Saturday, March 6, 2010

Oh, Crist.

From The Wall Street Journal on March 1:
Fortunes Flip in Florida Race

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist suddenly is the underdog in a heated Republican primary race with rival Marco Rubio for a U.S. Senate seat, amid signs the Sunshine State is tilting more to the right.

Two polls released last week showed Mr. Rubio leading the governor by 18 percentage points in the August primary, a reversal from last summer, when the Former House speaker trailed Mr. Crist by 80 points.

The shifting fortunes underscore how profoundly President Barack Obama's slumping popularity is convulsing both parties. The rise of hard-line conservatives and Tea Party activists are eroding support for Democrats and moderate Republicans such as Mr. Crist, who was viewed as a possible vice-presidential candidate in 2008.


Hmm. Maybe it has something to do with this? From The Palm Beach Post:
Crist says he would not scrap Dem health care reform,
can't identify part work keeping
By Michael C. Bender, Feb. 27

Gov. Charlie Crist, a Republican U.S. Senate candidate, told The Palm Beach Post editorial board on Friday that, unlike many Republicans in Washington, he didn't think President Obama should scrap his health care reform proposal:

"There may be parts of it that you don't have to scrap. There are three parts of it that I would like to see scrapped: It would raise taxes significantly, it would raise rates significantly and it would take half-a-trillion dollars out of Medicare.

"I think the real issue here, as it relates to health care, is that people want it to not cost so much and people want to have access to it. I think there is a consensus of agreement that the health care that is delivered in America is good. But it's not easy to get it and it's too expensive when you do get it."

Asked if there were any parts of the bill he liked, Crist said:

"I don't think a whole lot. Watching the discussion yesterday (Thursday) you get a chance to sort of see more of it be ferreted out. You know, I'm the kind of guy ... I'm pragmatic. The stimulus is a great example. We needed the money. Every other Republican governor took it, too. I was just maybe a little more honest and straight forward about it. Well, shame on me for being honest. But, you know, as it relates to health care, if there are good ideas, I'm willing to look at them. And I would take that same approach to any issue in Washington."

Asked again if there were any parts he liked he said:

"Not at present. No."

Not one good idea?

"There may be. There may be. You know, I'm pretty focused on Florida right now. I mean, after the session I'll be more focused on the issues in Washington. But I've got to do my job first."

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