Senate: May 2009 Archives

Republican officials, groping for a formula for party revival, have been firing up their conservative activist base with support for "tea parties" that skewer big government and rhetoric that brands President Barack Obama's Democratic Party as "Socialist."

At the same time, though, GOP strategists have been working to recruit candidates for key 2010 elections who project at least somewhat moderate images that might draw them support across party lines -- making them, at least in theory, more "electable."

This is proving to be no easy balancing act -- as underscored by a rising conservative backlash to the GOP establishment's efforts to clear the Florida Senate primary field for Republican Gov. Charlie Crist.

From The Situational Politics File...

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Both parties caught the attention of our hyperbole monitors today...

Florida Republican Gov. Charlie Crist made a much-ballyhooed announcement this morning that he'll run for his state's open Senate seat next year -- and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee wasted little time before releasing a barbed statement that essentially blames Crist for the impact of the national recession on his state.

The Democrats' broadside notes that unemployment in Florida under Crist's watch is above the national average, that the state has the second highest home foreclosure rate in the nation, and that the recently passed Florida budget raises taxes and cuts some social services to address a $6 billion gap.

OK, all's fair in politics. But the governor's seats in some other states with exceptionally high unemployment, such as Michigan and Ohio, are being defended by the Democratic Party. Is the DCCC suggesting that the Democratic incumbents there are responsible for the dire impacts of the recession? Of course not... but you can bet the Republicans will respond in kind there.


Will It Be 'Viva Crist' for Cuban-Americans?

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Republican Senate campaign strategists hope to clear the 2010 Florida primary field for star recruit Charlie Crist, the popular Republican governor, who today announced his bid to succeed retiring Republican Sen. Mel Martinez.

But not everyone in Florida's sizable and politically potent Cuban-American community will be lighting a cigar and raising a Cuba Libre (that's rum and coke) to Crist's fortunes -- at least not yet.

That's because one of their own -- Marco Rubio, a former state House Speaker -- beat Crist to the punch by announcing his own Senate candidacy last week.

Sure, the GOP brass has consolation prizes in hand to try to persuade Rubio to stay out of Crist's way in 2010: A run instead for the now-open governor's seat or some other major statewide office.

After more than 230 years of nationhood, you would think that our politics would have run out of new wrinkles. But listening to Republicans and other critics outraged over Arlen Specter's jump to the Democratic Party, you might conclude that the Pennsylvania senator just invented the idea of party-switching in the service of self-advancement.

Of course, that's not true. Not by a long shot.

One of the most unintentionally funny reactions to Specter's political bombshell came in a fundraising e-mail sent out last week by the National Republican Congressional Committee, the House GOP's campaign arm. The pitch was aimed at raising money to elect more House Republicans to counteract a Democratic-dominated Senate (a missive that also underscored the fact that there is hardly any event, whether good or bad for a party, that cannot be parlayed into a fundraising opportunity).