April 8, 2010 5:00 PM

Charlie Crist Rebuffs Rumors He'll Run for the Senate as an Independent

By
Stephanie Condon
Topics
Republicans ,
Campaign 2010
Charlie Crist (Credit: AP)

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist today rebuffed speculation that he would run for the Senate as an independent, even as a Republican primary challenge from Tea Party favorite Marco Rubio continues to build momentum.

"To put these rumors to rest once and for all, as we have said countless times before, Governor Crist is running for the United States Senate as a Republican," Crist's campaign manager Eric Eikenberg said in a statement. "The Governor is proud of his conservative credentials and stands firmly behind the principles of limited government and more personal freedom, the bedrock values of the Republican Party."

Recent actions by the governor, however, have fueled questions about Crist's intent, the St. Petersburg Times reports. For instance, Crist this week vetoed an elections bill favored by Republicans in the state, and he suggested he may veto another bill supported by Republicans like Jeb Bush that would connect teacher pay to student performance. He has also said the U.S. Attorney's Office should handle a criminal investigation into the Florida Republican party.

Meanwhile, former Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio appears to be gaining steam in the fight for the GOP nomination. He announced Wednesday he raised $3.6 million over the past 90 days. In recent polls, he has a strong lead over Crist, such as in the Mason-Dixon poll from late March that puts him ahead 48 percent to 37 percent.

Rubio is launching a four-day bus tour next week, which will culminate with Tea Party events on Thursday and Friday.

If Crist were to decide to run as an independent or under the label "No Party Affiliation," he would have to declare the change by April 30.

Such a move would mark the first significant victory for a "Tea Party candidate" over a mainstream Republican. Rubio has benefited from the support of conservatives within the Republican party such as Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina.

By contrast, Crist has not had the strongest ties to the Republican establishment. In his 2006 gubernatorial campaign, he opted to skip a campaign event with President Bush because he considered it politically risky. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said this year that it was "unforgivable" for Crist to support President Obama's stimulus package. Crist's 2008 endorsement of John McCain for president, however, was seen as critical for McCain's victory in the GOP primary.


Add a Comment
by Repubforlife April 9, 2010 11:57 PM EDT
I am very much enjoying the McCain campaign. He will win, he is the best candidate. It is almost humorous to watch JD stumble and fall all the time. He has no more ethics now then he has ever had. JD is one sly guy without much going on in his tiny little brain.
Reply to this comment
by waywardvariable April 8, 2010 8:25 PM EDT
"Tea party is a dangerous group because they want to silence opposition. "

LOL, what a ridiculous notion, it's not the Tea Partiers or Rubio that are calling vast swaths of the American People racists, nazis, "brown shirts", "tea baggers" and whatever other derogatory name they can think of to marginalize and demonize their opposition... those are the tactics of the progressive left and have been for quite some time.

Time for you to wake up and take a look at what's really going on in America.
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by mary-miami April 8, 2010 7:11 PM EDT
Why wouldn't he run as a republican? He is a moderate one. Rubio is a conservative...Tea party. Tea party is a dangerous group because they want to silence opposition. Freedom of speech and press is the base of a free society; when you have a group that does not want to let dissidents speak then you have dictatorship. At least Crist is trying to do what's best for his state...Rubio is a hypocrite, because being Cuban-American he should stand up and defend free speech, considering he always criticizes Castro's lack of liberty on the island...by not accepting other peoples right to opinion, his group is not practicing what they preach...Fortunately, there are more Democrat Cuban-Americans than republican ones in the U.S. I feel sorry for Florida if Rubio wins...I'm glad I no longer live in that state.
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