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Home Front: Politix
Crist steers clear of Obama during visit
2009-10-29
President Obama's visit to a massive solar power plant Tuesday was supposed to highlight the benefits of his $787 billion stimulus plan, passed soon after he took office. But one sign that the message may not be connecting: The Republican governor who in February publicly embraced both the president and the plan was nowhere to be seen this time.

In fact, Gov. Charlie Crist was noticeably absent from all of the president's events in Florida on Monday and Tuesday. He did not appear once with Mr. Obama, and even went so far as to imply Tuesday that he had just found out that Mr. Obama was in his state.

"First I've heard of it," he told local reporters of Mr. Obama's trip. A spokeswoman for the governor later said, when pressed to clarify, that Mr. Crist "did not know the president's exact itinerary."

State politics is a big reason why Mr. Crist, who is running for the Senate seat vacated by Sen. Mel Martinez in September, was not eager to be seen with Mr. Obama. Mr. Crist is being pressed hard on his right flank in the Republican primary by former GOP House Speaker Marco Rubio, a 38-year-old son of Cuban immigrants.

One of the biggest sticks in Mr. Rubio's arsenal is the governor's support for the stimulus package. Mr. Crist appeared at a rally for Mr. Obama in Fort Myers when the fate of the bill hung in the balance in Congress and gave the Democratic president a now-famous bear hug.

"It's clear President Obama's visit has made Gov. Crist excruciatingly uncomfortable," said Alex Burgos, a Rubio campaign spokesman. "It's clear his support for the stimulus was misguided; it hasn't lived up to its expectations; and now he's trying to run away from it."

Mr. Burgos cited a promise from the Obama administration that Florida would save or gain 218,000 jobs from some $12.2 billion in stimulus funds, and pointed to the fact that the state has lost more than 196,000 jobs this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Mr. Obama's approval rating has fallen from higher than 60 percent to below 50 percent, according to local news reports.

The White House argues that the stimulus has "cushioned the blow" of the ongoing economic recession, which has so far cost the nation 7.2 million jobs since December 2007, with 3.4 million of those jobs lost since Mr. Obama took office.
Posted by:Fred

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