Speeches by Marco Rubio and Paul Ryan Tuesday night might augur a shift in the GOP orthodoxy.

Reuters

A lament you'll hear from many liberals, and some moderate Republicans, these days is that the GOP seems to have learned nothing from its defeats in November. After all, even after getting pounded over Mitt Romney's infamous 47 percent remark and losing to a president who campaigned on nothing so much as raising taxes on the wealthy, congressional Republicans refuse to budge on tax rates during the ongoing fiscal-cliff negotiation. Clearly, these critics say, Republicans haven't gotten the message that being the party of the rich won't work.

But step away from the cliff and the story gets a bit more interesting. Consider Politico's (way-too-soon) story about 2016 contenders Paul Ryan and Marco Rubio, who spoke Tuesday night at the Jack Kemp Foundation dinner.

While Congress dawdled this summer, Rubio, 41, assigned his policy experts to figure out ways to help make the middle class wealthier -- and add a dose of substance to the charismatic presidential hopeful's résumé. Reaching out to academics and think tanks to build Rubio's network, the senator and his staff developed a two-year reinvention project and an "upward mobility agenda," including programs like early childhood education, school choice and incentives for entrepreneurs .... "The answer," Rubio will say in his after-dinner remarks, "is not to make rich people poorer. The answer is to make poor people richer."

Elsewhere in the story, a series of anonymous sources insist that Paul Ryan was very concerned about the poor during his unsuccessful vice-presidential bid, and that he bridled behind the scenes against Mitt Romney and his advisers' unwillingness to talk about poverty and economic mobility. (This has the benefit of being undebunkable; the authors do archly note that the need to discuss poverty is something "he has seldom said during the course of his political career.")