TAMPA -- A little brush got cleared from the Florida U.S. Senate
race this week when Florida State Senate President Mike Haridopolos
(R-Merritt Island) dropped out.
Haridopolos had been successful in raising campaign cash,
$3.5 million over the last two reporting periods. This isn't that
tricky considering how many folks like to keep state senate
presidents happy. But for all the money, he had baggage and his
campaign was unraveling. Staff was abandoning ship.
Haridopolos said he dropped out of the race to pay more
attention to his job as president of the Florida Senate. Made it
sound like he was doing Floridians a favor. But his baggage
included, though was not limited to, a "book" the Florida Community
College where Haridopolos worked paid him $152,000 to write, and a
stealth political consultant Haridopolos had idling on the public
payroll until she was needed. These would have been difficult to
square with his professed fiscal conservatism. Recent concern for
his state job notwithstanding, Haridopolos almost certainly
concluded, as did many other political observers, that he couldn't
win the primary.
It's difficult to say which remaining Senate candidate
benefits most from this departure. Perhaps it just adds a little
clarity to what will be one of the most watched U.S. Senate races
in the country next year. Conservatives have a chance to push the
ideological balance in the U.S. Senate to the right if the survivor
of the Florida Republican Senate primary can defeat two-term
incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson. Nelson is one of those Senate
"moderates" that the left-stream media loves, i.e., one who votes
for every bit of left-wing geekery that comes down the
pike.
Nelson has whooped up and/or voted for just about every
bad idea to come out of the Obama administration or the Reid-Pelosi
Congress (which has kept him a very busy "moderate"), including cap
and trade, the "stimulus" slush fund, ObamaCare, and every
conceivable form of regulation and incontinent spending. He's been
no help in the current debt crisis.
Nelson even voted against a measure that would have
prevented the Environmental Protection Agency from enacting its own
carbon cap and trade program. Florida's conservative rookie
senator, Marco Rubio, voted for the bill that would have prevented
the administration from doing administratively what the Congress
turned down. Candidates running for the Republican Senate
nomination say they would have too.
Nelson has not been obliged to pay the price for
supporting policies Floridians tell pollsters they don't like. He
has run twice against weak candidates, and the left-stream media
here have not made his liberal voting record public knowledge. He's
flown under the radar.
Nelson has the Florida media on his side and more than $6
million in campaign cash on hand. But all will not be smooth
sailing. A recent poll conducted for Sunshine State News found that
while Nelson's favorable/unfavorable rating is above water at
32-27, a mind-boggling 41 percent of respondents either expressed
no opinion of Nelson or said they were "not aware" of
him.
If this poll sample represents Florida voters, it means
that almost half of them don't know what to make of a man who has
been a U.S. Congressman from Central Florida, Florida Insurance
Commissioner or a U.S. Senator from Florida since 1972. It's a rare
politician who can make almost no impression on his constituents in
almost 40 years in office.
Can Nelson, in 2012, once again make a virtue of
mediocrity and hide his liberalism from voters in a state where
people self-identify as conservatives by two to one? Foiling this
would be the job of the Republicans seeking to replace Nelson, all
running on conservative platforms. They are:
Former U.S. Senator George LeMieux, who served the final
16 months of the term of former Senator Mel Martinez who resigned
in the summer of 2009. LeMieux was appointed to that post by former
Florida Governor Charlie Crist, whom LeMieux had worked for as
campaign manager and chief of staff. When appointed, LeMieux
pledged not to run for the office himself in 2010. He was thought
of as a seat-warmer for Crist, who sought the office himself in
2010 but was routed by Rubio.
In the Senate, LeMieux compiled a conservative record. And
when Crist abandoned the Republican Party to run against Rubio as
in independent, LeMieux made a clean and complete break with Crist
and supported Rubio. But his critics claim he was the architect of
the many liberal policies that Crist adopted on the way from being
a conservative Republican to being a liberal
independent.
He'll have to fight this Crist contamination to establish
himself as a true conservative. Early indications are he is doing
pretty well. He led the pack in collecting campaign contributions
with $950,000 in the most recent quarter. For good or ill, LeMieux
is seen by most as the establishment candidate.
Former state representative Adam Hasner of Boca Raton was
appointed by Rubio to be Florida House Majority Leader when Rubio
was Speaker. He's considered the movement conservative in the race.
He's campaigning on themes of limited government and reduced
spending, a tough foreign policy, and economic expansion. In so
doing he's garnered the endorsements of national conservative
organizations and personalities, much in the way Rubio did in 2009
and 2010. Hasner fetched in $560,000 in campaign cash in the latest
quarter.
Retired Army Colonel Mike McCalister has only been in the
race since late June and has mostly appeared before Tea Party
groups. McCalister, who is running as a conservative and an
outsider, finished third of three in the 2010 Republican primary
for governor. He's yet to report on his campaign
contributions.
The latest entry into the race, so recent as to have been
last week, is 61-year-old Orlando area restaurateur, Craig Miller,
who puts his private sector success up against the government
careers of his opponents. Miller, an Air Force veteran who served
at Cam Rahn Bay AFB at the height of the Vietnam war, who says he
too will put economic revitalization at the center of his efforts
if he's elected, claims he has actually created tens of thousands
of jobs at such restaurant chains as Red Lobster and Ruth's Chris
Steak House.
Can one of these conservatives bump off the liberal in
2012? Way too much time and chance between now and November of 2012
to say. But Nelson is by any measure a weak candidate. And Florida
still is, 2008's presidential hiccup notwithstanding, more red than
blue. By January of 2013, Rubio could be Florida's senior
senator.
Not a very impressive group of potential challengers for
Nelson's seat. At least on paper. Let's hope that Charlie Crist
doesn't decide to make a political comeback.
PattyMor| 7.22.11 @ 10:45AM
Liberals don't hide their liberals votes, they just lie about
them and pretend to be "moderate". Anyone who voted for the
Obamacare monstrosity is NOT moderate.
Adam Hasner is seasoned and appears principled: he'd be a great
addition to the Senate, where his foreign policy chops would be put
to good use. I think he can gain substantial statewide support.
McAlister and Miller look like attractive candidates right now,
though it's hard to learn about them through the hysterical
conniption fit over Gov. Scott that has entirely replaced
journalism in the dailies.
It's very good news that the corrupt Harodopolos is out. Too bad
Rubio, a former colleague in the troubled state Republican
leadership who committed the same community-college-based fiscal
featherbedding as his pal Haridopolos, is still in the picture and
beneficiary of so much identity-politics-based fawning press in
national conservative arenas.
Hasner has ties to Rubio too, and like him failed to act on
Florida's substantial illegal immigrant problem. But I haven't seen
the sort of personal corruption in him that mars Rubio and
Haridopolos and their other pals indicted for stealing taxpayer
money through invented government jobs and projects, all the while
feigning conservatism.
LeMieux? He has a good record in some ways.
Charlie's too busy doing tv personal injury ads, though he
really does deserve credit for instituting one of the most
effective recidivist and real-time sentencing reforms in the
U.S.
Go Adam.
RCV| 7.22.11 @ 1:03PM
The reason he dropped out is simple: all the polls show Nelson
coasting to reelection over all his potential GOP opponents.
TrueBlue| 7.22.11 @ 3:21PM
Polls can mean anything anyone wants them to, just like most
statistics. All you have to do is go to the group you know will
have the answer you want, and then post those results, showing you
are right. Someone else goes and does the same thing with another
group to show the exact opposite.
Realdealtpa| 7.22.11 @ 8:15PM
Mark Levin has endosed Adam Hasner, and I
believe Mr. Levin has a been a good judge of
conservative candidates (rep. West) in the past.
BTW----is everyone noticing how, as word
is sweeping the world of the real FRAUD of
bankster-Globalism, FOX 'News', which we've
long seen as a Murdoch Fabian FAKE OUT
----undercuts the very sanity of the awakening
and the 'Tea Party' movement.
O'Reilly, alas, brings to life the lowest of
stereotypes of ethnic 'on board' mercenaries,
as he's serves up one too many stale beers
to his ever more dumbed-down audience.
Even the FAKE Murdoch 'controversy'
ain't gonna' stop O'Reilly's scenery from collapsing for good.
Ho Chi Mihn| 7.23.11 @ 10:53AM
What's his connection to Ruth Chris Steakhouse? Did he manage
one? Hassner is the choice of Levinites.
As a lifelong Floridian I have always despised that little phony
weasle Nelson. He's used the "I flew on a shuttle" as a way to BS
people into thinking NASA couldn't survive without him. Meanwhile,
he's voted hardline liberal on everything. I guess all the jobs
"he's created" at the space center will now be Muslim outreach
related. I wonder if he's been fitted for his turbin and robe
yet.
Joe R| 7.22.11 @ 10:14AM
Not a very impressive group of potential challengers for Nelson's seat. At least on paper. Let's hope that Charlie Crist doesn't decide to make a political comeback.
PattyMor| 7.22.11 @ 10:45AM
Liberals don't hide their liberals votes, they just lie about them and pretend to be "moderate". Anyone who voted for the Obamacare monstrosity is NOT moderate.
Tina Trent| 7.22.11 @ 11:28AM
Joe R., I disagree.
Adam Hasner is seasoned and appears principled: he'd be a great addition to the Senate, where his foreign policy chops would be put to good use. I think he can gain substantial statewide support. McAlister and Miller look like attractive candidates right now, though it's hard to learn about them through the hysterical conniption fit over Gov. Scott that has entirely replaced journalism in the dailies.
It's very good news that the corrupt Harodopolos is out. Too bad Rubio, a former colleague in the troubled state Republican leadership who committed the same community-college-based fiscal featherbedding as his pal Haridopolos, is still in the picture and beneficiary of so much identity-politics-based fawning press in national conservative arenas.
Hasner has ties to Rubio too, and like him failed to act on Florida's substantial illegal immigrant problem. But I haven't seen the sort of personal corruption in him that mars Rubio and Haridopolos and their other pals indicted for stealing taxpayer money through invented government jobs and projects, all the while feigning conservatism.
LeMieux? He has a good record in some ways.
Charlie's too busy doing tv personal injury ads, though he really does deserve credit for instituting one of the most effective recidivist and real-time sentencing reforms in the U.S.
Go Adam.
RCV| 7.22.11 @ 1:03PM
The reason he dropped out is simple: all the polls show Nelson coasting to reelection over all his potential GOP opponents.
TrueBlue| 7.22.11 @ 3:21PM
Polls can mean anything anyone wants them to, just like most statistics. All you have to do is go to the group you know will have the answer you want, and then post those results, showing you are right. Someone else goes and does the same thing with another group to show the exact opposite.
Realdealtpa| 7.22.11 @ 8:15PM
Mark Levin has endosed Adam Hasner, and I
believe Mr. Levin has a been a good judge of
conservative candidates (rep. West) in the past.
scorfield| 7.22.11 @ 10:03PM
It's very good news that the corrupt Harodopolos is out.
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POST American| 7.23.11 @ 1:13AM
---Great piece!
BTW----is everyone noticing how, as word
is sweeping the world of the real FRAUD of
bankster-Globalism, FOX 'News', which we've
long seen as a Murdoch Fabian FAKE OUT
----undercuts the very sanity of the awakening
and the 'Tea Party' movement.
O'Reilly, alas, brings to life the lowest of
stereotypes of ethnic 'on board' mercenaries,
as he's serves up one too many stale beers
to his ever more dumbed-down audience.
Even the FAKE Murdoch 'controversy'
ain't gonna' stop O'Reilly's scenery from collapsing for good.
Ho Chi Mihn| 7.23.11 @ 10:53AM
What's his connection to Ruth Chris Steakhouse? Did he manage one? Hassner is the choice of Levinites.
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IB Wright| 7.24.11 @ 2:16PM
As a lifelong Floridian I have always despised that little phony weasle Nelson. He's used the "I flew on a shuttle" as a way to BS people into thinking NASA couldn't survive without him. Meanwhile, he's voted hardline liberal on everything. I guess all the jobs "he's created" at the space center will now be Muslim outreach related. I wonder if he's been fitted for his turbin and robe yet.
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