The latest polling numbers for Florida Gov. Charlie Crist don't
look good: In the race for the senatorial nomination, Public
Policy Polling has Marco Rubio clobbering
Crist 60 percent to 28 percent. Even if you think that's too
high, some of the underlying numbers are consistent with other
polls: Crist is massively unpopular with the conservatives he'll
need to win the primary.
The Quinnipiac
poll that was the first to show Rubio ahead had Rubio leading
Crist among conservatives by 52 percent to 39 percent. Republican
pollster Tony Fabrizio
later pegged the difference at 52 percent to 27 percent.
Conservatives make up roughly two-thirds of the Florida
Republican primary electorate.
So should Crist pull a Joe Lieberman and run as an independent?
Crist told the Washington Times that he won't, saying
"proud to be from the party of Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan,
Teddy Roosevelt." But a Daily Kos/Research 2000 poll
showed Crist could take a narrow lead in a three-way race against
Democrat Kendick Meek and Republican Rubio, 33-32-27.
Those numbers might not hold up, however. Consider the Lieberman
analogy. Joe Lieberman only narrowly lost the Democratic primary
to Ned Lamont. Crist is on track to get crushed. The exit polls
showed a critical mass of Lieberman's Democratic supporters --
not a majority, but just enough of them, close to 40 percent --
said they'd stick with him if he ran in the general. Public
Policy Polling only has Crist leading among moderate Republicans
49-36. How many of them would actually bolt the party for him?
There was no viable Republican in the 2006 Connecticut Senate
race, giving Lieberman a large majority of the Republican vote.
There is a viable Democrat in the Florida Senate race. And
Lieberman was the choice of independents. The jury is still out
on that for Crist.
If Crist were to run as an independent, he'd look less like Joe
Lieberman in 2006 and more like Arlen Specter in 2010.