With Rubio in, others step out in Florida's Senate race
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Republican Sen. Marco Rubio's
decision to run for president set off a scramble to replace him. His
last minute decision to run for re-election set off a scramble — though
much smaller — to get out of the Senate race.
A crowded Republican Senate primary has become much less
so after Rubio's announcement Wednesday that he'll seek a second term
after spending months saying he wouldn't.
U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis dropped out of the race and will
run for re-election, a decision U.S. Rep. David Jolly made last Friday
as it became more obvious that Rubio was leaning toward running again.
And the man who Rubio said helped convince him to run again, Lt. Gov. Carlos Lopez-Cantera, will focus on his job as Gov. Rick Scott's No. 2 — at least until 2018, when Florida has open seats for governor and three Cabinet positions and Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson is up for re-election.
Rubio didn't scare everyone off, and while he is the
immediate favorite to represent the GOP in November, he will have to
hope the anti-establishment mood that helped him get elected in 2010
doesn't now hurt him. That's especially the case since presidential
elections tend to bring out more Democrats and there's a risk that some
Republican faithful may be turned off by presumptive Republican
presidential nominee Donald Trump.
"I have no illusions about how tough this race will be," Rubio said. "It's Florida in a presidential election year and a very unusual presidential election year, so it will be a tough race and I'm prepared for that."
"I have no illusions about how tough this race will be," Rubio said. "It's Florida in a presidential election year and a very unusual presidential election year, so it will be a tough race and I'm prepared for that."
Rubio cited the importance of keeping a Republican majority in the Senate as one reason he changed his mind.
Two millionaires who have never run for office say they
won't get out of the race. In fact, businessman Todd Wilcox and
developer Carlos Beruff said the decision that came two days ahead of
the deadline to qualify for the ballot is a reason why Rubio shouldn't
be elected.
"He's a guy who has become part of the thing he ran
against six years ago. The Washington establishment has made him break
promises that he made. If you don't stand by word and your handshake,
what do you stand for?" said Beruff.
Beruff has already spent $4 million of his own money on
television ads. The running theme is Washington politicians are useless
and he's not one of them. When the race didn't include Rubio, the early
advertising blitz helped Beruff in the polls. The idea of facing Rubio
isn't going to change his plans to keep spending millions more before
the Aug. 30 primary.
"We have enough to stay in the game for 72 days without
changing where I go out to dinner," Beruff said. "It's only money; you
can't take it with you. Once you have enough to take care of the people
you love, the rest is excess."
Rubio was a little known former state House speaker when
he used tea party support to topple then Republican Gov. Charlie Crist
in the 2010 Senate race despite Crist beginning the race with far more
money and the backing of the Washington GOP establishment. Crist
eventually ran as an independent, and later changed parties, after
falling behind to Rubio. Now Beruff is hoping to tap into a similar mood
generated by Trump.
Ironically, Rubio says he won't share the campaign stage with Trump.
"We just have some significant policy disagreements,"
Rubio said. "I disagree with Donald more than I normally would with a
Republican nominee."
Wilcox, who served in combat and as a CIA officer in
Iraq, is also largely self-financing his campaign, but hasn't spent
nearly as much as Beruff. Still, he has been in the race for 11 months
and said he's not getting out.
"I am tired of going to the voting booth and holding my
nose to vote for the least worst candidate on the ballot. We need to
elect serious leaders that understand our enemies," he said in a
statement released by his campaign.
If he wins the primary, Rubio will face either U.S. Rep.
Patrick Murphy or U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, neither of whom are switching
their election plans.
"Until today, I had the highest name recognition of any
of the candidates. Now I have the second highest name recognition of any
of the candidates," Grayson said. "He's done nothing in his first term
in Congress, he didn't even show up. That's going to hurt him in his own
primary, if he wins the primary, and it's going to hurt him in
November."
Murphy likened Rubio's decision to an employee who says
he hates his job, leaves, and then wants it back when he doesn't get the
job he was hoping for.
"Marco Rubio has always put his ambition above the people
he's supposed to represent," he said."How can Floridians trust someone who continually breaks his word?"
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