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TALLAHASSEE (AP) _ In a heated
race for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination, Gov. Charlie Crist keeps moving away from his
support of President Barack Obama's stimulus package that the governor called
``fantastic'' and ``remarkable'' when lobbying for its passage.
Faced
with an increasingly difficult primary challenge from former House Speaker
Marco Rubio of West Miami, the governor now claims he didn't endorse the $787
billion economic stimulus that included a generous contribution for Florida.
``It
seems to be the president's answer to almost every challenge that's facing our
country is to spend more money,'' Crist said Thursday.
He
commented in response to a question while on his way back to his office where
he planned to work on putting together a special legislative session to get more
stimulus money for a high speed rail system in the state.
But
on a national cable news show Wednesday night, Crist said he saw the stimulus
more as Florida taxpayers' dollars coming back to the state and that he didn't
endorse the Obama plan.
Hardly
what the governor said earlier this year when he was voicing support for the
stimulus.
``I
think it's fantastic, are you kidding me?'' Crist said Feb. 20. ``It'll help
Florida do our job market. It's remarkable.''
Crist
then said it would mean Florida wouldn't have to raise taxes.
``We
might be able to cut property taxes some more,'' he said. ``We have more money
for education funding so we can increase the per-student funding. We can spend
more money on our roads and infrastructure. We can provide health care for our
people.''
And
the governor was only too happy to accept Florida's share, joining Obama for
the stimulus rally in Fort Myers where he hugged the president.
``We
know that it's important that we pass this stimulus package,'' Crist said on
that February day. ``We need to do it in a bipartisan way. This is not about
partisan politics. This is about rising above that.''
Crist
conceded Thursday the stimulus money has been good for Florida.
``The
opportunity, as I understand the numbers, to have about, more than 20,000
teachers not lose their jobs because of it, construction continuing to go
forward, I want to talk about more,'' Crist said. ``It'll help Florida.''
Rubio's
campaign released a video with excerpts showing several examples of Crist
praising the president's stimulus plan.
``Unfortunately
for Charlie Crist, the evidence of his stimulus support is on video,'' Rubio
campaign spokesman Alex Burgos said Thursday. ``By denying he infamously
supported the stimulus, Charlie Crist is hoping he can reinvent his record and
that voters forget he once embraced it.''
Rubio
has cut deeply into Crist's early lead in their battle for the 2010 GOP
nomination, a Quinnipiac University (Conn.) poll showed last month. Crist had a
lead of 29 percentage points in a mid-August survey by Quinnipiac, but that
fell to just 15 points in a similar sampling of Republican voters taken Oct.
12-18.
Democratic
Party spokesman Eric Jotkoff also didn't wait long to criticize Crist.
``Unfortunately
for Crist, the people of Florida know the truth about Charlie Crist always
putting his political ambition above doing his job,'' Jotkoff said.
Pictured above is
Gov. Charlie Crist.
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