Gov. Charlie Crist asked for a fight. And now he's getting one. Yesterday, Crist asked Marco Rubio's Republican supporters to explain why they're so "angry."
Today, came the predictable response:
"Charlie Crist is demonstrating an alarming contempt for the very Republican voters whose support he seeks," Rubio spokesperson Alex Burgos said. "Crist is clearly frustrated about his self-made credibility crisis and his endorsement of a stimulus policy that has failed to create the jobs he promised, but these are not acceptable excuses for him to lash out at Republicans."
Gov. Charlie Crist (R) is playing with fire with the new strategy, which takes direct aim at the conservatives who have been calling Crist out since the summer. Democrats and the Republicans trying to defeat him say he's going to get burned. But Crist's new rhetoric might be just what it takes for him to be the phoenix in the race.
After trying to first ignore Rubio and then later appease Rubio's supporters by backing off his past support for President Obama's economic stimulus, Crist has now turned to face his conservative opponents head on, claiming they're the problem with the Republican Party, not him.
From the St. Petersburg Times today:
"People are hurting and they're suffering. I hear about it every day. That's frankly why I thought the stimulus was so important,'' Crist said. "I know there are some in my party that don't agree with that, but I don't have the luxury of putting politics over people."
Crist says his record is a conservative one, and he dismisses Rubio's supporters as extremists -- in the Times interview, he pointed out that a recent DailyKos poll showed that birthers are more likely to support Rubio than him.
The national groups supporting Rubio are happy to have that fight.
"We don't care whether someone's pro gun, pro-life or pro whatever else [Crist] said," Club For Growth executive director David Keating told TPMDC. The group recently launched a series of anti-Crist TV ads and has endorsed Rubio.
Keating didn't engage Crist on his claims that Rubio's supporters were just a bunch of angry birthers. But he said it was clear to him who represented the majority of the GOP.
"Charlie Crist is not in the Republican mainstream on economic and fiscal issues," he said. "He's clearly not. You don't go and give an enthusiastic endorsement of the stimulus bill with the president, when by all reasonable reviews of it is one of the worst spending bills ever written by congress."
There's another group happy to see Crist engage Rubio's supporters head-on: supporters of Kendrick Meek, the likely Democratic nominee. The Meek campaign has been waiting patiently for Crist to battle Rubio over conservative bona fides, a battle which they say will alienate the independents and conservative Democrats that have backed Crist and in the past.
"Crist can't outflank Rubio," a Meek campaign official told TPMDC last week. "But as [Crist] creeps over to the right, it will open up a lot of territory for Meek."
But Crist has turned that dynamic on its head with his new strategy. While his attacks on Rubio's conservative backers are sure to fire them up even more than they already are, Crist is hoping his confrontational approach will force Rubio into uncomfortable discussions about Obama's citizenship and other right-wing rhetoric. He really had nowhere else to go -- Crist's record doesn't allow him to make a serious run at changing the minds of Rubio's supporters, so he has to run with the moderate message that has been successful in the past.
But if it works, Crist will have shown that moderates like him can beat back a conservative groundswell by directly confronting it. If it doesn't, Crist will have invited even more of the right wing attacks that threaten to defeat him.

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Walter Mitty
November 24, 2009 6:35 PM
It's actually an intriguing political play. Right now Rubio has made the vote a referendum on Charlie Crists' conservative bonafides. Turn it back on Rubio and make him defend or alienate his supporters.
How does Health care Reform poll in Florida? A huge political play would be to have Lemieux vote for cloture. He could make the statement that Rubio is an obstructionist, whereas as Senator Crist would be willing to work with the administration when he thought it benefited Florida.
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Matt Jones
November 24, 2009 6:38 PM in reply to Walter Mitty
I'm sure the retirees of Florida all want to keep the government out of their Medicare. :)
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Heraldblog
November 24, 2009 6:56 PM
If I was Rubio, I'd hammer Crist for his past associations with scam artists.
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sirkarl
November 24, 2009 7:35 PM
Heraldblo: why are you giving suggestions to the Rubio campaign and dissing Crist?
I don't like either of them, but if I had a choice, I think we'd all rather have Crist as a United States Senator then Rubio.
Plus 2010 may not be the best year for Democrats, so I'd rather we not encourage the campaigns of teabaggers
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Cal Gal
November 24, 2009 8:00 PM in reply to sirkarl
Just a guess, but perhaps Heraldblo wants Rubio as the nominee so Meek will win. Same reason most Dems would just LOVE to La Palin on the Republic Party ticket again in '12.
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DownriverDem
November 25, 2009 10:42 AM in reply to sirkarl
Perhaps it's because he's a Rubio supporter.
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elle a
November 24, 2009 8:56 PM
either way, Meek wont win while the focus is on the republicans, Meek needs to figure a strategy to seem like the sane adult in the race.
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WillAct723
November 24, 2009 9:01 PM
Meek should throw them both under the bus. Criticize them both for concerning themselves with who's more conservative than tackling the issues affecting all Floridians, regardless of affiliation.
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Peter Principle
November 24, 2009 9:15 PM
Crist . . . pointed out that a recent DailyKos poll showed that birthers are more likely to support Rubio than him.
Citing a DailyKos poll is definitely not the way to score points with the wing nuts -- not even the non-birther ones.
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runfastandwin
November 24, 2009 11:31 PM
Sadly, I think this strategy will seal the deal for Crist. Rubio really has nowhere to go but hard right once Crist starts attacking. It is possible they will kill each other in the primary but probably it will only make Crist stronger in the general. Unless Crist pulls a Ned Lamont and takes a 3 week vacation after the primary and allows Rubio to either run as an independent or consolidate the republicans, depending on which way the primary goes.
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DownriverDem
November 25, 2009 10:44 AM
Let's face it. The current Repub Party is all about purity tests. They have narrowed what their party stands for so much the even Reagan would not be accepted by this crowd. I honestly think it's too late for GOP moderates to do anything to save their party. They need to seriously think about changing parties to either the Dems or run as an independent. At this stage of the game, they have no other choice.
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