By Larry Thornberry on 11.13.09 @ 6:08AM
Is the Charlie Crist model of reasonable Republicanism defunct?
TAMPA -- Wrong season perhaps, but Florida Governor Charlie Crist
is mired in a slump. He just can't buy a hit. A large part of his
problem is that Crist's wind-sock form of "moderate"
Republicanism is increasingly out of favor. And he isn't helping
himself, as a bit of desperation starts to set in, by telling
fibs on the campaign trail. (Never a good idea. You ALWAYS get
caught.)
As recently as last summer Crist's race for the Republican
nomination to run for the U.S. Senate was supposed to be easy.
After all, he only had to get past Marco Rubio, a little-known
former speaker of the Florida House from Miami. It hasn't worked
out that way. Rubio has run a vigorous retail campaign based on
conservative issues versus Crist's more philosophy-free,
happy-talk approach. Rubio has eaten into Crist's popularity,
winning straw polls at Republican executive committees across the
state, as well as pulling in endorsements from conservative
figures and organizations.
In his 18-year run up the Florida political food-chain,
Crist has never encountered an opponent as talented and
persistent as Rubio. And Crist is not currently handling it
well.
Among the latest setbacks for Governor Sunshine is the Club
for Growth's endorsement of Rubio, along with the release of a TV
ad the conservative group produced showing Crist endorsing
President Obama's stimulus slush fund on stage in Ft. Myers with
Obama February 10, before the slush fund was adopted. This
contradicts, in living color, Crist's recent assertion that he
never supported the stimulus hustle.
A Nov. 6 editorial on Crist's remarkable switcheroo in the
"Ft. Myers News-Press" carried the headline: "Crist's lies won't
help campaign." Ouch!
"When we saw what he'd said we knew we had to set the
record straight as soon as possible," Club for Growth
Communications director Michael Connolly told me. Connolly said a
decision will be made soon on when the ad will start running in
Florida and in which markets. This won't do Crist's credibility
any good.
Nor has the opera buffa business of Crist telling reporters
he wasn't aware that Obama was in Florida in late October for the
first visit since Crist crooned with our rookie president about
the beauties of spending three quarters of a trillion tax dollars
haphazardly in a hope that some of it might help get the economy
on track. Newspapers and broadcast media across the state have
been reporting that the White House not only sent Crist's office
an itinerary of Obama's visit but invited him to join the
president.
It's not hard to understand why Crist doesn't want to be as
close to Obama now as he was last February. Obama and his
policies were hot back then, now they're more like radioactive.
Obama's numbers have tanked and the conservative base, critical
in Republican primaries, is deserting Crist. But why deny you
knew the guy was in town? This not only makes folks question
Crist's truthfulness, but also puts him in danger of becoming a
figure of fun. A rookie mistake on the part of a guy who has been
around awhile.
On the other side of the field the Rubio campaign continues
to go swimmingly. Rubio won his 12th straight Republican
organization straw poll, this time the Okaloosa County Republican
Executive Committee (just east of Pensacola in the panhandle), by
a margin of 86 to four. In straw votes, mostly Republican
executive committees, Rubio is 12-0 and in total has whomped
Crist 581 to 62. Crist has to be concerned that the state's most
active Republicans reject him so totally.
Probably Rubio's biggest recent triumph was the
enthusiastic reception he received Monday at the Pinellas County
Republican Executive Committee meeting. While jostling for a
place to stand in the packed meeting room of Tucson's restaurant
in Clearwater, committee member Dennis Green of Ozona told me
these meetings usually draw about 100 to 125 souls. That night
more than 400 turned up to hear Rubio's stump speech on
conservative themes such as limited government, liberty, a strong
foreign policy, and an economy built around entrepreneurs rather
than around government bureaucrats and politicians.
One of the best received lines was when Rubio said, "I want
to go to Washington to stand up to the direction of the current
administration and offer a clear alternative." Big applause. He
took a beat, and added, "I don't think anyone else running in
this race will do that." Even bigger applause.
This was informed applause, as Pinellas is Charlie Crist's
home county, where he's lived, when not in Tallahassee, since
school days. The final insult for Crist in this appearance
occurred when Crist's own congressman, Republican Bill Young,
who's represented Crist's home district in Congress since about
when Studebaker went broke, declined to endorse Crist. Young told
reporters that he usually doesn't make endorsements in Republican
primaries, though he has this cycle endorsed Bill McCollum in the
race to replace Crist as governor.
So what happened? Why is Crist having such a bad time of
it? (I should point out that Crist is probably still ahead in the
race. Just not nearly as much as he was, and he definitely
doesn't have the mo.) Wasn't Crist just recently being talked
about as a template for the new kind of Republican who could make
the party competitive for years to come? Well, yes, he was being
talked about that way by the people who always say that to win
elections Republicans have to become more like Democrats. In
2009, it isn't selling.
In his career in the Florida Legislature and in the two
Florida cabinet posts he's held, Crist generally steered, with
only a few deviations, a conservative course. Low taxes, pro-gun,
law and order. He even picked up the nickname "Chain gang
Charlie" for supporting legislation to bring that institution
back to Florida. He mostly steered clear of social issues.
But after Crist was elected governor in 2006 he seemed to
"grow in office." Over the past two years Crist has often been
described as a moderate, a populist, or even a liberal. He's
attracted these designations by supporting such big government
initiatives as President Obama's stimulus slush fund, cap and
trade (another boondoggle he's trying to claim now he never
supported), as well as supporting federal legislation that would
grant amnesty to illegal aliens. He recently appointed a liberal
justice to the Florida Supreme Court.
Crist hasn't helped his conservative bona fides by hanging
out with and being photographed over the past two years with the
likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robert Kennedy, Jr., rocker
Sheryl Crow, Laurie David (she produced Al Gore's hysterical
screed, An Inconvenient Truth), Robert
Redford, the Prince of Wales, and other leftie luminaries. It's
much harder to find a likeness of our Charlie with conservative
leaders.
With Crist it isn't so much that he's wedded to moderate or
liberal positions, it's that it is becoming increasingly clear he
has no core political philosophy at all other than the devout
belief that he should continually hold public office. Crist could
be the poster boy for the ambitious but soulless politician who
on the major issues of the day feels very strongly both ways.
There's no there, there.
Rubio has nine months left to get his story out. If the
current trend lines continue, and as we all know they don't
always in American politics, Charlie Crist could have gone in
three years from a template for the Republican future to an
also-ran looking for a real job. It's not always easy being a
template.
topics:
Charlie Crist, U.S. Senate Races 2010