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FL-AG

FL-Sen: Rubio May Switch to AG Race

by: DavidNYC

Wed Jul 15, 2009 at 4:53 PM EDT

No fun:

Two Republican sources said today that even as former Florida House Speaker Marco Rubio campaigns for retiring GOP Sen. Mel Martinez's Senate seat, he has been calling around to top Republican donors and activists in the state to discuss the idea of switching from the Senate primary against GOP Gov. Charlie Crist and into the open-seat race for attorney general, where a serious Republican candidate has yet to emerge.

Rubio has issued a bunch of weird, jokey non-denials on Twitter. It would suck if he dropped out, but I wouldn't be surprised if he started bailin' like Palin.

(Hat tip: Taegan)

UPDATE: Some more claims by various media outlets that Rubio is "denying" his interest in the AG spot, but the only thing his camp has said is that "Speaker Rubio is an active candidate for U.S. Senate" and "He is squarely focused on winning this campaign for Senate." Those are not denials.

Discuss :: (11 Comments)

FL-AG: Aronberg Will Run

by: James L.

Thu Jun 04, 2009 at 1:51 PM EDT

Florida Democratic state Senator Dave Aronberg has made up his mind, and he will indeed be running for attorney general:

Casting himself as a consumer advocate and a protege of popular former Democratic attorney general Bob Butterworth, state Sen. Dave Aronberg, D-Greenacres, announced today he'll run for attorney general in 2010. [...]

Aronberg, who could face a tough Democratic primary for the job, highlighted his work as an assistant attorney general under Butterworth, who left office in 2002 because of term limits.

"I learned from the best... We need to return to the days of Bob Butterworth, of an Attorney General who stands up for consumers," Aronberg said.

Aronberg is the first candidate to throw his hat in the ring for the office that Republican Bill McCollum is vacating in order to pursue his gubernatorial ambitions, but he may not have the field to himself: fellow state Sen. Dan Gelber and ex-state Sen. Rod Smith have also expressed interest in the job. While no one wants to see a contested primary here, it may be unavoidable. Opportunities to move up at the statewide level in Florida don't grow on orange trees.

This also means that the DCCC will have to go back to the well for a challenger to frosh GOP Rep. Tom Rooney in the 16th CD. Aronberg was their top choice, but the committee's recruiters have also been talking to St. Lucie County Commissioner Chris Craft as an alternative.

Discuss :: (7 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 5/20

by: Crisitunity

Wed May 20, 2009 at 2:06 PM EDT

KY-Sen: Jim Bunning's conference calls with reporters are always good for comedy gold, and his most recent one was no exception, as he heads further off the reservation and out into Howard Beale territory: he referred to Mitch McConnell as a "control freak," and said he'd be better off without McConnell's endorsement. He also challenged a reporter, who'd questioned his fitness to serve, to an arm-wrestling match.

NY-Sen-B: Another primary challenger to Kirsten Gillibrand dropped out of the race, but unlike Steve Israel's disappearance, this one barely made a ripple in the pond. Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer said he'll run for re-election instead, citing Barack Obama's desire for a clear path (nothing about an actual phone call from the POTUS, though). Gillibrand is also starting to rack up endorsements from some of her former House colleagues -- Maurice Hinchey and Yvette Clarke -- as well as state Senate leader Malcolm Smith, Assemblyman Peter Rivera (who was one of her loudest opponents at first), and NARAL New York.

MN-Sen: The NRSC has better places to spend its money (like trying to salvage NH-Sen, OH-Sen, and MO-Sen), but they're giving $750,000 to help Norm Coleman with his legal bills in his prolonged fight to get back his seat (or at least keep it empty as long as possible). Meanwhile, Rasmussen now finds that Minnesotans want Coleman to concede right now, 54-41.

MO-Sen: New (likely) entrant to the race Tom Schweich has wasted no time in lighting Rep. Roy Blunt up like a Christmas tree. Responding to Blunt's criticisms of a one-time donation by Schweich to Claire McCaskill, Schweich referenced Blunt's "vintage Washington-style smear campaign" and made fun of Blunt's big poll gap against Robin Carnahan. How sad is it (for Blunt) that he's having already playing defense against a never-elected law professor instead of Carnahan?

UT-Sen: Bob Bennett, suddenly facing a likely primary challenge from AG Mark Shurtleff, got high-profile help from Mitt Romney, who cut a TV spot for Bennett. Bennett's decision to spend big and spend now may be timed to encourage Shurtleff to think more about the 2010 governor's race that also just materialized.

MA-Sen: Harry Reid backed down today on yesterday's comments that Ted Kennedy's cancer is in remission and that he'll be back in the Senate after Memorial Day. He said he'll leave the timeline up to Kennedy and his doctors.

OK-Sen: Tom Coburn told the Tulsa World that he'll announce on June 1 what he'll do with his political future. (Not sure if that's real world June 1, or Mark Kirk June 1.)

NY-Gov: Rasmussen takes their first look at the NY-Gov morass. No big surprises: David Paterson has 31/67 approvals. Paterson loses 58-30 to Rudy Giuliani and 47-33 to George Pataki, while Andrew Cuomo beats Giuliani 55-37 and Pataki 57-29. Meanwhile, the GOP is putting together a Plan B in the likelihood that, as recently rumored, Rudy doesn't even show up; with Rick Lazio exciting nobody, they're increasingly interested in Erie County Exec Chris Collins.

WA-Gov: Yes, it's never too early to start thinking about 2012. AG Rob McKenna, the only Republican who poses a real threat to Dems in this blue state, seems to be staffing up with an eye toward bigger electoral challenges, hiring Randy Pepple (a prominent Republican strategist) as his new chief of staff.

TN-03: Robin Smith, Tennessee's GOP chair, quit her job in order to focus full-time on exploring the TN-03 race (to replace the retiring Zach Wamp, running for Governor). Insiders view Smith as the likely frontrunner for the GOP nod; she faces Bradley Co. Sheriff Tim Gobble in the primary, and maybe state Sen. Bo Watson as well.

GA-12: Another Republican is getting into the race against Rep. John Barrow in this rural Georgia district, despite Wayne Mosely's made-up statistics that he's one of the NRCC's Top 3 recruits. Carl Smith is the fire chief and former city councilor of "Thunderbolt." (Yes, it's a real town. I checked the atlas.)

WI-08: Rep. Steve Kagen also got another Republican challenger: Brown County Supervisor Andy Williams, who represents De Pere on the county board. Marc Savard (Door County Supervisor) is already in the race, so GOP voters will apparently think they're choosing between an NHL player and the guy who sang "Moon River."

FL-AG: Bill Nelson is trying to broker a truce to avoid a three-way primary between state Sen. Dan Gelber, Rod Smith ('06 gube candidate) and state Sen. Dave Aronberg for the AG slot. This could be a pretty important downballot test for Dems here -- if a Dem could win this race, they could be the star player of the farm team in Florida for quite some time. (J)

Discuss :: (39 Comments)

FL-Sen: Gelber "Not Shutting Any Doors" on AG Run

by: James L.

Tue May 12, 2009 at 8:20 PM EDT

Is state Sen. Dan Gelber considering bailing on the Democratic primary for Senate now that uber-popular Gov. Charlie Crist has made his candidacy official? The St. Pete Times has a teaser:

Certainly a lot of Florida Democrats want to avoid divisive primaries and Dan Gelber would be a natural candidate for attorney general, but the Miami Beach Democrat says he remains a U.S. Senate candidate, for now.

"I'm not shutting any doors," he said about an A.G. run, which unlike the US Senate, would require him to resign his state senate job.

If Gelber, himself a former federal prosecutor, decides to run for state attorney general instead, he will likely face a competitive primary. Dave Aronberg, one of Gelber's caucus-mates, says that he will run for the job if incumbent AG Bill McCollum (R) runs for Governor, which seems likely.

UPDATE: Perhaps surprisingly, Dem Rep. Ron Klein says that he's not shutting any doors, either, on a Senate run.

Discuss :: (25 Comments)

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