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Daylight in the Florida Primaries

Florida

From Unlikely voter: Florida is a large and aggressively contested state. It, of all states, demands the clarity of traditional horserace polling. We have been denied that opportunity yet, though, because the Republicans still need a candidate for Governor and the Democrats still need a candidate for Senate.

Quinnpiac’s poll suggests we may get answers soon, as late entering political novices Rick Scott and Jeff Greene take leads, showing clear daylight between the candidates in each primary.

In the Republican race for Governor, Rick Scott was a surprise late entry against formerly-presumptive nominee Bill McCollum. Scott now leads, per Qunnipiac, 43-32 (MoE 3.6), which gives Scott a commanding 93% chance of being ahead right now, according to this poll and my model. In my view this is a reversal on the order of Marco Rubio’s comeback against the once Republican frontrunner for Senate, Charlie Crist.

Between the Democrats running for Senate, Jeff Greene has made a similar move against Kendrick Meek, the man once thought to be the certain nominee for his party. Greene leads 33-23 (MoE 3.5), for a 92% lead probability, similar in nearly every way to Scott’s lead on the other side.

Of course, once we have the nominees, we’ll have an entirely new set of challenges to deal with: the independents. In the matchup between Jeff Greene, Marco Rubio, and newly independent Charlie Crist, Quinnipiac’s general election poll gives us the painfully unclear 37 Crist – 32 Rubio – 17 Greene (MoE 3.2). Three candidates make for an unstable situation.

Likewise, in the race for Governor, Bud Chiles as an independent confuses the situation and we get Rick Scott 32 – Alex Sink 24 – Bud Chiles 11 for another three cornered race where relatively small swings could easily change the entire race.

We still have hope for clarity in Florida, though. My own suspicion is that the two contested primaries are inflating the support each independent is getting, and voters from both major parties will see large numbers “come home” for the general. That’s why third parties and independents so rarely win, after all.

COMMENTS

  • IJB
  • paramedichess

    In many ways the “flip-flopping” of John Kerry killed him in 2004, when the reality was he voted liberal on almost everything. If more or less trivial flip flopping so damaged Kerry, I cannot imagine how Charlie “I don’t believe or support anything that I did last year” Crist will not be exponentially more damaged this fall. Rubio needs to clearly illustrate this lack of even the most basic of convictions and not let Charlie’s “leadership” in the oil spill be the defining issue.

  • kevinaw2

    I’m dubious about Quinnipiac overall. Their polling leaves far too many “undecideds” in my view. I would tale all their polls as a outlier to be honest.

  • RedBeard

    The Dem operatives pass out little cheat sheets to the condo associations, telling the clueless residents how to vote. It’s a bit like kindergarten, with the teacher having the kiddies repeat the ABCs after her.

  • cari

    He was one of the first, in early March of 2009, to come out against the move to nationalize our healthcare. He put 5 million of his own money to get CPR (Conservatives for Patients’ Rights) up and started, and ran and funded some of the best commercials against Obamacare during the debate.

    Any questions about his past with Columbia/HCA have been repeatedly explained, much to my personal satisfaction, by both Scott himself, and Dr. Merrill Matthews of the Institute of Policy Innovation in Dallas. Scott was in favor of HillaryCare in the 90′s, but has since seen the inevitable consequences of nationalized healthcare through his repeated dealings with the NHS in England. Now he is a passionate voice for market-based healthcare solutions as evidenced by his Solantis chain, fee-for-service walk-in emergency care centers in Florida.

    He was a dynamic Tea Party speaker in Florida in April 2009, and my personal interactions with him have led me to conclude that Rick Scott is a class act.

  • gfwarhol

    with two people vying for the Republican Governor’s office, neither of which I care to support or vote for as both IMO, suck! One is a long time politician, and part of the ‘good ole’ boy’ network, and the other has had dubious dealings in the private sector, and I do not trust him one iota! I’m so tired of having to choose the lesser of two evils!

  • http://www.the41stvote.org rcov092

    Billions of dollars of taxpayer money. This is fact evidenced by the guilty pleas by HCA in 5 states to 14 felonies.

    Rick Scott will lose to Sink. Once he wins the primary, we will hear nothing 24/7 but Rick Scott is an un-indicted Co-Conspirator. All paid for by the DNC. They want the Governorship Florida bad. If they get it they will count the 27 electoral vote sin Florida among their given for the next decade.