Charlie Crist Announces Bid For Florida Governor

Crist Announces Bid For Florida Governor
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Former Republican Florida Gov. Charlie Crist gestures during a campaign rally Monday, Nov. 4, 2013, in St. Petersburg, Fla. Crist announced that he is running again for governor, this time as a Democrat. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Get ready for the second coming of Crist.

When Charlie Crist stepped to the microphones Monday in St. Petersburg, he instantly changd the dynamics of Florida politics and set in motion a 52-week campaign that could end up making history: a former governor who switches parties and attempts to unseat his successor.

"The race begins," said Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler, who as a top Democrat in the Florida House of Representatives worked closely with Crist when he was the state's Republican governor. "Up until now, there has been a lot of campaigning, but there has not been a race. I think it's officially election season."

After waging a shadow campaign for months, Crist emerged to formally announce he's entering the contest for the Democratic nomination for governor. Members of both parties say Crist's move will immediately catapult the Sunshine State governor's race to the No. 1 contest in the country in the 2014 midterm elections.

Crist said he was launching a "journey to take back our state's destiny." He tore into Republican Gov. Rick Scott as someone who allowed a "revolving door of special interests" to take over Tallahassee.

"What we have here in Florida today isn't working. Tallahassee is out of control," he said. "The voice of the people has been silenced by the financial bullies and the special interests."

Bob Butterworth, the former state attorney general and former Broward sheriff was one of several speakers who introduced Crist. "There's no doubt in my mind that Charlie Crist is the best person at the right time in order to turn Florida around."

Many Democrats, and a fair number of Republicans, see Crist as the only candidate with a realistic chance of ousting Scott in the Nov. 4, 2014, election.

"It portends something we haven't seen yet in Florida politics, just when we thought we've seen it all," said Justin Sayfie, a Fort Lauderdale lawyer-lobbyist who was an aide to former Gov. Jeb Bush. "There's no textbook case study to understand how Florida voters will evaluate Governor Crist's candidacy."

Florida, a politically purple state that's neither hard-core Republican red nor Democratic blue, will be watched as a harbinger of what's to come in the 2016 presidential contest. "We can't overemphasize the importance of this gubernatorial election to 2016," said former U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler, a Democrat who represented Broward and Palm Beach counties.

Crist fans can barely contain their excitement. "Charlie actually personifies 21st Century Florida," said Wexler, whose friendship with Crist goes back to the early 1990s when both were members of the Florida Senate and Crist was a self-described Reagan Republican.

"His is the kind of leadership that Florida needs. Bring it back to the middle. Bring it back to a point of reason," said Wexler, who is president of the Washington-based S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace. "Charlie will be the Democratic nominee for governor because he represents the values and the aspirations and the dreams of the vast majority of Democrats in Florida."

Beyond the hyperbole of his supporters, Crist enters the race with huge advantages. He's well-known, he's generally well-liked -- except among Republicans who regard him as a Benedict Arnold -- and he'll be able to raise the tens of millions of dollars a candidate for governor in a large state like Florida needs to advertise on television.

His personality is perhaps his most potent weapon. "He really likes people. He loves people. He loves to be in a crowd," said Mark Alan Siegel, a former Palm Beach County Democratic chairman.

At a fancy political dinner, he'll schmooze with the big shots, but he's unlikely to leave before he can greet all the banquet servers or hotel cleaning staff.

"Charlie Crist is the best retail politician I have ever seen in this state," Seiler said. "He has got an incredibly ability to relate to people and to listen to people and to communicate with people."

Crist acolytes see him as the Democrats' savior, who can bring them back from the electoral wilderness. The party has won just six of the last 22 statewide contests and a Democrat hasn't been elected governor since 1994.

Crist's transformation began in February 2009 when Crist, then the governor, hugged Obama when the new Democratic president visited the state. Once seen as the sure Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in 2010, Crist left the party when it became obvious he'd be defeated by Marco Rubio. He ran for Senate as an independent/no-party-affiliation candidate, losing the general election to Rubio.

Kevin Wagner, a political science professor at Florida Atlantic University, said Crist was in the wrong place during the ascendancy of the tea party in 2010. "He went moderate a couple of years too early. He made a political miscalculation."

Last year, Crist stumped the state on behalf of Obama's re-election and later turned up at a White House Christmas party, showing a form that he used to switch his registration again, becoming a Democrat. This year, he's been touring the state, testing the waters and lining up supporters.

Not everyone is embracing the rebranded Crist.

"I like Charlie Crist as a person, but I call him a doorknob. His head turns like a doorknob in any direction," said Mikkie Belvedere, past president of the Wynmoor Democratic Club and a Coconut Creek city commissioner. "I think it may work against him."

Seiler said the people who are most upset about the change of positions will be stalwart Republicans who wouldn't vote for Crist anyway.

Crist doesn't yet have the nomination to run against Scott, who public opinion polls show has had relatively low popularity since his election in 2010.

Former Florida Senate Minority Leader Nan Rich, of Weston, has been seeking the nomination for more than a year.

Though she's had trouble raising money and polls show she isn't well-known, Rich said she's been building a network of party activists by traveling the state speaking to sometimes small groups of Democrats, putting more than 121,000 miles on the odometer in the past 18 months.

"I know there are people who would like me to get out of this race, but I'm not going to," she said, promising a race "about substance, not style."

Rich said she's bracing for the Crist cyclone on Monday. "The newspapers will be filled with articles dubbing him the front runner," she said. "We'll see. It's a long way from here to Election Day."

aman@tribune.com or 954-356-4550 ___

(c)2013 the Sun Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)

Visit the Sun Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) at www.sun-sentinel.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

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Before You Go

Rick Scott Controversies
Doctored Newspaper Front Page(01 of19)
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Florida Governor Rick Scott's Facebook managers posted an image containing a doctored Miami Herald headline, prompting the paper's managing editor to demand it be removed.The post, since deleted from the Governor's social media page, swapped in the headline "New Law Helps Put Floridians Back To Work" in place of the paper's original headline from 2007, "Murders Highlight Rise In Crime In Guatemala" -- making it appear an editorial from the governor had run above the fold on the Herald's front page. (credit:AP)
Non-Transparent Transparency Program(02 of19)
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"Prayers" In Public Schools(03 of19)
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Scott approved SB 98, which means that Florida students are now allowed to deliver "inspirational messages" that include everything from prayers to manifestos at mandatory school events. (credit:AP)
Refuses Affordable Care Act(04 of19)
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In a statement, the governor said the healthcare law would not aid economic growth in his state "and since Florida is legally allowed to opt out, that's the right decision for our citizens." (credit:AP)
Spain Gaffe(05 of19)
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Ads On State Trails(06 of19)
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Voter Purge(07 of19)
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The Governor is in a legal battle with the U.S. Justice Department over the state's effort to remove non-U.S. citizens from lists of registered voters ahead of this year's presidential election. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) (credit:Getty)
Reverses Ban On Dying Animals Artificial Colors(08 of19)
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Random Drug Testing(09 of19)
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49,000 Voters Discouraged From Polls(10 of19)
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Florida took center stage in the 2012 elections, when voters around the state had to wait in line at the polls for up to nine hours. Gov. Rick Scott (R) initially denied that there was any problem, saying it was "very good" that people were getting out to vote.But a new study shows that tens of thousands of people were actually discouraged from voting because of the long lines.According to an analysis by Theodore Allen, an associate professor of industrial engineering at Ohio State University, as many as 49,000 individuals in Central Florida did not vote because of the problems at the polls. (credit:AP)
Dismal Approval Rating -- Even Amongst GOP(11 of19)
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Most Florida voters, including Republicans, would like to see Gov. Rick Scott (R) challenged in 2014, according to a poll released by Quinnipiac University.More than half of voters said Scott didn't deserve a second term, and 55 percent, including 53 percent of Republicans, wanted another candidate to challenge the governor in a primary. Scott's approval ratings, though improved from 2011, were also underwater. (credit:AP)
Cost Taxpayers $1 Million In Legal Fees(12 of19)
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Governor Rick Scott's long list of controversial legislation -- including tweaking the state's pension plans, require drug testing of those on welfare, cutting teachers' pay, and purging voters -- may have cost Florida taxpayers upwards of $1 million in legal bills.The latest legal bill tallies at $190,000 after a federal court ruled that Florida has to pay the attorney fees as Scott fights for the right to drug test state workers.The Orlando Sentinel found that Scott has already cost taxpayers nearly $900,000 in attorney fees as he fights for his conversational legislation, making this latest legal bill tilt the tally over $1 million. (credit:AP)
First-Time Drug Offenders(13 of19)
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Florida Governor Rick Scott vetoed a widely popular bill that would send certain non-violent drug addicts to treatment after serving half their sentences.“He said it was a 'public safety’ issue. No it’s not,” said bill sponsor Sen. Ellyn Bogdanoff (R-Fort Lauderdale) according to the Miami Herald. “These are non-violent drug offenders.”The bill, a rare common sense favorite during a legislative season that saw Scott approve dying animals and Jay-Z lyrics debated on the House floor, was opposed by only four state lawmakers. (credit:AP)
Docs. vs. Glocks(14 of19)
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Gov. Scott pushed back when a federal judge ruled a law gagging Florida physicians from asking patients if they owned guns unconstitutional. U.S. District Court Judge cited the government-imposed gag order as a violation of free speech protection under the First Amendment. (credit:AP)
Scott's Boletera?(15 of19)
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Campaign finance reports show Florida Governor Rick Scott -- who framed recent evidence-defying efforts to purge state voter rolls, limit registration and reduce early voting hours as a protection of "honest" elections -- hired an alleged Miami-Dade absentee ballot broker during his 2010 gubernatorial campaign.Scott's campaign paid a $5,000 "contract labor" fee to 74-year-old Hialeah resident Emelina Llanes, who was identified as a so-called boletera to the Miami Herald and by El Nuevo Herald, multiple Miami-Dade watchdog blogs, and former Hialeah Police Chief Rolando Bolaños. (credit:AP)
Closes TB Hospital(16 of19)
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Gives Out Number For Sex Hotline(17 of19)
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Vetoed Funding For Mass Animal Deaths Research(18 of19)
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The Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute at Florida Atlantic University was counting on $2 million in state funds to study the dead pelicans, manatees, and dolphins piling up at Indian River Lagoon, described as a 'killing zone.' Scott vetoed the funding. (credit:Getty Images)
Sped Up Death Penalty(19 of19)
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Scott signed a law that will speed up Florida's execution process. The governor now must sign a death warrant within 30 days of the Supreme Court certifying that an inmate has exhausted all appeals. The execution date must be six months from the date of the warrant. (credit:AP)