Tag Archive | "Florida presidential primary"

Tonight’s The Night: Republican Debate Seen As Crucial For Candidates

Tonight’s The Night: Republican Debate Seen As Crucial For Candidates

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[Jacksonville, FL] With poll results showing each of them surging at different points of the week and with the enormous stakes of Tuesday’s Florida presidential primary, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney face different challenges as each takes the stage for tonight’s Republican debate in Jacksonville.

For Gingrich, the challenge is to try to keep his momentum going after soundly beating Romney in last week’s South Carolina primary and reviving his once-faint hopes of winning the nomination.

For Romney, the debate is a chance to reverse days of negative headlines, from reports that he actually lost the Iowa caucuses to former Sen. Rick Santorum – who originally came in second by eight votes – to his faltering answers on releasing his tax returns, something Romney finally did earlier this week.

Santorum and Congressman Ron Paul, meanwhile, face the prospect of trying to secure more attention for their long-shot bids in a room expected to be dominated by the showdown between Romney and Gingrich.

In between all of that, the candidates might also have to deal with situations unique to Florida – a housing market roiled by the foreclosure crisis, Cuban immigrants that make up a sizable chunk of the Republican base and the large number of older Floridians that call the state home.

The state’s AARP branch is already arguing that the neither of the Republican campaigns nor President Obama have focused enough on Social Security or Medicare.

Republican debate - Newt Gingrich

Image: DonkeyHotey

Will Gingrich have a strong performance in tonight’s Republican debate?

“We’re pleased that candidates are talking to Floridians 50-plus,” Jeff Johnson, AARP Florida interim state director said in a statement issued Wednesday. ”Now let’s hear them say something – something specific – about how their plans would affect real Floridians.”

Polls suggest Gingrich and Romney are far ahead of the other candidates but neck-and-neck with each other. A recent poll by Quinnipiac University showed Gingrich surging coming out of South Carolina, while a CNN/Time/ORC International Poll showed Romney regaining his edge by the time Tuesday rolled around.

Romney performed well in Florida in 2008 – getting 31% of the vote but losing to U.S. Sen. John McCain – and was expected to be a formidable candidate in the Sunshine State because of a sizable fundraising advantage.

“This should be a strong state for Romney,” said Matthew Corrigan, a political science professor at the University of North Florida (UNF), where Tuesday night’s debate will be held. “If Romney lost this state, it would be a big blow to him.”

To rebound, Romney needs to “be bold,” said state Sen. John Thrasher (R-8/St. Augustine) perhaps the highest-profile legislator to endorse Romney early in the cycle.

“I think ultimately people are going to decide on the basis that they want a person that they can believe could beat Barack Obama,” Thrasher said.

Corrigan said Romney should also try to flip the argument on Gingrich, who has taken a beating from Romney and his surrogates. Romney’s campaign has suggested that Gingrich is erratic, has a chaotic leadership style and engaged in influence-peddling after leaving the speakership in “disgrace.”

Republican debate - Ron Paul

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Will tonight’s Republican debate be Ron Paul’s last?

“I think his strongest argument is that Gingrich is not electable,” Corrigan said.

Gingrich, meanwhile, will look to shine in tonight’s forum after a lackluster performance Monday.

The former House speaker has used debates to propel himself in the polls in earlier states.

Several observers blamed NBC’s stern instructions to the crowd not to applaud the candidates for Monday’s poor showing; Gingrich seemed to feed off the audience in earlier debates.

The former speaker threatened to pull out of future debates if the crowds were quieted, but CNN has said those in attendance will be allowed to clap this evening.

“Gingrich has to do his best to please the crowed and recapture the lightning he had in South Carolina,” said Rick Wilson, a Republican strategist in Florida who is not affiliated with any campaign.

For Santorum, who was unable to ride his Iowa win to lasting success, and Paul, the mission of simply remaining a factor in the race is a tall order. Paul’s dovish foreign-policy views alienate large swaths of the GOP electorate, and he has all but conceded Florida to focus on later caucus states.

Republican debate - CNN stage

Photo: UNF Facebook

Setting the stage: First peek at the Republican debate podiums

“I stopped paying attention to Ron Paul, except to mock him, months ago,” Wilson said.

Gingrich’s surge in the Quinnipiac University poll appeared to show him gaining strength after the South Carolina results were announced, largely at Paul and Santorum’s expense.

While the larger margin of error for the subgroups was enough to raise some questions about how real that change was, it could suggest a coalescing of conservative support that some movement conservatives have hoped for in order to stop Romney.

John Stemberger, president of the Florida Family Policy Council, said conservative’s choices are essentially down to Gingrich and Santorum.

“They’re not looking at Romney,” he said. “That’s clear to me.”

Stemberger – who supported Texas Gov. Rick Perry before his implosion – was among a group of social conservative leaders who recently endorsed Santorum in the hopes that he could consolidate the right. Stemberger now worries that the group’s support “was unfortunately a little too late in the game to affect South Carolina or Florida.”

And the biggest game-changer left on the board – tonight’s debate – could further strengthen Gingrich.

“Let’s face it: While he’s not my candidate, Newt Gingrich is just a master communicator,” Stemberger said.

Whether that’s enough to overcome Romney’s advantage in ads and organization is a question that won’t be answered until Tuesday. And the results are almost certain to reverberate long after the candidates have left Florida.

 

By: Brandon Larrabee/The News Service of Florida

 

Lead image: DonkeyHotey

 

Republican debate

U.S. Senate Hopeful Craig Miller Endorsed By Herman Cain In Orlando

U.S. Senate Hopeful Craig Miller Endorsed By Herman Cain In Orlando

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[Orlando, FL] Today, Craig Miller’s campaign for the GOP nomination to challenge sitting U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson got a boost from an old friend.

Herman Cain – the former GOP presidential hopeful and pizza chain magnate – was in Orlando Thursday to deliver Miller a hand up in the form of an endorsement for the upcoming Florida primary. Miller and Cain are old buddies from their days in the restaurant business

Cain famously ran Godfather’s Pizza while Miller helmed Pizzeria Uno (now called Uno Chicago Grill) and Ruth’s Chris Steak House.

Cain also received an endorsement of sorts from Miller, who adopted Cain’s “9-9-9 Plan” with hopes of taking it to the U.S. Senate if elected.

While endorsement from Cain – who was drummed out of the race after several scandals involving improper relations with women and one-too-many lackluster foreign-policy interview performances – seems like a possible kiss of death to some, the “Pizza Guy” has many followers in Florida.

Cain won the Republican Party of Florida‘s P5 poll by a landslide, you may remember.

Miller is just hoping that someone – anyone – pays attention to his campaign. Cain’s endorsement and the resultant media coverage it will earn will likely give him a fresh look by Florida Republicans.

With the Florida presidential primary taking place on Jan. 31 – and yes, that includes the U.S. Senate primary race as well – the Cain endorsement of Miller couldn’t have come at a better time. Earlier this week, a Quinnipiac poll showed Miller at below 2%, way behind frontrunner U.S. Congressman Connie Mack (R-14/Cape Coral) who has 39%.

The only thing keeping Miller going at this point, according to the poll, is that 42% of likely GOP Florida primary voters are still undecided.

Miller, a United States Air Force veteran and grandfather, lives in Winter Park with his wife Susan. He has three children.

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Images: (L-R) Herman Cain, Craig Miller at last year’s CPAC FL in Orlando. By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

 

Florida primary

 

As Florida’s Presidential Primary Approaches, Gingrich Taps McCollum As Campaign’s Statewide Chairman

As Florida’s Presidential Primary Approaches, Gingrich Taps McCollum As Campaign’s Statewide Chairman

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[Miami, FL] Former Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, former Orange County Mayor Richard Crotty, and the Deputy Chief of Staff for former Gov. Jeb Bush during his time in Tallahassee (and current health care administrator/policy expert) Alan Levine have joined team Gingrich.

They top the list of politicians and political operatives on the just-announced roster of statewide leaders and steering committee members that will have an active role in Newt Gingrich’s presidential campaign.

With the Florida presidential primary mere weeks away (Jan. 31), the Newt 2012 FL campaign has a lot of work to do if they want to put the former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives into the White House.

But first, Newt needs to win Florida.

“Florida is always a top prize in the presidential election with 29 electoral votes, having statewide leadership like Bill McCollum, Rich Crotty and Alan Levine positions our campaign to tap the organizational resources of former elected officials and the intangibles that are key to Florida campaigns,” remarked Jose Mallea, Florida State Director for Newt 2012 .

“We are grateful for their support and guidance,” Mallea concluded.

McCollum – a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives himself who served alongside Gingrich during his high-profile reign as Speaker – will serve as Newt’s Statewide Campaign Chairman for Florida.

“Newt Gingrich is the strongest possible candidate that the GOP can field against Obama in 2012,” McCollum announced during his endorsement of Newt Gingrich for President. “Newt is the right person with the right set of leadership skills and vision for our country at this critical time.”

“Newt is the most likely Republican candidate to defeat President Obama,” said McCollum. “He is the most able to articulate the conservative positions, is the most concise and convincing advocate, speaking and debating, is the most versed on foreign policy, and has the best plan to restore the economy.”

Gingrich, who was virtually tied with perpetual frontrunner Mitt Romney in a poll conducted of likely Republican Party of Florida voters last month, has been slipping a bit as of late. In Tuesday’s Iowa caucuses, Gingrich finished a distant fourth while Romney came out on top.

And Iowa is a conservative state, which has to worry Gingrich who is considered much more conservative – in many respects, anyway – than Romney.

2011-09-23 - Newt Gingrich - CPAC FL

Photo: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

Newt does not shy away from the spotlight

The reasons for the slide? Attack ads from pro-Romney Super PACs have reminded voters of Gingrich’s personal and political ethical lapses, not to mention the former Speaker’s penchant for using the type of over-the-top hyperbole usually reserved for news-show pundits – and even a few Hillary Clinton-esque tears – on the campaign trail.

And then there is Gingrich himself, always reminding voters of the special kind of “wait, did he just say that?” moments he is capable of. On national television. Repeatedly. He actually said that as President, he would instruct U.S. Marshals and/or The Capitol Police to arrest judges that he thought were uncooperative or too radical.

Those types of comments are making Romney’s job all too easy, say political experts. Romney, the more polished candidate, understands that he should just keep his mouth shut whenever possible and let Newt do the talking. Mitt should know – he’s been running for president since 2008.

In turn, Gingrich has been chastising Romney for the negative ads and his moderate stances on the issues that are of importance to conservative voters. Unfortunately for Newt, the verdict already appears to be in: Romney’s slick, hands-off approach of a campaign has been winning the battle of public perception.

Even Gingrich understands this as he has started to throw hardballs in Romney’s direction, calling the former governor and Wall Street businessman a “timid Massachusetts moderate” in press releases.

But not everyone is buying what Romney is selling, as Florida politicos align themselves with Newt for this final 25-day Florida run.

Crotty – announced as a Newt 2012 FL Co-Chair along with Levine – prefers Gingrich, calling him, “a proven conservative leader who knows how to hold the line on taxes and balance a budget.”

“Newt’s commitment to economic opportunity, as it relates to our nation’s space program is important; thousands of jobs were lost when Obama scrapped plans to return astronauts to space,” said the former Orange County Mayor.

2011-09-23 - Newt Gingrich - CPAC FL

Photo: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

Gingrich poses for a picture at last year’s CPAC in Orlando

The Newt 2012 Florida Steering Committee members:

State Sen. Jim Norman (R-12/Tampa)
State Sen. Thad Altman (R-24/Melbourne)
State Rep. Michael Bileca (R-117/Miami)
State Rep. Gayle Harrell (R-81/Port St. Lucie)
State Rep. Deborah Mayfield (R-80/Vero Beach)
State Rep. Carlos Trujillo (R-116/Miami)
Xavier Suarez, Miami-Dade County Commission
Steve Abrams, Palm Beach County Commission
Patrick Roff, Vice Mayor of Bradenton and Bradenton City Council
Ray Holt, Jacksonville City Council
Kevin Hohn, Brooksville City Council
Gary Lee, former U.S. Congressman (Lee County)
John Grant, Sr., former State Senator (Hillsborough)
Kurt Kelley, former State Representative (Marion)
Luis Rojas, former State Representative (Miami Dade)
Joe Carollo, former Mayor of Miami
Monica Rodriguez (Miami-Dade)
Ed Depuy, former Leon County Commissioner
Dan Wyrick, former Chairman of Calhoun County Commission
Allison DeFoor, former candidate for Lt. Governor
Bruce O’Donohough, former Congressional Candidate (Orlando)
William Tolley, Brevard County Chair
Sam Rashid, Hillsborough County Chair
Coy Clark, Honorary Brevard County Chair
Bert Ralston, Duval County Co-Chair
Dr. Miguel Fana, Pinellas County Co-Chair
Nathan Meloon, Gingrich Florida Chair College Republicans
Christian Waugh, Gingrich Florida Chair of Young Republicans

 

By: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Images: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

 

Florida presidential primary

 

Rick Santorum Eyes Florida Presidential Primary After Strong Showing In Iowa

Rick Santorum Eyes Florida Presidential Primary After Strong Showing In Iowa

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[Verona, PA] With his surprise showing in the Iowa caucuses Tuesday, former Sen. Rick Santorum might have won himself a second look from voters in the Florida presidential primary on Jan. 31.

He also may have earned himself key consideration during the Jan. 26 GOP primary debate in Jacksonville.

“Last night we made a statement, a statement for the restoration of the founding values that made our country the greatest nation in the world,” emailed Santorum after the near-win in Iowa. “We spoke directly with the people of Iowa, in coffee shops and living rooms. We held over 370 town hall meetings, in all 99 counties.”

Sure, he did the Hawkeye math, but he also knows how to read a map. And it is a long journey to the White House by any measure, and the veteran campaigner knows it.

“We did not speed date our way through Iowa, we courted her votes and tonight were rewarded,” the politician from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania said via email. “But this is just the beginning, a beginning of a long journey to a brighter future for all Americans.”

A “long journey” is right. Plus, there is that whole Google-his-name mess (it is not pretty).

Santorum starts out behind and likely needing more than the momentum of a strong showing in Iowa – he essentially tied with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who won by eight votes – to be a factor in the Florida presidential primary.

And, political observers note, the Iowa vote was the first of three contests before the Florida presidential primary at the end of the month, with primaries in New Hampshire and South Carolina likely to shake up the field again before the Sunshine State votes.

2011-09-23 - Mitt Romney - CPAC FL

Photo: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

 Mitt Romney is still the frontrunner in Florida as hr gears up for the Florida presidential primary

According to a poll by Tel Opinion Research in the middle of December, Santorum was tied with former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman for last in Florida with 1%. Frontrunner Romney and former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who came in a disappointing fourth in Iowa, were far ahead with 27% and 26% of the vote, respectively.

But 31% of Republican voters in Florida said they hadn’t decided who to back, meaning the race remained volatile.

Santorum did do slightly better in a straw poll of party activists in Orlando in September, coming in fourth behind pizza magnate Herman Cain, who has since dropped out, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Romney.

In any case, Santorum had fewer resources available to him than competitors like Romney, Gingrich and Perry – something that could come into play when the candidates move to Florida, the most expensive state among the first four contests.

“With 10 media markets, it’s not Iowa,” said John Stemberger, president of the Florida Family Policy Council.

Stemberger has endorsed Perry but admitted that the Texas governor “does not seem to be resonating.”

But money is not the only thing that could trip up Santorum in Florida, observers say.

Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida, said Republicans in the state are more concerned about electability and less worried about the cultural issues credited with helping Santorum vault to the front in Iowa.

Rick Perry

Photo: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

Texas Gov. Rick Perry “does not seem to be resonating” with Florida voters

“Without question, the Florida Republicans are more about fiscal conservatism than social conservatism,” she said.

At the same time, Romney excels in money and organization but is still fighting the nagging perception that Republicans haven’t accepted him. Almost three-fourths of Republicans in Iowa voted for another candidate, and Romney’s share of the vote was almost the same as he drew in 2008.

“Romney has challenges too,” said Matthew Corrigan, a political science professor at the University of North Florida. “He’s got all the weapons, but he doesn’t have the passion.”

The intervening contests will begin to shake some of that out. Efforts to consolidate conservatives behind one anti-Romney candidate might be stronger as the results prompt some candidates to drop their campaigns.

“The biggest thing that’s brought clarity for social conservatives is Michele Bachmann dropping out,” Stemberger said.

Other candidates have staked their campaigns on other states. After beginning his campaign with an Orlando headquarters, Huntsman has since staked his success on what happens in New Hampshire next Tuesday, though polls have shown Romney with a strong lead in the state.

“If he does well, then I think that he leapfrogs South Carolina and does hit Florida,” MacManus said.

Newt Gingrich

Photo: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich seems to be fading down the stretch

At the same time, Perry is preparing for something approaching a last stand in South Carolina, where he is expected to do well among rural and Southern voters that shape much of that state’s GOP electorate.

“He has to do well in South Carolina,” Stemberger said. “If he doesn’t, it’s over for him.”

But Perry also faces obstacles among the conservative base in Florida, Stemberger said. The Texas governor’s stock plummeted at the Orlando straw poll in part because he questioned the “heart” of those who didn’t share his views on illegal immigration – which many interpreted as a swipe at conservatives.

“The question is, can the tea party forgive him for what they feel might have been an insult in the Florida debate?” Stemberger said.

If the first three states splinter among various GOP contenders, it could set up the Florida presidential primary as “the great decider,” MacManus said. But there is a flip side of that.

“The problem for Florida is, if Romney wins big in New Hampshire and somehow pulls something out in South Carolina, then Florida becomes less important,” Corrigan said.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott didn’t seem to be too concerned about that possibility when interviewed Wednesday morning on CNBC.

“The place is going to be Florida,” Scott said of what will make or break the primary.

He noted the state has 4 million Republicans and he said the Florida presidential primary turnout is expected to be high, based on a large absentee ballot request.

“It’s going to be a tough place to play, but you’re going to have to play here. … You have to win Florida to win the White House. I don’t know how you can do it without it,” Scott said.

 

By: Brandon Larrabee/The News Service of Florida. With additional reporting by Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate

 

Images: Mark Christopher/Sunshine Slate Images

 

Florida presidential primary

 

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