Yesterday I
posted on the possibility of Charlie Crist abandoning his run
for the Republican senatorial nomination in Florida and instead
running as an independent. I linked to a Daily Kos/Research 2000
poll that showed Crist narrowly ahead, with Democrat Kendrick
Meek trailing by just a point and Republican Marco Rubio in third
place. But a Public Policy Polling
survey (via
The Corner) shows Crist helping Rubio: In their poll, Rubio
would lead with 34 percent of the vote while Crist and Meeks both
trail at 27 percent.
A case could be made based on the PPP numbers that an independent
campaign would still be Crist’s best bet, due to his low standing
among Republicans. But again, a comparison with Joe Lieberman
would be instructive. In 2006, exit polls
showed Lieberman winning 54 percent of the independent vote
(Ned Lamont got just 35 percent) and 70 percent of the Republican
vote (the actual GOP nominee took just 21 percent) while hanging
on to 33 percent of Democrats.
By contrast, Crist would win 35 percent of independents, 32
percent of Democrats, and just 18 percent of Republicans. Those
numbers may deteriorate further if Crist’s independence is seen
as an Arlen Specter-style act of political self-preservation.
Lieberman lost the Democratic primary 52 percent to 48 percent.
Exit polls showed 73 percent of his primary supporters wanted him
to run as an independent. He could credibly make the argument
that there was a consensus in the state to retain him as senator,
with the exception of a narrow majority of the Democratic primary
electorate. Charlie Crist can make no comparable argument.
Mir | 3.10.10 @ 6:14PM
Nice blog. I like it.
alex | 10.5.10 @ 6:57PM
I am so happy to visit this site again!