
Rep. Kendrick Meek (D) told a group of national political reporters this morning he knows his bid for Florida's open U.S. seat wasn't the vision some Democrats had for the race.
"Look, I'm a walk on candidate," he said. "No one said 'let's go recruit Meek to run for the Senate.'" But the four-term Miami Rep. said he's proven he's the right man for Democrats in 2010.
To prove his point, Meek suggested he's got the support of the most powerful Democrat there is -- President Obama. "I'm pleased with what Obama has done with me early on," Meek said, claiming that he's been "in discussions" with the White House about a more formal role for the President down the road.
"I haven't personally crossed my legs with him about it," he said, "but [the White House] sees the seriousness of our campaign."
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Meek's comments came at pen-and-pad briefing held by his campaign at DSCC headquarters in Washington, across the street from the Senate chamber he hopes to have a desk in come 2011.
The main topic of the briefing was Meek's new poll, which TPMDC first reported last weekend. Reporters in the room peppered Meek and his campaign team with questions about the poll as well as his viability against likely GOP nominee Gov. Charlie Crist.
Meek said he has solid support with state Democrats and is building a base with national Democratic leaders as well. Last night, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid joined him at a fundraiser, and former President Clinton has been a mainstay of his campaign thus far. Meek said that base will springboard him to a strong position in the general.
(As for his current primary opponent, former Miami Mayor Maurice Ferre, Meek's pollster said, "we're not focused on the primary ... [Meek] will be the Democratic nominee.")
"I'm far from the perfect candidate for the people of Florida, but I connect with them in ways other people in the race can't," Meek said, reeling off his personal biography which he said includes jobs as a skycap and a highly decorated state trooper. "Those are service industry jobs," he said. "And this is a service industry state."
Walter Mitty
October 14, 2009 7:05 PM
Crist is going to be tough to beat. However if Meeks can stake claim to the middle while Rubio pulls Crist far left, I guess he could have an outside chance, though he's far from batle tested as he has yet to face an opponent the four times he ran for his current seat (and which he got when his mother retired from it). This guy is going to get eaten alive. Is this all the Dems have in Florida? Really? Or is it that Crist is virtually unbeatable?
Axelrod recently met with Alexi Giannoulias (according to a HuffPo entry) who's the early favorite to get the Dem nod for Obama's old Senate seat.
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lamonth
October 14, 2009 7:45 PM
tell meeks to lose some dang weight. i cannot stand fat politicians; if you allow your own body to take on such excesses than how can i trust you to use my tax dollars wisely
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happycozy
October 15, 2009 2:51 AM in reply to lamonth
Please tell me that's snark.
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tchamp77
October 15, 2009 7:52 AM
Etiquette question: When you're invited to a pen-and-pad briefing, is it bad form to take notes on your iphone?
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