justice Scalia. His loss is tremendous and obviously our hearts and prayers go out to his family. He will go down as one of the great justices in the history of this republic.

Marco Rubio 00:09:53-00:10:16 (23 sec)

You talk about someone who defended consistently the original meaning of the Constitution, who understood that the Constitution was not there to be interpreted based on the fads of the moment, but it was there to be interpreted according to its original meaning. Justice Scalia understood that better than anyone in the history of this republic. His dissent, for example, on the independent counsel case is a brilliant piece of jurist work.

Marco Rubio 00:10:16-00:10:58 (42 sec)

And, of course, his dissent on Obergefell as well. Number two, I do not believe the president should appoint someone. And it's not unprecedented. In fact, it has been over 80 years since a lame duck president has appointed a Supreme Court justice. And it remind us of this, how important this election is. Someone on this stage will get to choose the balance of the Supreme Court, and it will begin by filling this vacancy that's there now. And we need to put people on the bench that understand that the Constitution is not a living and breathing document. It is to be interpreted as originally meant.

John Dickerson 00:10:58-00:11:00 (2 sec)

Quickly, though on this question... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:11:00-00:11:06 (6 sec)

Very quickly, Senator, on this specific question, though. You were once in favor of dropping the threshold... [Crosstalk]

Marco Rubio 00:11:06-00:11:09 (3 sec)

That's not accurate.

John Dickerson 00:11:09-00:11:11 (2 sec)

... majority -- you were never in favor of that?

Marco Rubio 00:11:11-00:11:30 (19 sec)

No, I've never -- there has been, for example, today, according to the changes Harry Reid made, appellate judges can now be appointed by a simple majority, but not Supreme Court justices. And I think today you see the wisdom of why we don't that want to change. Because if that were the case and we were not in charge of the Senate, Harry Reid and Barack Obama would ram down our throat a liberal justice, like the ones Barack Obama has imposed on us already.

John Dickerson 00:11:30-00:11:39 (9 sec)

OK. Thank you, Senator. Governor Bush, I would like to ask you, conservatives for a long time have felt like that their Republican presidents have picked justices that didn't turn out to be real conservatives.

Jeb Bush 00:11:39-00:11:39 ( sec)

Right.

John Dickerson 00:11:39-00:11:47 (8 sec)

Bernie Sanders has said he would have a litmus test. He would you make sure that he appointed a justice who was going to overturn Citizens United. If they can have a litmus test for a nominee, what about you? Would you have a litmus test for a nominee? And what would it be?

Jeb Bush 00:11:47-00:12:01 (14 sec)

Not on specific issues, not at all. I think the next president -- if I'm president, I will appoint people -- I'll nominate people that have a proven record in the judiciary. The problem in the past has been we have appointed people thinking you can get it through the Senate because they didn't have a record.

Jeb Bush 00:12:01-00:12:28 (27 sec)

And the problem is that sometimes we're surprised. The simple fact is the next president needs to appoint someone with a proven conservative record, similar to Justice Scalia, that is a lover of liberty, that believes in limited government, that consistently applied that kind of philosophy, that didn't try to legislator from the bench, that was respectful of the Constitution. And then fight and fight, and fight for that nomination to make sure that that nomination passes.

Jeb Bush 00:12:28-00:12:49 (21 sec)

Of course, the president, by the way, has every right to nominate Supreme Court justices. I'm an Article II guy in the Constitution. We're running for the president of the United States. We want a strong executive for sure. But in return for that, there should be a consensus orientation on that nomination, and there's no doubt in my mind that Barack Obama will not have a consensus pick when he submits that person to the Senate.

John Dickerson 00:12:49-00:12:53 (4 sec)

Right, so, Senator Cruz, the Constitution... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:12:53-00:13:16 (23 sec)

So, Senator Cruz, the Constitution says the president "shall appoint with advice and consent from the Senate," just to clear that up. So he has the constitutional power. But you don't think he should. Where do you set that date if you're president? Does it begin in election year, in December, November, September? And once you set the date, when you're president, will you abide by that date?

Ted Cruz 00:13:16-00:13:25 (9 sec)

Well, we have 80 years of precedent of not confirming Supreme Court justices in an election year. And let me say, Justice Scalia...

John Dickerson 00:13:25-00:13:31 (6 sec)

Just can I -- I'm sorry to interrupt, were any appointed in an election year or is that just there were 80 years... [Crosstalk]

Ted Cruz 00:13:31-00:13:34 (3 sec)

Eighty years of not confirming. For example, LBJ nominated Abe Fortas. Fortas did not get confirmed. He was defeated.

John Dickerson 00:13:34-00:13:37 (3 sec)

But Kennedy was confirmed in '88.

Ted Cruz 00:13:37-00:13:38 (1 sec)

No, Kennedy was confirmed in '87...

John Dickerson 00:13:38-00:13:39 (1 sec)

He was appointed in '87.

Ted Cruz 00:13:39-00:13:39 ( sec)

He was appointed in...

John Dickerson 00:13:39-00:13:43 (4 sec)

... confirmed in '88. That's the question, is it appointing or confirming, what's the difference?

Ted Cruz 00:13:43-00:13:47 (4 sec)

In this case it's both. But if I could answer the question...

John Dickerson 00:13:47-00:13:53 (6 sec)

Sorry, I just want to get the facts straight for the audience. But I apologize. [Booing] [Laughter]

Ted Cruz 00:13:53-00:14:20 (27 sec)

Justice Scalia was a legal giant. He was somebody that I knew for 20 years. He was a brilliant man. He was faithful to the Constitution. He changed the arc of American legal history. And I'll tell you, his passing tonight, our prayers are with his family, with his wife, Maureen, who he adored, his nine children, his 36 grandkids.

Ted Cruz 00:14:20-00:14:38 (18 sec)

But it underscores the stakes of this election. We are one justice away from a Supreme Court that will strike down every restriction on abortion adopted by the states. We are one justice away from a Supreme Court that will reverse the Heller decision, one of Justice Scalia's seminal decisions that upheld the Second Amendment right to keep and to bear arms.

Ted Cruz 00:14:38-00:15:15 (37 sec)

We are one justice away from a Supreme Court that would undermine the religious liberty of millions of Americans -- and the stakes of this election, for this year, for the Senate, the Senate needs to stand strong and say, "We're not going to give up the U.S. Supreme Court for a generation by allowing Barack Obama to make one more liberal appointee." And then for the state of South Carolina, one of the most important judgments for the men and women of South Carolina to make is who on this stage has the background, the principle, the character, the judgment, and the strength of resolve to nominate and confirm principled constitutionalists to the court? That will be what I will do if I'm elected president.

John Dickerson 00:15:15-00:15:30 (15 sec)

All right. [Applause] Thank you, Senator Cruz. All right, we're going to move on to national security here, and we are going to -- I want to read a quote from Secretary Robert Gates, former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who served for eight year -- under eight presidents.

John Dickerson 00:15:30-00:15:40 (10 sec)

And this is what he said about Republican candidates, quote, "Part of the concern that I have with the campaign is that the solutions being offered are so simplistic and so at odds with the way the world really works." So, in that spirit, we're going to work tonight to be more specific. Mr. Trump, I want to start with you.

John Dickerson 00:15:40-00:15:48 (8 sec)

You have said as president, you'll get up to speed very quickly. You'll know more quickly as president than any of the experts. So, you've been elected president. It's your first day in the situation room. What three questions do you ask your national security experts about the world?

Donald Trump 00:15:48-00:16:06 (18 sec)

What we want to do, when we want to do it, and how hard do we want to hit? Because we are going to have to hit very, very hard to knock out ISIS. We're going to also have to learn who our allies are. We have allies, so-called allies, we're spending billions and billions of dollars supporting people -- we have no idea who they are in Syria.

Donald Trump 00:16:06-00:16:19 (13 sec)

Do we want to stay that route, or do we want to go and make something with Russia? I hate to say Iran, but with Russia, because we -- and the Iran deal is one of the worst deals I have ever seen negotiated in my entire life. It's a disgrace that this country negotiated that deal. But very important...

Donald Trump 00:16:19-00:16:50 (31 sec)

[Applause] Not only a disgrace, it's a disgrace and an embarrassment. But very important, who are we fighting with? Who are we fighting for? What are we doing? We have to rebuild our country. But we have to -- I'm the only one on this stage that said, "Do not go into Iraq.

Donald Trump 00:16:50-00:17:42 (52 sec)

Do not attack Iraq." Nobody else on this stage said that. And I said it loud and strong. And I was in the private sector. I wasn't a politician, fortunately. But I said it, and I said it loud and clear, "You'll destabilize the Middle East." That's exactly what happened. I also said, by the way, four years ago, three years ago, attack the oil, take the wealth away, attack the oil and keep the oil. They didn't listen. They just started that a few months ago. [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:17:42-00:17:44 (2 sec)

Senator Rubio -- just 30 seconds on this question, Senator Rubio. Are those the questions you would ask?

Marco Rubio 00:17:44-00:17:52 (8 sec)

No. I think there are three major threats that you want to immediately get on top of. No.

Marco Rubio 00:17:52-00:18:16 (24 sec)

1 is, what are we doing in the Asia-Pacific region, where both North Korea and China pose threats to the national security of the United States. No. 2 is, what are we doing in the Middle East with the combination of the Sunni-Shia conflict driven by the Shia arc that Iran is now trying to establish in the Middle East, also the growing threat of ISIS.

Marco Rubio 00:18:16-00:18:24 (8 sec)

And the third is rebuilding and reinvigorating NATO in the European theater, particularly in Central Europe and in Eastern Europe, where Vladimir Putin is now threatening the territory of multiple countries, already controls 20 percent of Georgia and a significant percentage of Ukraine.

John Dickerson 00:18:24-00:18:32 (8 sec)

Let me ask you a follow-up, a full, proper question, then. [Applause] Violent extremists are operating or active in 40 countries. Some 80 countries are in different degrees of instability.

John Dickerson 00:18:32-00:19:09 (37 sec)

And so, that's just the crises overseas. Barack Obama walked into an economic collapse when he came into office. We face international health crises, from Ebola to Zika. So, there is a lot of opportunity for crisis, as you have talked about. What would you point to in your past to show voters that you've been in a crisis and that you've been tested when that inevitable crisis comes when you're president?

Marco Rubio 00:19:09-00:19:30 (21 sec)

Well, let me tell you what has happened a couple of years ago. One of the hardest decisions you'll ever make in Congress is when you are asked by the president to authorize the use of force in a conflict, because you are now putting your name, on behalf of the people of your state, behind a military action, where Americans in uniform could lose their life. So, in 2014, Barack Obama said he would not take military action against Assad unless it was authorized by the Senate, beginning on the Committee of Foreign Relations, where I am one of its members.

Marco Rubio 00:19:30-00:19:42 (12 sec)

And it was hard because you looked at the pictures. I saw the same images people saw. I'm the father of children.

Marco Rubio 00:19:42-00:20:01 (19 sec)

I saw the images of these little children -- been gassed and poisoned by their own leaders and we were angry. Something had to happen, and there was the sense that we needed to seek retribution. And then I looked at Barack Obama's plan.

Marco Rubio 00:20:01-00:20:30 (29 sec)

Barack Obama's plan, which John Kerry later described as unbelievably small, and I concluded that that attack would not only not help the situation, it would make it actually worse. It would allow Assad to stand up to the United States of America, survive a strike, stay in power and actually strengthen his grip. So it was a difficult decision to make and when we only had a few days to look at and make a decision on it and I voted against Barack Obama's plan to use force, and it was the right decision.

John Dickerson 00:20:30-00:20:53 (23 sec)

Dr. Carson, I want to ask you a question... [Applause] Dr. Carson, you said you've had more two a.m. -- two a.m. phone calls than anybody up on this stage. But when those two a.m. phone calls came, you operated on a foundation of all of that amazing medical work that you did, all of that learning. So if you were to be president, though, you wouldn't have the political foundation that hones those instincts when the two a.m. phone call comes. So isn't that a liability?

Ben Carson 00:20:53-00:21:01 (8 sec)

No, it isn't. First of all, let me go back to your first question for me. It wasn't phrased as who gets to nominate Supreme Court appointees, of course that's the president.

Ben Carson 00:21:01-00:21:25 (24 sec)

So I know that there are some left wing media who would try to make hay on that. Secondly, thank you for including me in the debate. Two questions already.

Ben Carson 00:21:25-00:21:43 (18 sec)

This is great. Now, as far... [Laughter] [Applause] As far as those two a.m.

Ben Carson 00:21:43-00:22:34 (51 sec)

phone calls are concerned, judgment is what is required. And the kinds of things that you come up with are some sometimes very, very difficult and very unique. One of the things that I was known for is doing things that have not been done before. So no amount of experience really prepares you to do something that has never been done before. That's where judgment comes in. And that, I think, is a situation that we're in right now, a situation that we have never been in before with the kinds of threats that pose real danger to our nation, and it comes in very handy in those situations.

John Dickerson 00:22:34-00:23:37 (63 sec)

Governor Kasich, Russia is being credited... [Applause] Russia is being credited with bombing U.S. -backed rebels on behalf of Assad in Aleppo and Syria. They've also moved into the Crimea, eastern Ukraine. You've said you want to punch them in the nose. What does that mean? What are you going to do?

John Kasich 00:23:37-00:23:54 (17 sec)

First of all -- yes. First of all, look, we have to make it clear to Russia what we expect. We don't have to declare an enemy, rattle a sword or threaten, but we need to make it clear what we expect.

John Kasich 00:23:54-00:23:59 (5 sec)

Number one is we will arm the folks in Ukraine who are fighting for their freedom. They deserve it. There will be no ifs, ands or buts about it.

John Kasich 00:23:59-00:24:21 (22 sec)

Secondly, an attack on NATO, trumped up on any excuse of Russian- speaking people, either in the NATO countries or in Finland or Sweden is going to be an attack on us. And look, I think we have an opportunity as America to put something really great together again. The Egyptians, the Saudis, the Jordanians, the Gulf states, they all know they're at risk.

John Kasich 00:24:21-00:24:33 (12 sec)

We need to look into Europe, we look at France, we look at Germany and the migrants. We look at Belgium, we look at Britain. Everybody now is being threaten by radical Islam.

John Kasich 00:24:33-00:25:01 (28 sec)

We have an opportunity to lead. You know, the fact of the matter is the world is desperate for our leadership. Sometimes they may -- they may make a remark here or there that we don't like, but frankly, the world needs us. And we have an opportunity now to assemble a coalition of the civilized people, those who respect civilization, the rights of women, the rights to protest, to be able to reassert our leadership all across this globe again and make sure this century is going to be the best we've ever seen.

John Dickerson 00:25:01-00:25:03 (2 sec)

Governor... [Applause] Governor Bush.

Jeb Bush 00:25:03-00:25:03 ( sec)

Yes.

John Dickerson 00:25:03-00:25:18 (15 sec)

You said defeating ISIS requires defeating Assad. But wouldn't that also put us into conflict with Russia, a country that supports Assad? so doesn't that mean effectively Assad's there to stay?

Jeb Bush 00:25:18-00:25:33 (15 sec)

No, it doesn't, and that's the problem. The lack of leadership in this country by Barack Obama, John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, thinking that this is a policy that works, this policy of containment with ISIS. It's a complete, unmitigated disaster.

Jeb Bush 00:25:33-00:25:38 (5 sec)

And to allow Russia now to have influence in Syria makes it harder, but we need to destroy ISIS and dispose of Assad to create a stable Syria so that the four million refugees aren't a breeding ground for Islamic jihadists. This is the problem. Donald Trump brought up the fact that he would -- he'd want to accommodate Russia.

Jeb Bush 00:25:38-00:25:50 (12 sec)

Russia is not taking out ISIS. They're -- they're attacking our -- our -- our team, the team that we've been training and the team that we've been supporting. It is absolutely ludicrous to suggest that Russia could be a positive partner in this. They are on the run. They are making -- every time we step back, they're on the run.

Jeb Bush 00:25:50-00:26:18 (28 sec)

The question that you asked was a really good one about what you would do -- what three things would you do. I would restore the military, the sequester needs to be reversed. I would have a strategy to destroy ISIS, and I would immediately create a policy of containment as it relates to Iran's ambitions, and to make it make clear that we are not going to allow for Iran to do what it's doing, which is to move towards a nuclear weapon.

Jeb Bush 00:26:18-00:26:31 (13 sec)

Those three things would be the first and foremost things that we need to do... [Bell Rings]

Jeb Bush 00:26:31-00:26:34 (3 sec)

... in 2017.

John Dickerson 00:26:34-00:26:39 (5 sec)

Mr. Trump, you're... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:26:39-00:26:44 (5 sec)

Mr. Trump, you were mentioned here. You did say that you could get along very well with Vladimir Putin. You did at one point say let Russia take care of ISIS...

Donald Trump 00:26:44-00:26:45 (1 sec)

... [Inaudible] called me a genius, I like him so far, I have to tell you. Let me just tell you this.

Donald Trump 00:26:45-00:26:53 (8 sec)

Jeb is so wrong. Jeb is absolutely self -- just so you understand, you know what that is? That's Jeb's special interest and lobbyist talking. Look, let me just tell you something, Jeb -- Jeb is so wrong.

Donald Trump 00:26:53-00:27:01 (8 sec)

You got to fight ISIS first. You fight ISIS first. Right now you have Russia, you have Iran, you have them with Assad, and you have them with Syria.

Donald Trump 00:27:01-00:27:19 (18 sec)

You have to knock out ISIS. They're chopping off heads. These are animals. You have to knock em out. You have to knock them off strong. You decide what to do after, you can't fight two wars at one time. If you listen to him, and you listen to some of the folks that I've been listening to, that's why we've been in the Middle East for 15 years, and we haven't won anything. We've spent $5 trillion dollars in the Middle East with thinking like that. We've spent $5... [Bell Rings]

Donald Trump 00:27:19-00:27:30 (11 sec)

Lindsey Graham, who backs him, had zero on his polls. Let me just say something -- we've spent -- we've spent. I only tell the truth, lobbyists. We've spent $5 trillion dollars all over the -- we have to rebuild our country. We have to rebuild our infrastructure. you listen to that you're going to be there for another 15...

John Dickerson 00:27:30-00:27:30 ( sec)

... Alright...

Donald Trump 00:27:30-00:27:32 (2 sec)

... You'll end up with world war three...

John Dickerson 00:27:32-00:27:34 (2 sec)

... Alright, Governor Bush, please respond.

Jeb Bush 00:27:34-00:27:40 (6 sec)

The very basic fact is that Vladimir Putin is not going to be an ally of the United States. The whole world knows this. It's a simple basic fact. [Applause]

Jeb Bush 00:27:40-00:27:54 (14 sec)

They're not taking out -- they're not even attempting to take out ISIS. They're attacking the troops that we're supporting. We need to create a coalition, Sunni led coalition on the ground with our special operators to destroy ISIS, and bring about stability. And, you can't do that with Assad in power. He has...

Donald Trump 00:27:54-00:27:56 (2 sec)

... We're supporting troops

Jeb Bush 00:27:56-00:27:56 ( sec)

... Let me finish....

Donald Trump 00:27:56-00:27:56 ( sec)

...that we don't even know who they are.

John Dickerson 00:27:56-00:27:57 (1 sec)

... OK, settle...

Jeb Bush 00:27:57-00:27:58 (1 sec)

...This is ridiculous...

Donald Trump 00:27:58-00:28:05 (7 sec)

... We're supporting troops that we don't even know who they are...

John Dickerson 00:28:05-00:28:10 (5 sec)

... Alright, Mr. Trump, alright...

Donald Trump 00:28:10-00:28:11 (1 sec)

We have no idea who they are.

John Dickerson 00:28:11-00:28:32 (21 sec)

Gentleman, I think we're going to leave that there. I've got a question for Senator...

Jeb Bush 00:28:32-00:28:35 (3 sec)

... This is coming from a guy who gets his foreign policy from the shows.

Donald Trump 00:28:35-00:28:37 (2 sec)

... Oh, yeah, yeah...

Jeb Bush 00:28:37-00:28:40 (3 sec)

... This is a guy who thinks that Hillary Clinton is a great negotiator in Iran...

Donald Trump 00:28:40-00:28:51 (11 sec)

... Let 44 million in New Hampshire, it was practically [Inaudible] ...

Jeb Bush 00:28:51-00:28:58 (7 sec)

... This is a man who insults his way to the nomination...

Donald Trump 00:28:58-00:29:02 (4 sec)

... 44 million -- give me a break. [Crosstalk]

John Dickerson 00:29:02-00:29:13 (11 sec)

... Alright, alright, gentlemen, gentlemen, let's leave it there so I can ask a question of Senator Cruz who's also running for President. [Laughter] [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:29:13-00:29:37 (24 sec)

Senator Cruz, you talked about the first Gulf War as being a kind of model for your focused, and determined effort to go after ISIS. But, there were 700,000 ground troops as a part of that, and you don't have a ground component to your plan. Why?

Ted Cruz 00:29:37-00:30:35 (58 sec)

Well, we need to focus on what the objective is, you know? You're question about the first three questions you would ask in this Situation Room. I think it is a problem if the president, commander in chief we've elected does not have the experience and background to understand the threats facing this country coming in on day one. If you look at the threats facing this country, the single gravest threat, national security threat, is the threat of a nuclear Iran.

Ted Cruz 00:30:35-00:31:15 (40 sec)

That's why I've pledged on day one to rip to shreds this Iranian nuclear deal, and anyone that thinks you can negotiate Konami does not understand the nature of Komani. When it comes to ISIS, we've got to have a focused objective. One of the problems of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton's foreign policy, and sadly, too many establishment Republicans in Washington, is they focus on issues unrelated to protecting this country.

Ted Cruz 00:31:15-00:32:06 (51 sec)

They focus on nation building, they focus on toppling governments to promote democracy, and it ends up undermining our national security. Now, with regard to ISIS, we need a commander in chief that sets the objective we will utterly defeat them because they have declared war. They've declared a jihad on us. Now, what do we need... [Bell Rings]

Ted Cruz 00:32:06-00:32:32 (26 sec)

... To carry that out. We need overwhelming air power, we need to arm the Kurds who can be our boots on the ground, and if ground troops are necessary than we should employ them, but it shouldn't be politicians demonstrating political toughness. It should be military expert judgement carrying out the objectives set out by the commander in chief. [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:32:32-00:32:52 (20 sec)

Very quickly, 30-second follow-up. You've said that essentially the Kurds would be the American ground forces in there. The criticism that experts have on that is that the Kurds only can work within their territory. If they take larger amounts of territory, you have an ethnic war with the Arabs. So the Kurds can't really do as much as you seem to be putting on their backs.

Ted Cruz 00:32:52-00:32:58 (6 sec)

We have Kurds in both Iraq and Syria. They are fighting ISIS right now. They are winning victories right now.

Ted Cruz 00:32:58-00:33:13 (15 sec)

ISIS is using American military equipment they've seized in Iraq. And the Obama administration refuses to arm the Kurds, the Peshmerga, the fighting forces who have been longtime allies. We ought to be arming them and letting them fight.

Ted Cruz 00:33:13-00:33:30 (17 sec)

Now if we need to embed Special Forces to direct our overwhelming air power, if it is required to use ground troops to defeat ISIS, we should use them, but we ought to start with using our incredible air power advantage. The first Persian Gulf War, we launched 1,100 air attacks a day. Today we're launching between 15 and 30. We're not using the tools we have and it's because the commander-in-chief is not focused on defeating the enemy.

John Dickerson 00:33:30-00:33:31 (1 sec)

All right. Mr. Trump... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:33:31-00:33:32 (1 sec)

... on Monday, George W. Bush will campaign in South Carolina for his brother.

John Dickerson 00:33:32-00:33:46 (14 sec)

As you've said tonight, and you've often said, the Iraq War and your opposition to it was a sign of your good judgment. In 2008, in an interview with Wolf Blitzer, talking about President George W. Bush's conduct of the war, you said you were surprised that Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi didn't try to impeach him.

John Dickerson 00:33:46-00:33:55 (9 sec)

You said, quote: "which personally I think would have been a wonderful thing." When you were asked what you meant by that and you said: "For the war, for the war, he lied, he got us into the war with lies." Do you still believe President Bush should have been impeached.

Donald Trump 00:33:55-00:34:04 (9 sec)

First of all, I have to say, as a businessman I get along with everybody. I have business all over the world. [Booing]

Donald Trump 00:34:04-00:34:11 (7 sec)

I know so many of the people in the audience. And by the way, I'm a self-funder. I don't have -- I have my wife and I have my son. That's all I have. I don't have this. [Applause]

Donald Trump 00:34:11-00:34:22 (11 sec)

So let me just tell you, I get along with everybody, which is my obligation to my company, to myself, et cetera. Obviously, the war in Iraq was a big, fat mistake. All right? Now, you can take it any way you want, and it took -- it took Jeb Bush, if you remember at the beginning of his announcement, when he announced for president, it took him five days.

Donald Trump 00:34:22-00:34:49 (27 sec)

He went back, it was a mistake, it wasn't a mistake. It took him five days before his people told him what to say, and he ultimately said, "it was a mistake." The war in Iraq, we spent $2 trillion, thousands of lives, we don't even have it. Iran has taken over Iraq with the second-largest oil reserves in the world. Obviously, it was a mistake.

John Dickerson 00:34:49-00:35:07 (18 sec)

So...

Donald Trump 00:35:07-00:35:27 (20 sec)

George Bush made a mistake. We can make mistakes. But that one was a beauty. We should have never been in Iraq. We have destabilized the Middle East.

John Dickerson 00:35:27-00:35:30 (3 sec)

But so I'm going to -- so you still think he should be impeached?

Jeb Bush 00:35:30-00:35:31 (1 sec)

I think it's my turn, isn't it?

John Dickerson 00:35:31-00:35:46 (15 sec)

You do whatever you want. You call it whatever you want. I want to tell you. They lied. They said there were weapons of mass destruction, there were none. And they knew there were none. There were no weapons of mass destruction. [Booing]

John Dickerson 00:35:46-00:35:49 (3 sec)

All right. OK. All right. Governor Bush -- when a member on the stage's brother gets attacked...

Jeb Bush 00:35:49-00:35:51 (2 sec)

I've got about five or six...

John Dickerson 00:35:51-00:35:52 (1 sec)

... the brother gets to respond.

Jeb Bush 00:35:52-00:35:59 (7 sec)

Do I get to do it five or six times or just once responding to that?

Donald Trump 00:35:59-00:35:59 ( sec)

I'm being nice.

Jeb Bush 00:35:59-00:36:02 (3 sec)

So here's the deal. I'm sick ask tired of Barack Obama blaming my brother for all of the problems that he has had. [Applause]

Jeb Bush 00:36:02-00:36:07 (5 sec)

And, frankly, I could care less about the insults that Donald Trump gives to me. It's blood sport for him. He enjoys it. And I'm glad he's happy about it. But I am sick and tired...

Donald Trump 00:36:07-00:36:08 (1 sec)

He spent $22 million in... [Crosstalk]

Jeb Bush 00:36:08-00:36:10 (2 sec)

I am sick and tired of him going after my family. My dad is the greatest man alive in my mind. [Applause]

Jeb Bush 00:36:10-00:36:15 (5 sec)

And while Donald Trump was building a reality TV show, my brother was building a security apparatus to keep us safe. And I'm proud of what he did. [Applause]

Jeb Bush 00:36:15-00:36:18 (3 sec)

And he has had the gall to go after my brother.

Donald Trump 00:36:18-00:36:22 (4 sec)

The World Trade Center came down during your brother's reign, remember that. [Booing]

Jeb Bush 00:36:22-00:36:27 (5 sec)

He has had the gall to go after my mother. Hold on. Let me finish. He has had the gall to go after my mother.

Donald Trump 00:36:27-00:36:30 (3 sec)

That's not keeping us safe.

Jeb Bush 00:36:30-00:36:34 (4 sec)

Look, I won the lottery when I was born 63 years ago, looked up, and I saw my mom. My mom is the strongest woman I know.

Donald Trump 00:36:34-00:36:35 (1 sec)

She should be running.

Jeb Bush 00:36:35-00:36:40 (5 sec)

This is not about my family or his family. This is about the South Carolina families that need someone to be a commander-in- chief that can lead. I'm that person.

John Dickerson 00:36:40-00:36:43 (3 sec)

Governor Kasich, would you weigh in on... [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:36:43-00:36:44 (1 sec)

Governor Kasich, please weigh in.

John Kasich 00:36:44-00:36:45 (1 sec)

I've got to tell you, this is just crazy, huh? [Laughter]

John Kasich 00:36:45-00:36:49 (4 sec)

This is just nuts, OK? Jeez, oh, man. I'm sorry, John.

John Dickerson 00:36:49-00:36:51 (2 sec)

Why is it nuts? Talk about it. Give us your sense of...

John Kasich 00:36:51-00:36:58 (7 sec)

Oh, well, listen, I think being in Iraq, look, we thought there were weapons of mass destruction. Colin Powell, who is one of the most distinguished generals in modern time said there were weapons there. [Applause]

John Kasich 00:36:58-00:37:16 (18 sec)

But, but, the fact is we got ourselves in the middle of a civil war. The Sunni, the Shia, and the Kurds, never gotten along. In fact, that country was drawn -- the borders of that country were drawn after World War I by Westerners that didn't understand what was happening there.

John Kasich 00:37:16-00:37:52 (36 sec)

The tragedy of it is that we're still embroiled. And, frankly, if there weren't weapons of mass destruction we should never have gone. I don't believe the United States should involve itself in civil wars.

John Kasich 00:37:52-00:38:30 (38 sec)

Civil wars are not in our direct are interest, and if you -- and look, I served on a defense committee for 18 years and was called into the Pentagon after 9/11 by Secretary Rumsfeld to deal with some of the most serious problems that we faced. The fact is, is that we should go to war when it is our direct interest. We should not be policemen of the world, but when we go, we mean business.

John Kasich 00:38:30-00:38:45 (15 sec)

We'll do our job. We'll tell our soldiers, our people in the service, take care of your job and then come home once we've accomplished our goals. That's what we need to do.

John Dickerson 00:38:45-00:38:46 (1 sec)

Thirty seconds, Senator Rubio.

Marco Rubio 00:38:46-00:38:51 (5 sec)

I just want to say, at least on behalf of me and my family, I thank God all the time it was George W. Bush in the White House on 9/11 and not Al Gore. [Applause] And you can -- I think you can look back in hindsight and say a couple of things, but he kept us safe.

Marco Rubio 00:38:51-00:39:05 (14 sec)

And not only did he keep us safe, but no matter what you want to say about weapons of mass destruction, Saddam Hussein was in violation of U.N. resolutions, in open violation, and the world wouldn't do anything about it, and George W. Bush enforced what the international community refused to do. And again, he kept us safe, and I am forever grateful to what he did for this country. [Applause]

Donald Trump 00:39:05-00:39:11 (6 sec)

How did he keep us safe when the World Trade Center -- the World -- excuse me. I lost hundreds of friends. The World Trade Center came down during the reign of George Bush. He kept us safe? That is not safe. That is not safe, Marco. That is not safe.

Marco Rubio 00:39:11-00:39:15 (4 sec)

The World Trade Center came down because Bill Clinton didn't kill Osama bin Laden when he had the chance to kill him. [Applause]

Donald Trump 00:39:15-00:39:17 (2 sec)

And George Bush-- by the way, George Bush had the chance, also, and he didn't listen to the advice of his CIA.

John Dickerson 00:39:17-00:39:19 (2 sec)

All right, Dr. Carson, we have a cleansing...

Jeb Bush 00:39:19-00:39:19 ( sec)

Can I just...

John Dickerson 00:39:19-00:39:20 (1 sec)

We have a cleansing...

Jeb Bush 00:39:20-00:39:23 (3 sec)

I'm not going to invite Donald Trump to the rally in Charleston on Monday afternoon when he brother is coming to speak.

Donald Trump 00:39:23-00:39:25 (2 sec)

I don't want to go. [Laughter]

Jeb Bush 00:39:25-00:40:05 (40 sec)

I'm rescinding the invitation. I thought you might want to come, but I guess not.

John Dickerson 00:40:05-00:41:35 (90 sec)

All right. Well, Dr. Carson, I have got a question now for you. A moment of pause here. You have said, Dr. Carson, that -- referring to yourself that people bought into the idea that, quote, "A nice person can't be tough on terrorists." You have called for loosening the rules of engagement for the military, which could lead to more civilian casualties. So, explain why those casualties would be acceptable in the fight against ISIS?

Ben Carson 00:41:35-00:41:55 (20 sec)

Well, first of all, let me just address the Iraq question. You know, I was not particularly in favor of us going to war in Iraq, primarily because I have studied, you know, the Middle East, recognizing that those are nations that are ruled by dictators and have been for thousands of years. And when you go in and you remove one of those dictators, unless you have an appropriate plan for replacing them, you're going to have chaos.

Ben Carson 00:41:55-00:42:38 (43 sec)

Now, fortunately, we were able to stabilize the situation, and it was the current administration that turned tail and ran and destabilized the situation. [Applause] Now, having said that, in terms of the rules of engagement, I was talking about, you know, Obama has said, you know, we shouldn't bomb tankers, you know, coming out of refineries because there may be people in there, or because the environment may be hurt. You know, that's just asinine thinking.

Ben Carson 00:42:38-00:43:19 (41 sec)

And the fact of the matter is... [Applause] You know, we -- obviously, you're not going to accomplish all of your goals without some collateral damage. You have to be able to assess what is acceptable and what is not.

John Dickerson 00:43:19-00:43:43 (24 sec)

All right, thank you, Dr. Carson. We're going to have to take a commercial break here. Thank you to all the candidates. We'll be right back with CBS News' 2016 debate in Greenville, South Carolina. [Applause] [Commercial Break]

John Dickerson 00:43:43-00:43:55 (12 sec)

We're back with the Republicans who could be president. The topic now is money and how the candidates would spend it. We'll turn the questioning over to Kimberly Strassel of The Wall Street Journal and Major Garrett of CBS news. Kim?

Kimberley Strassel 00:43:55-00:43:59 (4 sec)

Mr. Trump.

Donald Trump 00:43:59-00:44:00 (1 sec)

Yes.

Kimberley Strassel 00:44:00-00:44:27 (27 sec)

You have made a lot of promises and you have also -- you're the only candidate who has said he would not touch entitlements. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has estimated that your ideas would cost an additional $12 trillion to $15 trillion over the next 10 years and that we would have to have annual economic growth of anywhere from 7.7 percent to nine percent annually to pay for them. Are you proposing more than you can actually deliver, at least not without big deficits?

Donald Trump 00:44:27-00:44:41 (14 sec)

First of all, the -- when you say I'm the only candidate, if you listen to the Democrats, they want to do many things to Social Security and I want to do them on its own merit. You listen to them, what they want to do to Social Security, none of these folks are getting elected, OK, whether they can do it or not. I'm going to save Social Security.

Donald Trump 00:44:41-00:44:52 (11 sec)

I'm going to bring jobs back from China. I'm going to bring jobs back from Mexico and from Japan, where they're all -- every country throughout the world -- now Vietnam, that's the new one. They are taking our jobs.

Donald Trump 00:44:52-00:44:57 (5 sec)

They are taking our wealth. They are taking our base. And you and I have had this discussion.

Donald Trump 00:44:57-00:45:05 (8 sec)

We're going to make our economy strong again. I'm lowering taxes. We have $2.5 trillion offshore.

Donald Trump 00:45:05-00:45:23 (18 sec)

We have 2.5 trillion that I think is actually five trillion because the government has no idea when they say 2.5, they have no idea what they're doing or saying, as they've proven very well. We're going to bring that money back. You take a look at what happened just this week, China bought the Chicago Stock Exchange, China, a Chinese company.

Donald Trump 00:45:23-00:45:58 (35 sec)

Carrier is moving to Mexico, air conditioning company. Not only the ones I talk about all the time, Nabisco and Ford and -- they're all moving out. We have an economy that last quarter, GDP didn't grow. It was flat. We have to make our economy grow again. We're dying. This country is dying. And our workers are losing their jobs, and you're going...

Kimberley Strassel 00:45:58-00:45:59 (1 sec)

But in terms of...

Donald Trump 00:45:59-00:46:02 (3 sec)

I'm the only one who is going to save Social Security, believe me.

Kimberley Strassel 00:46:02-00:46:05 (3 sec)

OK. But how would you actually do that? Can I ask you? because right now, Social Security and Medicare...

Donald Trump 00:46:05-00:46:07 (2 sec)

Because you have tremendous waste. I'll tell you...

Kimberley Strassel 00:46:07-00:46:13 (6 sec)

They take up two-thirds of the federal budget and they're growing.

Donald Trump 00:46:13-00:46:19 (6 sec)

You have tremendous waste, fraud and abuse. That we're taking care of. That we're taking care of.

Donald Trump 00:46:19-00:46:46 (27 sec)

It's tremendous. We have in Social Security right now thousand and thousands of people that are over 106 years old. Now, you know they don't exist. They don't exist. There's tremendous waste, fraud and abuse, and we're going to get it. But we're not going to hurt the people who have been paying into Social Security their whole life and then all of a sudden they're supposed to get less. We're bringing our jobs back. We're going to make our economy great again.

Major Garrett 00:46:46-00:47:24 (38 sec)

Senator Cruz. [Applause] John mentioned this is about dollars and incentives, we also want to talk about economic growth engagements. You have proposed a consumption tax, you called it the "back tax. " Some analysts compare it more to an attributed "value added tax." From the perspective from economic growth in building wages, how does that work and how would you address those loan standing conservative concerns that something approaching the "value added tax" would be used to constantly increase those race to pay for future government spending and become an escalator of taxation not of growth?

Ted Cruz 00:47:24-00:47:57 (33 sec)

Well, let me say it at the outset that everyone here understands - everyone understands that how - that the middle class has been left behind in the last seven years of the Obama economy and we've got to bring jobs back. We've got to get people back to work. We've got to get wages going up again.

Ted Cruz 00:47:57-00:48:21 (24 sec)

We've got to get people moving from part time work to full time work. We all agree on that but it's not going to be solved with magic pixie dust. It's just going to be solved by declaring into the air, "let there be jobs." We actually have to understand the principles that made America great in the first place.

Ted Cruz 00:48:21-00:48:47 (26 sec)

Now, where do you get economic growth? If you look at cause and effect over our nation's history, every time we lessen the burden of Washington on small business owners, on job creators, we see incredible economic growth. You do that through tax reform and regulatory reform. My tax plan - typical family of four , first 36,000 dollars you earn, you pay nothing in taxes - no income taxes, no pay role taxes, no nothing.

Ted Cruz 00:48:47-00:48:56 (9 sec)

Above ten percent, everyone pays the same simple flat ten percent income rate, it's flat and fair. You can fill out your taxes on a postcard and we abolish the IRS. If you want to see the post card, I've got it on my website.

Major Garrett 00:48:56-00:49:09 (13 sec)

Now the question - conservatives have sort of this idea conceptually for a long time but especially on this consumption value added tax system. In Europe where it exist, it has become an escalator of taxation to feed government spending and that's why conservatives have long resisted it. Why and what would you do as president to make sure that doesn't happen?

Ted Cruz 00:49:09-00:49:28 (19 sec)

Now Major, the business flat tax that is in my tax plan is not a VAT. A VAT in Europe is a sales tax. The business flat tax is not a sales tax, it is a tax of 16 percent opposed fairly and evenly across the board on all business.

Ted Cruz 00:49:28-00:50:12 (44 sec)

One of the things that's critical is we're doing that in conjunction with abolishing the corporate income tax, with abolishing the Obamacare taxes, with abolishing the payroll taxes which are the biggest taxes paid by most working Americans and with abolishing the death tax which is cruel and unfair. And you asked about economic growth, the non-partisan tax foundation estimated a simple flat tax that would product 4.9 million new jobs, it would increase capital investment by 44 percent and would lift everyone's income by double digits. That's how you turn the country around, not just hoping and praying for it but implementing policies that work.

Kimberley Strassel 00:50:12-00:50:56 (44 sec)

OK, I have a question, a related tax question. Senator Rubio, you have the highest tax rate of anyone up on the stage in terms of the top tax rates, 35 percent. Some economists say, "it would limit its potential to boost economic growth." You do that, so that you will have more revenue to pay for a tripling of the Child Tax Credit. Normally, it's liberals who like to use the tax code to insert social policy. Why should conservatives who want to tax adopt the other side's approach?

Marco Rubio 00:50:56-00:51:10 (14 sec)

Well, because I'm influencing social policy, this is their money. This is the money of parents. You don't earn the tax credit unless you're working.

Marco Rubio 00:51:10-00:51:33 (23 sec)

That's your money, it doesn't belong to government. Here's what I don't understand, if a business takes their money and they invest in the piece of the equipment, they get to write to off their taxes. But if a parent takes money that they have earned to work and invests in their children, they don't? This makes no sense.

Marco Rubio 00:51:33-00:51:44 (11 sec)

Parenting is the most important job any of us will ever have. Family formation is the most important thing in society. So what my tax plan does, is it does create - especially for working families, an additional Child Tax Credit.

Marco Rubio 00:51:44-00:52:00 (16 sec)

So that parents who are working get to keep more of their own money, not the government's money to invest in their children to go to school, to go a private school, to buy a new back pack. Let me tell you, if you're a parent that's struggling, then you know that fifty dollars a month is the difference between a new pair of shoes this month or not getting a new pair of shoes for your kids. I'm going to have a tax plan that is pro-family because the family is the most important institution in society. You cannot have a strong country without strong families. [Applause]

Kimberley Strassel 00:52:00-00:52:18 (18 sec)

Governor Kasich, this on is on size of government. In 2013 you pushed through a Medicaid reform in yours state over the rejections of many of the republicans in your state. Total enrollment and overall cost of program have gone well beyond what anyone had expected including yourself. How can you argue that this overall growth fits in with conservative ambition to significantly cut back on the size of federal welfare programs?

John Kasich 00:52:18-00:52:28 (10 sec)

Yeah. Well, first of all, those numbers incorrect. We are -- our Medicaid programs are coming in below cost estimates, and our Medicaid program in the second year grew at 2.5 percent.

John Kasich 00:52:28-00:53:01 (33 sec)

And Kimberly, let me tell you, when we expand Medicaid and we treat the mentally ill, then they don't live under a bridge or live in a prison, where they cost $22,500 a year. When we take the drug addicted and we treat them in the prisons, we stop the revolving door of people in and out of prisons and we save $22,500 a year. Guess what else? They get their lives back.

John Kasich 00:53:01-00:53:11 (10 sec)

And the working poor, they're now getting health care. And you know that about a third of the people who are now getting that health care are people who are suffering very serious illnesses, particularly cancer. So, what I would tell you is, we've gone from an $8 billion hole to a $2 billion surplus.

John Kasich 00:53:11-00:53:30 (19 sec)

We've cut taxes by more than any governor in America by $5 billion. We have grown the number of jobs by 400,000 private sector jobs since I've been governor. Our credit is strong. Our pensions are strong. And frankly, we leave no one behind. Economic growth is not an end unto itself. We want everyone to rise, and we will make them personally responsible for the help that they get. And that is exactly the program we're driving in Ohio. And, boy, people ought to look at Ohio, because it has got a good formula. [Applause]

Major Garrett 00:53:30-00:53:32 (2 sec)

Governor Bush, a question for you -- but if you want to jump in, please.

Jeb Bush 00:53:32-00:53:32 ( sec)

I'd like -- can I -- can I...

Major Garrett 00:53:32-00:53:33 (1 sec)

Jump in, and then I've got a question for you.

Jeb Bush 00:53:33-00:53:51 (18 sec)

Look I admire the fact that Governor Kasich is supporting spending more money on drug treatment and mental health. I think that's a high priority all across this country, but expanding Obamacare is what we're talking about, and Obamacare's expansion, even though the federal government is paying for the great majority of it, is creating further debt on the backs of our children and grandchildren. We should be fighting Obamacare, repealing Obamacare, replacing it with something totally different.

Jeb Bush 00:53:51-00:54:06 (15 sec)

[Applause] When I was -- as a private citizen, Florida was confronted with the choice. The governor was supportive of doing what John did. So was the Florida Senate. A committed speaker of the House asked me to go as a private citizen to make the case against the expansion. I did, and it wasn't expanded there, just as it wasn't expanded in South Carolina under Governor Haley. [Crosstalk]

Major Garrett 00:54:06-00:54:16 (10 sec)

Real quickly, jump in, because I have got a question for Governor Bush, but jump in.

John Kasich 00:54:16-00:54:33 (17 sec)

Yeah, let me say a couple of things. First of all, when Jeb was governor, his first four years as governor, he expand -- his Medicaid program grew twice as fast as mine. OK? It's just a fact.

John Kasich 00:54:33-00:54:38 (5 sec)

Now, with Obamacare, I've not only sued the administration, I did not set up an exchange. And he knows that I'm not for Obamacare, never have been. But here's what's interesting about Medicaid.

John Kasich 00:54:38-00:54:55 (17 sec)

You know who expanded Medicaid five times to try to help the folks and give them opportunity so that you could rise and get a job? President Ronald Reagan. Now, the fact of the matter is, we expanded to get people on their feet, and once they're on their feet, we are giving them the training and the efforts that they need to be able to get work and pull out of that situation.

Major Garrett 00:54:55-00:54:58 (3 sec)

Understood, Governor Kasich.

John Kasich 00:54:58-00:55:00 (2 sec)

That's what we're doing in our state.

Jeb Bush 00:55:00-00:55:07 (7 sec)

South Carolina -- South Carolinians need to know this, because the Cato Institute, which grades governors based on their spending, rank him right at the bottom.

Major Garrett 00:55:07-00:55:08 (1 sec)

Yeah, Governor Bush, fine.

Jeb Bush 00:55:08-00:55:10 (2 sec)

And Governor Haley is ranked at the top. [Crosstalk]

Major Garrett 00:55:10-00:55:11 (1 sec)

Let me get in a question from...

Jeb Bush 00:55:11-00:55:11 ( sec)

No. He mentioned my name.

Major Garrett 00:55:11-00:55:13 (2 sec)

I understand, I understand.

Jeb Bush 00:55:13-00:55:16 (3 sec)

Let me finish, though. No, no, no -- hey, wait, wait, wait. Just hold Major, hold Major. Hold on, Major. [Crosstalk]

Jeb Bush 00:55:16-00:55:18 (2 sec)

South Carolinians want to make that they elect the most conservative governor or candidate that can win.

John Kasich 00:55:18-00:55:20 (2 sec)

Let me -- let's tell you...

Major Garrett 00:55:20-00:55:22 (2 sec)

I have a question on economic growth, Governor Bush. [Applause]

John Kasich 00:55:22-00:55:45 (23 sec)

Major -- Major, we can't -- we've got to -- look, I have got to correct the record. And the fact of the matter is, we went from an $8 billion hole to a $2 billion surplus. We're up 400,000 jobs. Our credit is rock solid. And I don't know...

Major Garrett 00:55:45-00:55:50 (5 sec)

A [Inaudible] , Governor.

John Kasich 00:55:50-00:56:04 (14 sec)

Look, the bottom line is the people of this -- of this country, and this state want to see everybody rise, and they want to see unity, and I don't want to get into all this fighting tonight because people are frankly sick of the negative campaigning.

Major Garrett 00:56:04-00:56:05 (1 sec)

I know, understood. Governor Bush.

John Kasich 00:56:05-00:56:07 (2 sec)

And I'm going to stay positive about what I want to do from the... [Applause]

Major Garrett 00:56:07-00:58:19 (132 sec)

Governor Bush, from the perspective economic growth -- viewed from this perspective of economic growth, you have proposed a tax on hedge fund managers. The Americans for Tax Reform, a conservative tax group you're probably aware of, has said no Republican should be for higher taxes on capital gains. And many conservatives wonder if this proposal of yours would undermine not only that philosophy, but undercut your projection of 4 percent economic growth annually under your presidency?

Jeb Bush 00:58:19-00:58:19 ( sec)

Of course, not. It won't have an impact on hedge funds managers paying ordinary income. In fact, it's not just hedge fund people, but people that are doing -- they're in the business of investing other people's money, getting capital gains treatment is not appropriate.

Jeb Bush 00:58:19-00:58:19 ( sec)

They should be paying ordinary income. That's their business. They're grateful to be able to make a lot of money, I'm sure. And what we do is lower the rates. It's not the end of the world that private equity people and hedge fund folks that are, right now, getting capital gains treatment for the income they earn, pay ordinary income like everybody else in this room.

Jeb Bush 00:58:19-00:59:52 (93 sec)

That's not a problem at all. What we need to do is reform the tax code to simplify the rates, to shift power away from Washington, D.C. That's what I did as governor of the state of Florida, $19 billion dollars of tax cuts, and it stimulated seven out of the eight years. Florida led the nation in job growth. [Applause]

John Dickerson 00:59:52-00:59:56 (4 sec)

Dr. Carson, before we go to break, could you give us your sense of this conversation about either MedicAid, or economic growth through taxation?

Ben Carson 00:59:56-01:00:04 (8 sec)

Well, first of all, let me just mention on the tax issue. Ben Carson.com, go read about it because my tax plan has been praised by Kato, by Wall Street Journal. Forbes said it is the best, the most pro-growth tax plan, and it's based on real fairness for everybody.

Ben Carson 01:00:04-01:00:41 (37 sec)

Starts at the 150% poverty level, but even the people below that have to pay something because everybody has to have skin in the game, and the millions of people can't, you know, talk about what other people have to pay and have no skin in the game. And, it deals with corporate tax rate, and makes it the same as everybody else... [Bell Rings]

Ben Carson 01:00:41-01:00:42 (1 sec)

... Everybody pays exactly the same.

John Dickerson 01:00:42-01:00:42 ( sec)

Doctor...

Ben Carson 01:00:42-01:00:45 (3 sec)

... And, as far as Medicare and MedicAid, my main goal is to get rid of Obamacare, and put the care back in the hands of [Inaudible] ...

Major Garrett 01:00:45-01:00:46 (1 sec)

... Dr. Carson...

John Dickerson 01:00:46-01:00:52 (6 sec)

... Dr. Carson, I'm sorry we have to go to a commercial. The free market wants what it wants. Back soon with the 2016 Republican debate in Greenville, South Carolina. [Commercial Break]

John Dickerson 01:00:52-01:00:59 (7 sec)

Welcome back. We'll begin the second half of the debate with one of the hottest issues in the Republican campaign, immigration. But before I turn it back to Major Garrett and Kim Strassel, I have one question for Mr. Trump.

John Dickerson 01:00:59-01:01:24 (25 sec)

Mr. Trump, in the Republican National Committee's Spanish language response to the State of the Union, Congressman Diaz-Balart said, quote "It's essential that we find a legislative solution," talking about immigration, "to offer a permanent and humane solution to those who live in the shadows. What does that mean to you, a humane solution to those who live in the shadows?

Donald Trump 01:01:24-01:01:41 (17 sec)

I want everybody taken care of, but we have to take care of our people in this country. We're not taking care of our people. We have no border.

Donald Trump 01:01:41-01:02:20 (39 sec)

We have no control. People are flooding across. We can't have it. We either have a border, and I'm very strongly -- I'm not proposing. I will build a wall. I will build a wall. Remember this, the wall will be paid for by Mexico. We are not being treated right. [Applause] We are not being treated properly. If we don't have borders, if we don't have strength, we don't have a country. People are flowing across. We have to take care of our people. Believe me.

Major Garrett 01:02:20-01:02:32 (12 sec)

Senator Rubio... [Applause] For the purposes of the lines -- lines you would draw legislatively as a president on immigration reform, define amnesty.

Marco Rubio 01:02:32-01:02:44 (12 sec)

Well, first of all, I think amnesty is the forgiveness of a wrongdoing without consequence and that -- I've never supported that. I do not support that. I think there has to be consequences for violating our immigration laws.

Marco Rubio 01:02:44-01:02:57 (13 sec)

What I think is clear about this issue to begin with is we're not going to be able to make progress on illegal immigration until first, illegal immigration is brought under control. You go back to 1986 when they legalized three million people and they promised to secure the border. It didn't happen, and as a result, people have lost trust in the federal government.

Marco Rubio 01:02:57-01:03:05 (8 sec)

It is now clear that the only way to make progress on immigration is not just to pass a law that enforces the law, but actually prove to people that it's working. They want to see the wall built. They want to see the additional border agents.

Marco Rubio 01:03:05-01:03:27 (22 sec)

They want to see e-verify. They want to see an entry- exit tracking system. Forty percent of the people in this country illegally are entering legally and over-staying visas. And only after all of that is in place, then we'll see what the American people are willing to support on this issue. I think the American people will be very reasonable, but responsible, about how you handle someone who has been here a long time, who can pass a background check, who pays a fine and starts paying taxes and all they want is a work permit. But you can't do any of that until you prove to people that illegal immigration is under control once and for all. [Applause]

Kimberley Strassel 01:03:27-01:04:11 (44 sec)

Senator Cruz. Senator Cruz, you have promised to deport illegal aliens. You have also promised to reverse President Obama's executive action that gives temporary amnesty to illegals brought here by their parent as children. As president, you would have the names and addresses of the some 800,000 of those that have registered under that action. Now, you have said that in this country, we shouldn't go door to door look for illegals, but in this case you would have a list. Would you use it?

Ted Cruz 01:04:11-01:04:34 (23 sec)

Well, you know, your question highlights a sharp difference on immigration on this stage. You know, in a Republican primary, everyone talks tough on immigration. Everyone is against illegal immigration in a Republican primary.

Ted Cruz 01:04:34-01:05:04 (30 sec)

But as voters, we've been burned over and over again by people that give us a great campaign speech and they don't walk the walk. There are sharp differences on amnesty. If you look at the folks on this stage, when Harry Reid and Chuck Schumer and establishment Republicans were leading the fight to pass a massive amnesty plan, I stood with Jeff Sessions and Steve King and the American people and led the fight to defeat that amnesty plan. [Applause]

Kimberley Strassel 01:05:04-01:05:05 (1 sec)

So would you -- would you use the addresses?

Ted Cruz 01:05:05-01:05:06 (1 sec)

Now that moment...

Kimberley Strassel 01:05:06-01:05:08 (2 sec)

Would you pick them up?

Ted Cruz 01:05:08-01:05:24 (16 sec)

That moment was what Reagan would call "a time for choosing." When it comes to deciding which side of the line you're on, the Rubio-Schumer amnesty plan... [Booing]

Ted Cruz 01:05:24-01:05:53 (29 sec)

... apparently supported by the donor class, which is why Washington supported it. The Rubio-Schumer amnesty plan passed the Senate and it was on the verge of passing the House. House leadership intended to take it up and pass it with the Democrats overruling most of the Republicans. And the question for anyone on illegal immigration is where were you in that fight? Where did you stand? You are right. There is a difference between Senator Rubio and me on this question. [Crosstalk]

Kimberley Strassel 01:05:53-01:05:55 (2 sec)

Senator Rubio, your reply.

Marco Rubio 01:05:55-01:06:12 (17 sec)

We're going to have to do this again, OK? When that issue was being debated, Ted Cruz, at a committee hearing, very passionately said, I want immigration reform to pass, I want people to be able to come out of the shadows. And he proposed an amendment that would legalized people here. Not only that, he proposed doubling the number of green cards.

Marco Rubio 01:06:12-01:06:22 (10 sec)

He proposed a 500 percent increase on guest workers. Now his position is different. Now he is a passionate opponent of all those things. So he either wasn't telling the truth then or he isn't telling the truth now, but to argue he is a purist on immigration is just not true. [Applause]

Ted Cruz 01:06:22-01:06:27 (5 sec)

Major, I get a response to that.

Major Garrett 01:06:27-01:06:30 (3 sec)

Very quickly, Senator Cruz.

Kimberley Strassel 01:06:30-01:06:37 (7 sec)

All right. Senator Cruz. Your response, Senator Cruz.

Ted Cruz 01:06:37-01:06:49 (12 sec)

You know, the lines are very, very clear. Marco right now supports citizenship for 12 million people here illegally. I oppose citizenship.

Ted Cruz 01:06:49-01:07:11 (22 sec)

Marco stood on the debate stage and said that. But I would note not only that, Marco has a long record when it comes to amnesty. In the state of Florida, as speaker of the house, he supported in-state tuition for illegal immigrants. In addition to that, Marco went on Univision in Spanish and said he would not rescind President Obama's illegal executive amnesty on his first day in office. I have promised to rescind every single illegal executive action, including that one. [Applause, Booing]

Ted Cruz 01:07:11-01:07:13 (2 sec)

And on the question... [Crosstalk]

Marco Rubio 01:07:13-01:07:21 (8 sec)

Well, first of all, I don't know how he knows what I said on Univision because he doesn't speak Spanish. And second of all, the other point that I would make...

Ted Cruz 01:07:21-01:07:22 (1 sec)

[In Spanish] .

Marco Rubio 01:07:22-01:07:27 (5 sec)

Look, this is a disturbing pattern now, because for a number of weeks now, Ted Cruz has just been telling lies. He lied about Ben Carson in Iowa. [Applause]

Marco Rubio 01:07:27-01:07:43 (16 sec)

He lies about Planned Parenthood. He lies about marriage. He's lying about all sorts of things. And now he makes things up. The bottom line is this is a campaign and people are watching it. And they see the truth behind all these issues. And here is the truth, Ted Cruz supported legalizing people that were in this country...

Ted Cruz 01:07:43-01:07:45 (2 sec)

That is simply... [Crosstalk]

Marco Rubio 01:07:45-01:07:47 (2 sec)

... and only now does he say... [Crosstalk]

Ted Cruz 01:07:47-01:07:52 (5 sec)

That is absolutely false. What he said is knowingly false. And I would note, if you want to assess -- if you want to assess...

Marco Rubio 01:07:52-01:07:59 (7 sec)

Well, we'll put on our Web site, marcorubio.com. We're going to... [Crosstalk]

Ted Cruz 01:07:59-01:08:02 (3 sec)

... who is telling the truth... [Crosstalk]

Ted Cruz 01:08:02-01:08:03 (1 sec)

If you want to assess who is telling the truth... [Applause]

Ted Cruz 01:08:03-01:08:09 (6 sec)

... then you should look to Jeff Sessions, who said, without Ted Cruz the Rubio-Schumer amnesty bill would have passed, and Ted was responsible. You should look to Rush Limbaugh and Mark Levin that said... [Crosstalk]

Major Garrett 01:08:09-01:08:15 (6 sec)

Governor Bush, I want to bring this out to a little wider philosophical aspect, if you will.

Jeb Bush 01:08:15-01:08:18 (3 sec)

Thank you.

Major Garrett 01:08:18-01:08:41 (23 sec)

You have said illegal immigrants, quote, "broke the law but it's not a felony," still quoting you, "it's an act of love, it's an act of commitment to your family." Mr. Trump has, as you are well aware, denounced that statement over and over. Do you still believe it? What does that mean to you? And how does that inform your approach to immigration reform?

Jeb Bush 01:08:41-01:08:52 (11 sec)

Great question. I feel like I have to get into my inner Chris Christie, and point out that the reason why I should be president is listening to two senators talk about arcane amendments to bills that didn't pass. [Applause]

Jeb Bush 01:08:52-01:09:14 (22 sec)

This is -- this is the problem. We need a leader to fix this problem. And I have a detailed plan to do just that, including controlling the border, dealing with the visa over-stayers, making sure that we have a path to legal status, not to citizenship, for those that come out from the shadows and pay a fine, learn English, don't commit crimes, work and pay taxes. That is the better approach.

Major Garrett 01:09:14-01:09:19 (5 sec)

Fundamentally, do you believe this rhetoric is insufficiently compassionate to this issue?

Jeb Bush 01:09:19-01:09:31 (12 sec)

The great majority of people that come to this country come because they have no other choice. They want to come to provide for their families. That doesn't mean it's right.

Jeb Bush 01:09:31-01:09:54 (23 sec)

That doesn't mean it's right. We should pick who comes to our country. We should control our border. Coming here legally should be a lot easier than coming here illegally. But the motivation, they're not all rapists, as you-know- who said. They're not that. These are people that are coming to provide for their families. And we should show a little more respect for the fact that they're struggling. It doesn't mean we shouldn't be controlling the border. That's exactly what we should be doing.

Major Garrett 01:09:54-01:09:55 (1 sec)

Mr. Trump...

Donald Trump 01:09:55-01:09:56 (1 sec)

Look... [Applause]

Donald Trump 01:09:56-01:10:07 (11 sec)

... when I announced that I was running for president on June 16th, illegal immigration wasn't even a subject. If I didn't bring it up, we wouldn't even be talking.

Donald Trump 01:10:07-01:10:18 (11 sec)

Now I don't often agree with Marco, and I don't often agree with Ted, but I can in this case. The weakest person on this stage by far on illegal immigration is Jeb Bush. They come out of an act of love, whether you like it or not. He is so weak on illegal immigration it's laughable, and everybody knows it.

Jeb Bush 01:10:18-01:10:19 (1 sec)

... So, you know... [Bell Rings]

Jeb Bush 01:10:19-01:10:22 (3 sec)

... This is the standard operating procedure, to disparage me. That's fine...

Donald Trump 01:10:22-01:10:23 (1 sec)

... Spend a little more money on the commercials...

Jeb Bush 01:10:23-01:10:34 (11 sec)

... But, if you want to talk about weakness, you want to talk about weakness? It's weak to disparage women. [Applause]

Donald Trump 01:10:34-01:10:40 (6 sec)

[Inaudible] . I don't know what you're talking about.

Jeb Bush 01:10:40-01:10:42 (2 sec)

It's weak to denigrate the disabled. And, it's really weak to call John McCain a loser because he was a...

Donald Trump 01:10:42-01:10:43 (1 sec)

... I never called him -- I don't call him..

Jeb Bush 01:10:43-01:10:45 (2 sec)

... That is outrageous. The guys an American hero. [Applause]

Donald Trump 01:10:45-01:10:45 ( sec)

He also said about language...

Jeb Bush 01:10:45-01:10:48 (3 sec)

... The simple fact is I've also laid out my plans on [Inaudible] immigration...

Donald Trump 01:10:48-01:11:06 (18 sec)

... Language. Two days ago he said he would take his pants off and moon everybody, and that's fine. Nobody reports that. He gets up and says that, and then he tells me, oh, my language was a little bit rough...

Kimberley Strassel 01:11:06-01:11:06 ( sec)

... OK...

Donald Trump 01:11:06-01:11:07 (1 sec)

... My language. Give me a break...

Major Garrett 01:11:07-01:11:10 (3 sec)

... Governor Kasich, here in South Carolina earlier this week you said the idea, the concept of deporting 11 million undocumented workers...

Jeb Bush 01:11:10-01:11:16 (6 sec)

[Inaudible] Just, for the record [Inaudible] make sure my mother's listening, if she's watching the debate. I didn't say that I was going to moon somebody...

Donald Trump 01:11:16-01:11:19 (3 sec)

... You did say it, You did say it. Been reported in 10 different news...

Major Garrett 01:11:19-01:11:49 (30 sec)

... We will leave the moon metaphors to be adjudicated later, I assure you. Governor Kasich, you said earlier this week in South Carolina, the concept, the idea of deporting 11 million undocumented workers in this country is nuts. Why is it you are so opposed to that idea? Senator Cruz has said it's a simple application of existing law. The application of that is not inhumane, it is just. Why do you disagree?

John Kasich 01:11:49-01:12:17 (28 sec)

Before I get to that, this is the ninth or tenth debate. What I've been watching here, this back and forth, and these attacks, some of them are personal. I think we're fixing to lose the election to Hillary Clinton if we don't stop this. [Applause]

John Kasich 01:12:17-01:12:23 (6 sec)

I mean, the fact is -- you know what? I would suggest why don't we take off all the negative ads, and all the negative comments down from television and let us just talk about what we're for, and let's sell that, and the Republican party will be stronger as a result...

Major Garrett 01:12:23-01:12:24 (1 sec)

...What are you for on immigration?

John Kasich 01:12:24-01:12:34 (10 sec)

... [Off Microphone] [Inaudible] First of all, I'm for sealing the border, OK? And, then I'm for a guest worker program. People can come in, work, and go back home.

John Kasich 01:12:34-01:13:04 (30 sec)

We haven't closed the border because special interests, I believe, blocked it. Then, we have 11 and a half million people here. If they have not committed a crime since they've been here, make them pay a fine, and some back taxes, and give them a path to legalization, never to citizenship.

John Kasich 01:13:04-01:13:56 (52 sec)

It is not going to happen that we're going to run around and try to drag 11 and a half million people out of their homes. I'll tell you this. Within the first hundred days I will send a plan like this to the congress of the United States, and if I'm president, I'll bet you dollar to donuts right now, it will pass. [Bell Rings] That is a reasonable proposal that the people of this country, in my judgement, will support, and so will the bulk of the congress of the United States. [Applause]

Kimberley Strassel 01:13:56-01:14:27 (31 sec)

Moving subjects. Dr. Carson, this week Morgan Stanley agreed to pay a $3.2 billion dollar fine to state and federal authorities for contributing to the mortgage crisis. You have a lot of Democrats out saying that we should be jailing more executives, so two questions. Should financial executives be held legally responsible for financial crisis, and do you think fines like these are an effective way to deter companies from future behavior like that?

Ben Carson 01:14:27-01:15:21 (54 sec)

Well, first of all, please go to my website, Bencarson.com and read my immigration policy, OK? Because it actually makes sense. Now, the -- as far as these fines are concerned, you know? Here's the big problem. We've got all these government regulators, and all they're doing is running around looking for people to fine.

Ben Carson 01:15:21-01:15:43 (22 sec)

And, we've got 645 different federal agencies, and sub-agencies. Way, way too many, and they don't have anything else to do. I think what we really need to do is start trimming the regulatory agencies rather than going after the people who are trying to increase the viability, economic viability of our society.

Ben Carson 01:15:43-01:16:05 (22 sec)

Now, that doesn't mean there aren't some people out there who are doing bad things. But, I'm not sure that the way to solve that problem is by increasing all the regulatory burden. You know, when you consider how much regulations cost us each year, you know? $2 trillion dollars per family, $24,000 per family, that happens to be the same level as the poverty level... [Bell Rings]

Ben Carson 01:16:05-01:16:15 (10 sec)

... For a family of four. If you want to get rid of poverty, get rid of all the regulations.

John Dickerson 01:16:15-01:16:46 (31 sec)

Senator Cruz, I have a question for you. Speaker Paul Ryan has made a big commitment to trying to lift the 50 million poor out of poverty. Arthur Brooks, who is the president of the American Enterprise Institute, says, quote, "If we are not warriors for the poor every day, free enterprise has no matter." How you have been in your campaign a warrior for the poor?

Ted Cruz 01:16:46-01:17:13 (27 sec)

I think it is a very important question because the people who have been hurt the most in the Obama economy had been the most vulnerable. It's been young people. It's been Hispanics.

Ted Cruz 01:17:13-01:17:27 (14 sec)

It's been African-Americans. It's been single moms. We have the lowest percentage of Americans working today in any year since 1977.

Ted Cruz 01:17:27-01:17:50 (23 sec)

And the sad reality is big government, massive taxes, massive regulation, doesn't work. What we need to do instead is bring back booming economic growth, let -- small businesses are the heart of the economy. Two-thirds of all new jobs come from small businesses.

Ted Cruz 01:17:50-01:18:02 (12 sec)

If we want to lift people out of poverty -- you know, I think of these issues from the perspective of my dad. My dad fled Cuba in 1957. He was just 18.

Ted Cruz 01:18:02-01:18:06 (4 sec)

He couldn't speak English. He had nothing. He had $100 in his underwear.

Ted Cruz 01:18:06-01:18:16 (10 sec)

And he washed dishes making 50 cents an hour and paid his way through school. Today, my dad is a pastor. He travels the country preaching the gospel.

Ted Cruz 01:18:16-01:18:24 (8 sec)

Now, I think about all of these issues. How would it impact my dad when he was washing dishes? If we had Obamacare in place right now, the odds are very high my father would have been laid off because it's teenaged kids like my dad who have gotten laid off. If he didn't get laid off, the odds are high he would have had his hours forcibly reduced to 28, 29 hours a week. We need to lift the burdens on small businesses so you have jobs and we need welfare reform that gets people off of welfare and back to work.

Major Garrett 01:18:24-01:18:44 (20 sec)

Mr. Trump -- Mr. Trump. [Applause] I was with you in Pendleton, South Carolina earlier this week at the Rodeo Arena. It was a bit chilly there. You promised the crowd and they rose to their feet that if Ford or a company like were to move a factory to Mexico, you would try to stop it or threaten them with a 35 percent tax or tariff on every car sold.

Donald Trump 01:18:44-01:18:45 (1 sec)

Or a tax.

Major Garrett 01:18:45-01:18:49 (4 sec)

Right. So my question is, based on your understanding of the presidency, where do you derive that power? Would you need the consent of Congress to go along? And do you see the presidency as a perch from which you can cajole and/or threaten private industry to do something you think is better for the U.S. economy?

Donald Trump 01:18:49-01:18:50 (1 sec)

I would build consensus with Congress and Congress would agree with me. I'll give you an example because I don't like the idea of using executive orders like our president. It is a disaster what he's doing.

Donald Trump 01:18:50-01:18:54 (4 sec)

I would build consensus, but consensus means you have to work hard. You have to cajole. You have to get them into the Oval Office and get them all together, and you have to make deals.

Donald Trump 01:18:54-01:18:59 (5 sec)

Let me just tell you, I mentioned before, China -- big Chinese company bought the Chicago Exchange. Kerry is moving -- and if you saw the people, because they have a video of the announcement that Carrier is moving to Mexico, OK? Well, I'll tell you what. I would go right now to Carrier and I would say I am going to work awfully hard.

Donald Trump 01:18:59-01:19:04 (5 sec)

You're going to make air conditioners now in Mexico. You're going to get all of these 1400 people that are being laid off -- they're laid off. They were crying.

Donald Trump 01:19:04-01:19:58 (54 sec)

They were -- it was a very sad situation. You're going to go to Mexico. You're going to make air conditioners in Mexico, you're going to put them across our border with no tax. I'm going to tell them right now, I am going to get consensus from Congress and we're going to tax you when those air conditioners come. So stay where you are or build in the United States because we are killing ourselves with trade pacts that are no good for us and no good for our workers. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:19:58-01:22:01 (123 sec)

Alright. Mr. Trump, thank you so much. We're going to take a break for a moment. We'll be back in a moment with the CBS News Republican debate. [Commercial Break]

John Dickerson 01:22:01-01:22:11 (10 sec)

We're back now from Greenville, South Carolina with the candidates for the Republican presidential nomination. Mr. Trump, I have a question for you.

John Dickerson 01:22:11-01:22:34 (23 sec)

Presidents have to, on the one hand, be firm, but also be flexible. You have been flexible and changed your opinion on a number of things from abortion to Hillary Clinton. But you have said, rightly, that it's just like Ronald Reagan, who changed his mind on things. But at the same time, you're criticizing Senator Cruz for what you say is a change on immigration. He disputes that, of course. So, why is your change of opinion make you like Reagan, and when he changes his opinion, it's a huge character flaw? [Laughter]

Donald Trump 01:22:34-01:22:36 (2 sec)

John, in life you have flexibility. You do have flexibility. When you're fighting wars, you're going one way, you have a plan.

Donald Trump 01:22:36-01:22:46 (10 sec)

It's a beautiful plan. It can't lose. The enemy makes a change, and all of a sudden you have to change.

Donald Trump 01:22:46-01:23:33 (47 sec)

You have to have flexibility. In Ronald Reagan, though, in terms of what we're talking about, was the great example. He was a somewhat liberal Democrat who became a somewhat, pretty strong conservative. He became -- most importantly he became a great president. He made many of the changes that I've made -- I mean, I've seen as a grew up, I've seen, and as I get older and wiser, and I feel that I am a conservative. Now, I also feel I'm a common-sense conservative, because some of the views I don't agree with. And I think a lot of people agree with me, obviously, based on what's happening.

John Dickerson 01:23:33-01:23:40 (7 sec)

Which conservative idea don't you agree with?

Donald Trump 01:23:40-01:23:51 (11 sec)

Well, I think these people always hit me with eminent domain, and frankly, I'm not in love with eminent domain. But eminent domain is something you need very strongly. When Jeb had said, "You used eminent domain privately for a parking lot." It wasn't for a parking lot.

Donald Trump 01:23:51-01:24:23 (32 sec)

The state of New Jersey -- too bad Chris Christie is not here, he could tell you -- the state of New Jersey went to build a very large tower that was going to employ thousands of people. I mean, it was going to really do a big job in terms of economic development. Now, just so you understand, I got hit very hard. It's private, it's private eminent domain. You understand that they took over a stadium in Texas, and they used private eminent domain, but he just found that out after he made the charge.

John Dickerson 01:24:23-01:24:28 (5 sec)

All right. Governor Bush, I think by "they," he is referring to your brother, these on the hook for your brother.

Donald Trump 01:24:28-01:24:32 (4 sec)

Yeah. Well, Jeb, wouldn't have known about it.

Jeb Bush 01:24:32-01:24:49 (17 sec)

So, there -- so, there is all sorts of intrigue about where I disagree with my brother, there would be one right there. You should not use eminent domain for private purposes. A baseball stadium or a parking lot for a limo... [Laughter]

Donald Trump 01:24:49-01:24:52 (3 sec)

You shouldn't have used it then, Jeb.

John Dickerson 01:24:52-01:24:53 (1 sec)

But that was his brother.

Jeb Bush 01:24:53-01:25:06 (13 sec)

It's very different. Transmission lines, pipe lines, bridges, and highways. All of that is proper use of imminent domain. Not to take an elderly woman's' home to build a parking lot so that high-rollers can come from New York City to build casinos in Atlantic City.

Kimberley Strassel 01:25:06-01:25:07 (1 sec)

Senator Cruz, you were mentioned in the mix here, your response?

Ted Cruz 01:25:07-01:25:16 (9 sec)

You know flexibility is a good thing but it shouldn't - you shouldn't be flexible on core principles. I like Donald, he is an amazing entertainer but his policies for most of his life...

Donald Trump 01:25:16-01:25:21 (5 sec)

Thank you very much, I appreciate it.

Ted Cruz 01:25:21-01:25:28 (7 sec)

For most of his life his policies have been very very liberal. For most of his life, he has described himself as very pro- choice and as a supporter of partial birth abortion. Right now today as a candidate, he supports federal tax payer funding for Planned Parenthood. I disagree with him on that. That's a matter of principle and I'll tell you...

Donald Trump 01:25:28-01:25:42 (14 sec)

You probably are worse than Jeb Bush. You are single biggest liar. This guys lied - let me just tell you, this guy lied about Ben Carson when he took votes away from Ben Carson in Iowa and he just continues.

Donald Trump 01:25:42-01:25:51 (9 sec)

Today, we had robo-calls saying. "Donald Trump is not going to run in South Carolina," -- where I'm leading by a lot." I'm not going to vote for Ted Cruz. This is the same thing he did to Ben Carson. This guy will say anything, nasty guy. Now I know why he doesn't have one endorsement from any of his colleagues.

Ted Cruz 01:25:51-01:25:53 (2 sec)

Don, I need to go on...

Donald Trump 01:25:53-01:25:53 ( sec)

He's a nasty guy.

Ted Cruz 01:25:53-01:26:11 (18 sec)

I will say, it is fairly remarkable to see Donald defending Ben after he called, "pathological," and compared him to a child molester. Both of which were offensive and wrong. But let me say this - you notice Donald didn't disagree with the substance that he supports taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood. And Donald has this weird pattern, when you point to his own record he screams, "liar, liar, liar." You want to go...

Donald Trump 01:26:11-01:26:12 (1 sec)

Where did I support it? Where did I...

Ted Cruz 01:26:12-01:26:13 (1 sec)

You want to go... [Crosstalk]

Donald Trump 01:26:13-01:26:14 (1 sec)

Again, where did I support it?

Ted Cruz 01:26:14-01:26:18 (4 sec)

If you want to watch the video, go to our website at Tedcruz.org.

Donald Trump 01:26:18-01:26:19 (1 sec)

Hey Ted, where I support it?

Ted Cruz 01:26:19-01:26:21 (2 sec)

You can see it out of Donald's own mouth.

Donald Trump 01:26:21-01:26:22 (1 sec)

Where did I support?

Ted Cruz 01:26:22-01:26:28 (6 sec)

You supported it when we were battling over defunding Planned Parenthood. You went on...

Donald Trump 01:26:28-01:26:29 (1 sec)

That's a lot of lies.

Ted Cruz 01:26:29-01:26:32 (3 sec)

You said, "Planned Parenthood does wonderful things and we should not defund it."

Donald Trump 01:26:32-01:26:38 (6 sec)

It does do wonderful things but not as it relates to abortion.

Ted Cruz 01:26:38-01:26:40 (2 sec)

So I'll tell you what...

Donald Trump 01:26:40-01:26:42 (2 sec)

Excuse me. Excuse me, there are wonderful things having to do with women's health.

Ted Cruz 01:26:42-01:26:42 ( sec)

You see you and I...

Donald Trump 01:26:42-01:26:43 (1 sec)

But not when it comes to abortion.

Ted Cruz 01:26:43-01:27:05 (22 sec)

Don, the reasoned principle matters. The reasoned principle matters sadly was illustrated by the first questions today. The next president is going to appoint, one, two, three, four Supreme Court Justices. If Donald Trump is president, he will appoint liberals. If Donald Trump is president, your Second Amendment will gone... [Crosstalk]

Donald Trump 01:27:05-01:27:05 ( sec)

Hold on...

Ted Cruz 01:27:05-01:27:09 (4 sec)

You know how I know that?

John Dickerson 01:27:09-01:27:13 (4 sec)

Hold on gentleman, I'm going to turn this car around.

Donald Trump 01:27:13-01:27:19 (6 sec)

Ted Cruz told your brother that he wanted John Roberts to be on the United States Supreme Court. They both pushed him, he twice approved Obamacare.

John Dickerson 01:27:19-01:27:19 ( sec)

All right gentlemen.

Jeb Bush 01:27:19-01:27:21 (2 sec)

My name was mentioned twice.

John Dickerson 01:27:21-01:27:21 ( sec)

Well hold on. We're going to -- gentleman, we're in danger of driving this into the dirt.

John Dickerson 01:27:21-01:27:25 (4 sec)

Senator Rubio, I'd like you to jump in here...

Jeb Bush 01:27:25-01:27:25 ( sec)

He called me a liar.

John Dickerson 01:27:25-01:27:27 (2 sec)

I understand, you're on deck governor.

Jeb Bush 01:27:27-01:27:35 (8 sec)

Also, he talked about one of my heroes, Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan, was a liberal maybe in the 1950's. He was a conservative reformed governor for eight years before he became president and no one should suggest he made an evolution for political purposes. He was a conservative and he didn't tear down people like Donald Trump is. He tore down the Berlin Wall.

Donald Trump 01:27:35-01:27:35 ( sec)

OK, governor.

Jeb Bush 01:27:35-01:27:37 (2 sec)

He was a great guy.. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:27:37-01:27:40 (3 sec)

Senator Cruz, 30 seconds on this one.

Ted Cruz 01:27:40-01:27:42 (2 sec)

I did not nominate John Roberts. I would not have nominated John Roberts.

Donald Trump 01:27:42-01:27:43 (1 sec)

You pushed him. You pushed him.

Ted Cruz 01:27:43-01:27:43 ( sec)

I supported...

Donald Trump 01:27:43-01:27:44 (1 sec)

You worked with him and you pushed him. Why do you lie?

Ted Cruz 01:27:44-01:27:46 (2 sec)

You need to learn to not interrupt people.

Donald Trump 01:27:46-01:27:46 ( sec)

Why do you lie?

Ted Cruz 01:27:46-01:27:46 ( sec)

Donald, adults learn...

Donald Trump 01:27:46-01:27:47 (1 sec)

You pushed him.

Ted Cruz 01:27:47-01:27:52 (5 sec)

Adults learn not to interrupt people.

Donald Trump 01:27:52-01:27:57 (5 sec)

Yeah, yeah, I know, you're an adult.

Ted Cruz 01:27:57-01:28:22 (25 sec)

I did not nominate him. I would not have nominated him. I would've nominated my former boss Liberman who was Justice Scalia's first law clerk. And you know how I know that Donald's Supreme Court Justices will be liberals? Because his entire life he support liberals from Jimmy Carter, to Hillary Clinton, to John Kerry. In 2004, he contributed to John Kerry. Nobody who cares about judges would contribute to John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer, and Harry Reid.

John Dickerson 01:28:22-01:28:23 (1 sec)

We're going to switch...

Ted Cruz 01:28:23-01:28:24 (1 sec)

That's what Donald Trump does.

John Dickerson 01:28:24-01:28:32 (8 sec)

We're going to switch here to Senator Marco Rubio. Senator Marco Rubio, please weigh in.

Marco Rubio 01:28:32-01:28:33 (1 sec)

On anything I want?

John Dickerson 01:28:33-01:28:35 (2 sec)

I thought you had a point?

Marco Rubio 01:28:35-01:28:38 (3 sec)

Well, let me talk about poverty.

John Dickerson 01:28:38-01:28:39 (1 sec)

I thought you had a point you wanted to make.

Marco Rubio 01:28:39-01:28:40 (1 sec)

I do.

Jeb Bush 01:28:40-01:28:40 ( sec)

That was me.

Marco Rubio 01:28:40-01:28:44 (4 sec)

I had something important.

John Dickerson 01:28:44-01:28:45 (1 sec)

You're on deck sir.

Marco Rubio 01:28:45-01:28:55 (10 sec)

The issue of poverty is critical, because for me, poverty is the -- is -- is free enterprise not reaching people. Today, we have antipoverty programs that don't cure poverty. We don't cure poverty in America.

Marco Rubio 01:28:55-01:29:42 (47 sec)

Our anti-poverty programs have become, in some instances, a way of life, a lifestyle. Now, we do need anti-poverty programs, you can't have free enterprise programs without them, but not as a way of life. And so I have a very specific proposal on this and I don't -- in 60 seconds, I can't describe it all, but it basically turns the program over to states. It allows states to design innovative programs that cure poverty, because I think Nikki Haley will do a better job curing poverty than Barack Obama. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:29:42-01:29:58 (16 sec)

Senator, I wanted to ask you, just going back to immigration, in the last debate, you listed your series of accomplishments in the Senate. One thing you left off was -- was immigration reform. Is it the case that in your list of accomplishments you can't mention that?

Marco Rubio 01:29:58-01:30:03 (5 sec)

Well, no. It's not the case. It didn't pass and we haven't solved immigration in this country.

Marco Rubio 01:30:03-01:30:13 (10 sec)

It's still a problem. It is worse today than it was three years ago, which is worse than it was five years ago. And it has to be confronted and solved.

Marco Rubio 01:30:13-01:30:27 (14 sec)

But the only way forward on this issue -- you asked a question about flexibility. Let me tell you about that. One of the things that you need in leadership is the ability to understand that to get things done, you must figure out the way to get it done.

Marco Rubio 01:30:27-01:30:58 (31 sec)

You will not pass comprehensive immigration reform. People do not trust the federal government. They want to see the law being enforced. They want to see illegal immigration come under control. They want to see that wall. They want to see e-verify. They want to see all of these things working and then they will have a conversation with you about what do you do with people that have been here a long time that are otherwise, you know, not criminals. But they're not going to do it until you first enforce the law.

John Dickerson 01:30:58-01:31:09 (11 sec)

Dr. Carson, I have... [Applause] Dr. Carson, I have a question for you. Candidates are...

Ben Carson 01:31:09-01:31:13 (4 sec)

Before you ask the question, can I respond to the -- you know, they mentioned my name a couple of times.

John Dickerson 01:31:13-01:31:16 (3 sec)

Alright. You have 30 seconds, Doctor.

Ben Carson 01:31:16-01:32:02 (46 sec)

Alright. Well, first of all, you know, so many people have said to me, "You need to scream and jump and down -- jump up and down like everybody else." Is that really what you want? What we just saw? I don't think so. And you know, I -- when I got into this race, I decided to look under the hood of the engine of what runs Washington, D.C., and my first inclination was to run away, but I didn't do it because I'm thinking about our children and fact that we are the United States of America.

Ben Carson 01:32:02-01:32:19 (17 sec)

And anybody up here is going to be much better than what's going to come on the other side. And what happened tonight with -- with Justice Scalia tells you that we cannot afford to lose this election and we cannot be tearing each other down. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:32:19-01:33:38 (79 sec)

Dr. Carson, I -- let me ask you a different question. When you were -- you were the first one, really, to talk about political correctness. Everybody now talks about it, but that was really what sparked your -- your rise. Politicians are often accused of glossing over any hard choices people have to make, just always selling happy, nice things. So in the -- in the spirit of saying something that might be politically incorrect, tell the voters something that they need to hear but that might be politically incorrect?

Ben Carson 01:33:38-01:34:03 (25 sec)

Well, first of all, I'm not a politician, so I'm never going to become a politician. But here's what -- here's what people need to know. People need to know that free college is not -- it's a non-starter.

Ben Carson 01:34:03-01:34:40 (37 sec)

You know, you have to look at our economic situation. We're on the verge of economic collapse and, you know, we're -- it's not just the $19 trillion, but it's also the $200 trillion in unfunded liabilities. What we need to think about is what does that do to the average person? When we have a debt of that nature, it causes the Fed to change their policy, it causes the central bank to keep the -- the rates low, and who does does that affect?

Ben Carson 01:34:40-01:35:36 (56 sec)

Mr. Average, who used to go to the bank every Friday and put part of his check in the bank and watch it grow over three decades and be able to retire with a nice nest egg, that's gone. That part of the American dream is gone. All of these things are disappearing, and Bernie Sanders and people like Hillary Clinton blame it on the rich. They say those evil rich people, if we take their money we can solve the problem. It's not the evil rich people. It's the irresponsible evil government. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:35:36-01:36:07 (31 sec)

Governor Kasich. Governor Kasich, you've been described as the Democrats' favorite Republican. You talked about in New Hampshire, Democrats would come up to you and say, "I hope you win." Why will that help you win a Republican nomination?

John Kasich 01:36:07-01:36:37 (30 sec)

You know, John, I think all people are the same. Look, I did 106 town halls and I've been doing them left and right here in South Carolina. The first thing we have to do is grow the economy, and I know the formula because I was chairman in Washington when we balanced the budget and created so many jobs, and the same that we've been able to do in Ohio.

John Kasich 01:36:37-01:36:55 (18 sec)

You need common sense regulations so small business can flourish, you need lower taxes both on business and individuals, and you need a fiscal plan to be able to get ourselves in a situation where people can predict a little bit about the future when it comes to the fiscal issues. And when you have that formula, combined with workforce that's trained, you can explode the economy and create many jobs. I have done it twice, and I want to go back to Washington and do it again.

John Kasich 01:36:55-01:37:12 (17 sec)

John, the thing is, is I think that there are people now, these blue-collar Democrats -- my dad was a blue-collar Democrat -- the Democratic party has left them. When they're arguing about being socialists, they've left -- they have lost those blue-collar Democrats. And you know what I think they get out of me -- is my sense of what they get out of me, and it's embarrassment about campaigns, you brag about yourself.

John Kasich 01:37:12-01:37:27 (15 sec)

But I think I'm a uniter, I think people sense it. I think they know I have the experience, and that I'm a man that can give people hope and a sense that they have the opportunity rise. And I'll tell you, I love these blue-collar Democrats, because they're going to vote for us come next fall, promise you that. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:37:27-01:37:46 (19 sec)

Mr. Trump, let me ask you a question. Presidents in both parties say that the one thing you need in your administration is somebody who can tell you you're wrong. You don't necessarily seem like somebody who has somebody who tells you you're wrong a lot. Can you tell us of an instance where somebody has said, "Donald Trump, you're wrong," and you listened to them?

Donald Trump 01:37:46-01:37:51 (5 sec)

Well, I would say my wife tells me I'm wrong all the time. And I listen. [Laughter]

John Dickerson 01:37:51-01:37:53 (2 sec)

About what?

Donald Trump 01:37:53-01:37:58 (5 sec)

Oh, let me just say -- look, I am very open -- I hired top people. I've had great success. I built a great, great company.

Donald Trump 01:37:58-01:38:03 (5 sec)

I don't need to do this. I'm self-funding. I'm spending a lot of money.

Donald Trump 01:38:03-01:38:13 (10 sec)

I've spent -- like in New Hampshire, I spent $3 million. Jeb bush spent $44 million. He came in five, and I came in No.

Donald Trump 01:38:13-01:39:02 (49 sec)

1. That's what the country needs, folks. I spent $3, he spends 42 of their money, of special interest money. And it's just -- this is not going to make -- excuse me. This is not going to make our country great again. This is not what we need in our country. We need people that know what the hell they're doing. And politicians, they're all talk, they're no action. And that's why people are supporting me. I do listen to people. I hire experts. I hire top, top people. And I do listen. And you know what? Sometimes they're wrong. You have to know what to do, when to do it. But sometimes they're wrong.

John Dickerson 01:39:02-01:39:06 (4 sec)

Let me -- something, in talking to voters that they wish somebody would tell you to cut it out is the profanity. What's your reaction to that? [Applause]

Donald Trump 01:39:06-01:39:11 (5 sec)

Well, I'll tell you -- over the years, I've made many speeches. People have asked me, big companies have asked me to make speeches, and friends of mine that run big companies on success. And occasion, in order to sort of really highlight something, I'll use a profanity.

Donald Trump 01:39:11-01:39:28 (17 sec)

One of the profanities that I got credited with using, that I didn't use, was a very bad word, two weeks ago, that I never used. I said, "You." And everybody said "Oh, he didn't say anything wrong." But you bleeped it, so everyone thinks I said the -- I didn't say anything. I never said the word.

Donald Trump 01:39:28-01:39:44 (16 sec)

It is very unfair, that criticism. Now, I will say this, with all of that being said, I have said I will not do it at all, because if I say a word that's a little bit off color, a little bit, it ends up being a headline. I will not do it again. I was a very good student at a great school not using -- by the way -- not using profanity is very easy.

John Dickerson 01:39:44-01:39:45 (1 sec)

All right. OK. Governor Bush, I'd like to ask you...

Jeb Bush 01:39:45-01:39:50 (5 sec)

Yeah, well, I have got to respond to this.

John Dickerson 01:39:50-01:39:57 (7 sec)

Well, can I -- how about you respond, and then you can answer the question I'm about to ask you.

Jeb Bush 01:39:57-01:39:58 (1 sec)

Sounds like a good plan.

John Dickerson 01:39:58-01:40:00 (2 sec)

It'll be...

Jeb Bush 01:40:00-01:40:10 (10 sec)

Or you could ask me two questions, so I could get two minutes instead of one.

John Dickerson 01:40:10-01:40:23 (13 sec)

If we adjudicate this, the night will be over. Governor, in 2012, you said that your father and Ronald Reagan would have a hard time in today's Republican Party, based on their records of trying to find accommodation and finding some degree of common ground. Do you still feel that way?

Jeb Bush 01:40:23-01:40:36 (13 sec)

I think the dysfunction in Washington is really dangerous, that's what I think. And we need a proven leader that has a record of solving problems, someone who doesn't cut and run; someone who could be a commander-in-chief to unite our country around common purposes; someone who doesn't disparage people. Someone that doesn't brag, for example, that he has been bankrupt four times and it was great, because he could use the legal system. Someone...

Donald Trump 01:40:36-01:40:40 (4 sec)

That's not -- let me respond. That's another lie. I never went bankrupt! [Crosstalk]

John Dickerson 01:40:40-01:40:41 (1 sec)

Hold on, Mr. Trump. [Crosstalk]

Donald Trump 01:40:41-01:40:42 (1 sec)

No, but it's another lie.

John Dickerson 01:40:42-01:40:46 (4 sec)

Hold on, Mr. Trump.

Donald Trump 01:40:46-01:40:49 (3 sec)

No, but it's another lie. This guy doesn't know what he's talking about. Just a lie.

Jeb Bush 01:40:49-01:41:05 (16 sec)

We need someone with a proven record to be able to forge consensus to solve problems. And right now, both Republicans and Democrats in Washington don't get it. People are struggling -- 63 percent of Americans can't make a $500 car payment. Most Americans are living paycheck to paycheck. And we need someone has a proven record of growing the economy, reforming the things that are broken. And I'm that person.

John Dickerson 01:41:05-01:41:08 (3 sec)

OK, Mr. Trump, your response. [Applause]

Donald Trump 01:41:08-01:41:30 (22 sec)

Let me just tell you. Jeb goes around saying, just like the biggest business leaders in this country, I've used the laws of the land to chapter -- I bought a company, I threw it immediately into a chapter, I made a great deal. I uses the laws to my benefit, because I run a company.

Jeb Bush 01:41:30-01:41:36 (6 sec)

Yeah...

Donald Trump 01:41:36-01:41:37 (1 sec)

Excuse me, Jeb!

Jeb Bush 01:41:37-01:41:39 (2 sec)

Yeah.

Donald Trump 01:41:39-01:41:46 (7 sec)

I never went bankrupt, never. Now -- but you don't want to say that. Now, let me just say, I've used it, just like the biggest leaders in the country. Let me tell you something -- Florida.

Donald Trump 01:41:46-01:42:03 (17 sec)

Florida, he put so much debt on Florida. You know, we keep saying he's a wonderful governor, wonderful governor. He put so much debt on Florida, and he increased spending so much that as soon as he got out of office, Florida crashed. I happened to be there. It's my second home. Florida crashed. He didn't do a good job as governor.

Jeb Bush 01:42:03-01:42:04 (1 sec)

Here we go.

Donald Trump 01:42:04-01:42:19 (15 sec)

And you haven't -- excuse me, you haven't heard that. You listen to the good record in Florida. You take a look at what happened, as soon as that year ended he got out, Florida crashed. Too much debt. He loaded it up with debt, and his spending went through the roof. [Crosstalk]

Donald Trump 01:42:19-01:42:19 ( sec)

By the way...

John Dickerson 01:42:19-01:42:20 (1 sec)

The bells are ringing, sir.

Donald Trump 01:42:20-01:42:22 (2 sec)

... he was not a good governor.

Jeb Bush 01:42:22-01:42:31 (9 sec)

Here's the record. Here's the record. We led the nation in job growth seven out of eight years. When I left there was $9 billion of reserves, 35 percent of general revenue. No state came close to that.

Donald Trump 01:42:31-01:42:31 ( sec)

Take a look at your numbers.

Jeb Bush 01:42:31-01:42:44 (13 sec)

When I -- during my time, we were one of the two states to go to AAA bond rating. We didn't go bankrupt like Trump did and call it success when people are laid off, when vendors don't get paid. That's not success. What we did was create an environment where people had a chance to have income. Personal income during my time went up by 4.4 percent.

Donald Trump 01:42:44-01:42:46 (2 sec)

Florida went down the tubes right after he got out of office.

Jeb Bush 01:42:46-01:42:57 (11 sec)

The government grew by...

Donald Trump 01:42:57-01:43:01 (4 sec)

Went right down because of what he did to it.

Jeb Bush 01:43:01-01:43:10 (9 sec)

... half of that.

John Dickerson 01:43:10-01:43:37 (27 sec)

All right. Thank you. Senator Rubio, I want to ask you a 30-second question, no president can...

Marco Rubio 01:43:37-01:43:39 (2 sec)

Thirty seconds.

John Dickerson 01:43:39-01:43:48 (9 sec)

No -- well, I'll ask the question, you do what you want.

Marco Rubio 01:43:48-01:43:55 (7 sec)

I speak fast. [Laughter]

John Dickerson 01:43:55-01:44:10 (15 sec)

No president can know everything, right? So a smart leader knows how to ask questions. So if you could talk to any previous president, what's the smart question you would ask about that job that you would want to know?

Marco Rubio 01:44:10-01:44:15 (5 sec)

Well, I think one of the presidents -- well, the president I grew up under was Ronald Reagan. And Reagan had a vision for America's future. And if you think about what Ronald Reagan inherited, it's not unlike what the next president is going to inherit.

Marco Rubio 01:44:15-01:44:41 (26 sec)

This is the worst president we've had in 35 years, 35 years back would have made it Jimmy Carter. That's what Ronald Reagan inherited. And I think the question you would ask is how did you inspire again the American people to believe in the future? How did you -- what did it take to ensure that the American people, despite all of the difficulties of the time -- you know, you look back at that time, the American military was in decline.

Marco Rubio 01:44:41-01:45:10 (29 sec)

Our standing in the world was in decline. We had hostages being held in Iran. Our economy was in bad shape.

Marco Rubio 01:45:10-01:46:57 (107 sec)

The American people were scared about the future. They were scared about what kind of country their children were going to live in and inherit. And yet somehow Ronald Reagan was able to instill in our nation and in our people a sense of optimism. And he turned America around because of that vision and ultimately because of that leadership. I wish Ronald Reagan was still around. This country needs someone just like that. And if our next president is even half the president Ronald Reagan was, America is going to be greater than it has ever been. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:46:57-01:47:01 (4 sec)

All right. That's going to have to be it there, Senator Rubio. We have got to go to a break. We will be right back with the CBS News Republican Debate in Greenville, South Carolina. [Commercial Break]

John Dickerson 01:47:01-01:47:02 (1 sec)

Time now for closing statements. You will each have one minute, and we'll begin with Governor Kasich.

John Kasich 01:47:02-01:47:27 (25 sec)

Well, I want to thank the people of South Carolina. You've been fantastic. And look, what I want you to know is I'm going to send a lot of power, money and influence back to where we all live.

John Kasich 01:47:27-01:47:50 (23 sec)

But as I've traveled around South Carolina, I've noticed something. You know, it's that people have a sense that you're not going to wait on a president. You know, when I was a kid, we didn't wait on presidents to come to that little blue-collar town and fix things.

John Kasich 01:47:50-01:47:56 (6 sec)

You know, the Lord made all of us special. The Lord wants us to be connected. I believe we're part of a very big mosaic.

John Kasich 01:47:56-01:48:10 (14 sec)

And I'll send the power back. And whoever gets elected president here, hopefully will take care of the issue of jobs and wages and Social Security and the border. But the spirit of the America rests in all of us.

John Kasich 01:48:10-01:48:37 (27 sec)

It's in our guts. It's taking care of our children. It's taking care of the lady next door who just lost her husband. It's fixing the schools where we live and telling kids to stay off drugs. You see, I think what the Lord wants is for to us engage, and in America, the spirit of America doesn't come from the top down. The spirit of America rests in us. And I want to call on everyone in America to double down and realize that you were made special to heal this country and lift it for everyone. Thank you all very much. And I hope I can have your vote in South Carolina. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:48:37-01:48:47 (10 sec)

Dr. Carson -- Dr. Carson, you're next.

Ben Carson 01:48:47-01:49:07 (20 sec)

This is the first generation not expected to do better than their parents. Some people say it's the new normal, but there's nothing normal about it in an exceptional American. I, like you, am a member of we, the people, and we know that our country is heading off the cliff.

Ben Carson 01:49:07-01:49:36 (29 sec)

Joseph Stalin said if you want to bring America down you, have to undermine three things: our spiritual life, our patriotism and our morality. We, the people, can stop that decline, starting right here in South Carolina. If all the people who say, "I love Ben Carson and his policies, but he can't win," vote for me, not only can we win, but we can turn this thing around.

Ben Carson 01:49:36-01:50:00 (24 sec)

You know, we have this manipulation by the political class and by the media telling us who we're supposed to pick and how we're supposed to live. We, the people, are the only people who will determine that. And if you elect me as your next president, I promise you that you will get somebody who is accountable to everybody and beholden to no one. Thank you. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:50:00-01:50:00 ( sec)

Governor -- Governor Bush.

Jeb Bush 01:50:00-01:50:23 (23 sec)

Thank you all very much. The next president is going to be confronted with an unforeseen challenge. That's almost certain. It could be a pandemic, a major natural disaster or an attack on our country. The question for South Carolinians and Americans is you who do you want to have sitting behind the big desk in the Oval Office? Because that's the question. It's not the things we're talking about today. It's the great challenge that may happen.

Jeb Bush 01:50:23-01:50:35 (12 sec)

I believe I will have a steady hand as Commander in Chief and President of the United States. I will unite this country around common purposes because I did it as governor of the state of Florida. When I was governor, we had eight hurricanes and four tropical storms in 16 months.

Jeb Bush 01:50:35-01:51:07 (32 sec)

Our state was on it's back. We recovered far faster than what people thought because we led. We want to challenge rather than cutting and running. That's what we need in Washington , D.C. We need someone with a servant's heart that has a backbone that isn't going to focus on polls and focus groups. The focus will be on the American people to keep them safe and secure. I ask for your vote next Saturday. [Applause]

Major Garrett 01:51:07-01:51:08 (1 sec)

Thank you governor.

Kimberley Strassel 01:51:08-01:51:10 (2 sec)

And now, Marco Rubio.

Marco Rubio 01:51:10-01:51:17 (7 sec)

Thank you and thank you for watching tonight. This is a difficult time in our country. Our economy's flat, it's not creating the jobs it once did and people struggle living paycheck to paycheck.

Marco Rubio 01:51:17-01:51:25 (8 sec)

Our culture's in trouble. Wrong is considered right and right is considered wrong. All the things that once held our families together are now under constant assault.

Marco Rubio 01:51:25-01:51:33 (8 sec)

And around the world, America's reputation is in decline. Our allies don't trust us, our adversaries don't fear us, Iran captures our sailors and parades them before the world on video. These are difficult times but 2016 can be a turning point.

Marco Rubio 01:51:33-01:51:51 (18 sec)

That's why I'm running for president and that's why I'm here today to ask you for your vote. If you elect me president, we are going to re- embrace free enterprise so that everyone can go as far as their talent and their work will take them. We are going to be a country that says that, "life begins at conception and life is worthy of the protection of our laws." We're going to be a country that says.

Marco Rubio 01:51:51-01:52:03 (12 sec)

that marriage is between one man and one woman. We are going to be a country that says, "the constitution and the rights that it talks about do not come from our president, they come from our creator." We are going to be loyal to our allies like Israel, not enemies like Iran. And we will rebuild the U.S. military so no one will there test it. Vote for me. I will unify this party. I will grow it. We will win this election and we will make the 21st century a new American century. [Applause]

John Dickerson 01:52:03-01:52:06 (3 sec)

Senator Cruz? Senator Cruz, your closing statement?

Ted Cruz 01:52:06-01:52:41 (35 sec)

South Carolina, you have a critical choice to make. Our country literally hangs in the balance. Do you want another Washington deal maker who will do business as usual, cut deals with the democrats, grow government, grow debt and give up our fundamental liberties? Or do you want a conservative, a proven conservative that will stand and fight with you each and every day? Listen, repealing Obamacare is not going to be easy.

Ted Cruz 01:52:41-01:52:58 (17 sec)

Passing a simple flat tax that abolishes the IRS is not going to be easy but if we stand with the American people we can do it. And today, we saw just how great the stakes are, two branches of government hang in the balance. Not just the presidency but the Supreme Court.

Ted Cruz 01:52:58-01:53:29 (31 sec)

If we get this wrong, if we nominate the wrong candidates, the Second Amendment, life, marriage, religious, liberty - everyone of those hangs in the balance. My little girls are here. I don't want to look my daughters in the eyes and say, "we lost their liberties." Who do you know will defend The Constitution and Bill of Rights? And as a Commander in Chief, who do you know will stand up to our enemies as the clam, steady, deliberate, strength to defeat our enemies, to secure our borders and to keep America safe.

John Dickerson 01:53:29-01:53:32 (3 sec)

Mr. Trump, your closing statements?

Donald Trump 01:53:32-01:53:42 (10 sec)

Thank you. Politicians are all talk, no action. You've seen where they've take you to.

Donald Trump 01:53:42-01:53:55 (13 sec)

We are 19 trillion dollars right now. It's going to be increased with that horrible budget from a month ago that was just approved by politicians. We need a change.

Donald Trump 01:53:55-01:54:10 (15 sec)

We need a very big change. We're going to make our country great again. I say this every night, every day, every afternoon and it's so true - we don't win anymore.

Donald Trump 01:54:10-01:54:34 (24 sec)

We don't win with healthcare, we don't win with ISIS and the military, we don't take care of our vets, we don't care of our borders, we don't win. We are going to start winning again. We are not going to be controlled by people that are special interests and lobbyists that everybody here has contributed to. And you know what, they do exactly what those folks want them to do. We are going to make our country great and we're going to do the right thing. I'm working for you. I'm not working for anybody else. Thank you very much.

Kimberley Strassel 01:54:34-01:54:39 (5 sec)

We'll be back with a few final thoughts in a moment. [Commercial Break]