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The Campaign Spot

Election-driven news and views . . . by Jim Geraghty.


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Crist and Clinton Pushed Meek Hard to Drop Out

This is an interesting 11th-hour story going on in Florida, but we’ve reached a point where I simply don’t trust something coming from the Crist camp.

And as for Bill Clinton . . . well, I don’t think this is a source of unimpeachable credibility.

Bill Clinton sought to persuade Rep. Kendrick Meek to drop out of the race for Senate during a trip to Florida last week — and nearly succeeded. Meek agreed — twice — to drop out and endorse Gov. Charlie Crist’s independent bid in a last-ditch effort to stop Marco Rubio, the Republican nominee who stands on the cusp of national stardom. Meek, a staunch Clinton ally from Miami, has failed to broaden his appeal around the state and is mired in third place in most public polls, with a survey today showing him with just 15 percent of the vote. His withdrawal, polls suggest, would throw core Democratic voters to the moderate governor, rocking a complicated three-way contest and likely throwing the election to Crist. The former president’s top aide, Doug Band, initially served as the intermediary between Meek and Crist, and Clinton became involved only when Meek signaled that he would seriously consider the option, Clinton spokesman Matt McKenna confirmed to POLITICO. “The argument was: ‘You can be a hero here. You can stop him, you can change this race in one swoop,’” said another Democrat familiar with the conversations, who said Clinton had bluntly told Meek that he couldn’t win the race.

Crist also confirmed the planned scenario Thursday night, telling MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann: “I had numerous phone calls with people very close to President Clinton.”

Meek conceded in an interview on CNN that he and Clinton had discussed his leaving the race, but denied that the conversation was serious. “We talk politics all the time. He said, ‘I heard this thing about you getting out.’ I said, ‘I’m not getting out.’ I said Charlie Crist needs to get out of the race. And that was that,” Meek said. “This whole thing, I don’t know where it came from. I know the discussions I had with the president wasn’t about some sort of wrapped deal with me getting out of the race. I’m not getting out of the race.”

Team Rubio responds:

Tonight, Rubio Senior Strategist Todd Harris issued the following statement on today’s Politico story:”Charlie Crist truly will say and do anything to get elected and hold on to power. Secret deals to trade away principles for power is already the problem in Washington, it’s not the solution. This is simply politics as usual which is exactly what voters across the country are emphatically rejecting this election.”

Facts Of Note:

As of today, more than 1.7 million Floridians have already voted — approximately 1/3 of all likely voters (4.8 million Floridians voted in 2006, the last midterm election).

There is not a single public poll which shows Crist leading Rubio in a hypothetical two-way race.

As of yesterday, our internal tracking showed Crist and Meek in a statistical dead heat.

Among those who have already voted, our internal polling actually shows Meek beating Crist 28% to 24%.

Tags: Charlie Crist, Kendrick Meek, Marco Rubio

New on The Campaign Spot. . .


COMMENTS   4

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   10/29/10 10:13

It is more likely that Meek supporters would have stayed away from the polls and this would hurt lots of Democrats down ticket. African Americans also would have never forgiven Clinton -- why didn't you try to talk Crist into dropping out and support Meek? Can you imagine the conspiracy theories this would have given rise to?

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   10/29/10 10:37

I have to wonder who makes up the 30% or so of Floridians that are are still saying they would vote for this guy.

I've heard lots of people say you should never date/marry a guy (or girl) who has cheated on a spouse or a girl/boyfriend - if he/she is willing to do it once he/she is willing (and likely) to do it to you. Seems to fit Crist here - he clearly has no loyalty and few (if any) principles. So why are any Floridians willing to trust what he says or put their faith in him? Clearly Crist is willing to do a 180 on virtually any policy position or political affiliation and, if it's advantageous, he will throw you under the bus faster than Obama would. So why won't he do it again once he gets to the Senate?

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   10/29/10 10:56

Of course they are pulling out all the stops to derail Rubio.

The man scares the bejeezus out of the Dems because he is the embodiment of the American Dream in a crisp, Hispanic package. You remember Hispanics. They are the fastest growing demographic in the US- the "control" of which allegedly will dictate which party rules Washington.

How many times have we heard that the MSM try to push the narrative that the American Dream is dead? Sure it worked for all the Irish, Italians, Polish etc etc (read: white Europeans) but that was all over 100 years ago. The message being that if you want a piece of that pie- we (Dems) will give it to you through some government program. You won't get that from the other guy and the system is now so ingrained that you will ALWAYS be the odd man out- so vote for us.

Rubio, like Miguel Estrada or if you go back further in the Wayback Machine- Clarence Thomas, is a compelling story preaching a message that espouses "traditional" American values. The Left CANNOT have that.

The crisis arises for the Dems because Rubio will win or lose via popular vote while the other two could be stifled by a handful of senators.

Just like those internal memos regarding Estrada said stop him at all costs because he would likely end up on the Supreme Court, I guarantee memos are circulating saying the same thing about Rubio and the White House.

Dems only have about 35% of the white vote as we speak. Without 95% of the black and 65% of the Hispanic- they are finished as a party and they know it. This is just another instance of political calculus where the Dems figure that blacks will always vote Dem so they try to protect their percentage of the Hispanic vote by blocking the rise of a Hispanic who offers a message of self-reliance rather than reliance on government aid.

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   10/29/10 17:19

Of course Charlie has now denied "initially" making such a proposal. But something else struck me about this unintentionally funny video (External Link ) of his denial.

Is it just me, or does anyone else think that Charlie's speech and mannerisms are eerily similary to Harry Shearer at the end of "A Mighty Wind"? (External Link )

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