Yeah, Dr. Dobson is really going to decide this race...that is insane!!! Have you seen the last two polls to come out.
Strategic Vision poll
Below are the poll results based on telephone interviews with 1200 likely voters in Florida, aged 18+, and conducted August 25-27, 2006. The margin of sampling error is ±3 percentage points.
Charlie Crist 52%
Tom Gallagher 36%
Undecided 12%
Quinnipiac University poll
Crist 57%
Gallagher 32%
Undecided 11%
In the same poll of people who called themselves born again or evangelicals:
Crist - 53%
Gallagher - 38%
Sorry folks, this one is over.
weekend polling is unreliable. where've ya been? What about the defections from Crist to Gallagher? The polls aren't logging those in.
TUESDAY my FRiend... TUESDAY !!! I am not calling it over until TUESDAY !!.. then we rally behind the winner... right?
Do you have any idea how many churches there are in the State of Florida? And you can forget about black churches voting for Crist because there's Martin Anderson's boot camp death, may he rest in peace. Suffocated to death by deputies who call Crist friend. Martin died on Jan. 6th at 14 and no charges have been filed at all. Forget about it.
I respectful disagree - This isn't over. Charlie knows it. That's why he's gone on a crazed attack.
Gallagher still has a fighting chance
Florida Insider, 08/30/2006
Theres a growing perception among some Florida Republican insiders that Charlie Crist needs to run out the clock.
Our poll last week for the Florida Chamber of Commerce showed Crists supposedly insurmountable lead over Gallagher in the GOP primary race for governor to be shrinking. The Crist campaign pooh-poohs the notion. They cite internal and other polls that indicate his lead is growing again, if it ever dwindled to start with.
Maybe. But then why has Crist gone from offense to defense on televised debates and with paid TV ads? In Monday nights debate which Gallagher won Crist unwillingly shed his Ronald Reagan, Teflon armor and got testy. He let Gallaghers insistent attacks get under his skin. In sports lingo, thats called playing down to your competition. Strange stuff for someone who believes he will win walking away.
Likewise on paid TV is Crist playing a defensive brand of one-upmanship about who stands furthest to the right. These mutual recriminations are starting to amount to so much white noise. And further disengagement among an already disengaged conservative electorate might help Gallagher. It might further depress voter turnout and leave indignant social conservatives in possession of the field.
Storms and voter indifference
Our polling and official projections both show a likely low turnout Tuesday. Jeb Bush isnt running. There are a limited number of contested primaries and legislative races. Many Republicans are put out with their leaders in Washington. Its Labor Day weekend. The Miami-Florida State football game is Monday night.
And now most of the Florida peninsula is soaked with the rains of Ernesto. No, its not a hurricane and it will be long gone by Tuesday. But its effect wont. Broadcast and newspaper media have shoved politics aside this week for storm coverage. That means TV gross ratings points for Crist and Gallagher have likely been diminished.
Our take is that this is more of a danger to Crist. His ads appear reactive, whereas Gallaghers are the icing on a strategic cake that was baked long ago. Crist is reinventing himself late. That requires drenching Florida TV markets with ads -- especially when you've stumbled slightly in your last debate. (Gallagher insiders curse themselves for not jumping on Crist's offer months back to hold up to a dozen, in-depth "Lincoln-Douglas" debates.)
Stormy weather can also affect get-out-the-vote efforts. Again, Crist may be more hurt than Gallagher, who has put more emphasis on grassroots organization his team would appear to know where their voters are and how to corral them.
North Florida hasnt gotten the hurricane scare that South Florida has. Particularly in the Panhandle, conservative North Florida leans towards Gallagher. Might these voters turn out in disproportionately higher numbers than their Republican counterparts in South and Central Florida?
While the Panhandle makes up a smaller portion of the overall vote in most GOP primaries, what if campaign organizations there are better organized and more motivated than in other regions?, said Matt Towery, CEO of InsiderAdvantage, the publisher of Florida Insider. And what if TV campaign ads in other areas are being trumped or marginalized by broadcasting dedicated to protecting against the storm?, he said. If the race actually narrows and turnout overall is thin, the weather situation could help Gallagher."
Another of the few demographics favorable to Gallagher is Latino voters. His unabashedly pro-life rhetoric resonates with these observant Catholics. And Latinos vote. Especially the older ones.
Also, the Jeb Bush machine is running hot in Miami. Thats where Republican state Senate rebel Alex Villalobos is being targeted for defeat for having abandoned the GOP on two key votes in the Legislature last spring. The governor is appearing in Spanish-speaking media and on automated campaign phone calls on behalf of challenger Frank Bolaños. Bush speaks fluent Spanish. Plus, his face is the face of reassurance in hurricane-information free media.
Were this race to take place absent bad weather leading up to it, and were Election Day not the day after Labor Day, Id say Crist would be more than safe, said Towery. But I sense that Gallagher is starting to move to his camp some voters who are more hard-core Jeb Bush supporters. And with a weak turnout, Gallaghers late surge could be setting us up for a much tighter finish than is widely believed.
Unofficial help for Gallagher?
Beyond all this, the recent, dramatic appearance of superstar campaign consultant Mike Murphy in Gallagher's camp is a puff of smoke that almost surely hides a fire named Jeb. Throw in Gallagher supporters with extensive organizational expertise, such as former state Republican chairman Al Cárdenas, and youve got what looks like an officially unofficial political machine working for Gallagher.
"When I heard that Mike Murphy had moved to the Gallagher team, I knew there was no way this would have happened if it were deemed offensive to Gov. Bush, said Matt Towery. Mike's work is known in GOP circles, dating back into my campaigning days of the 1980s. (Sorry Mike, our Mack Mattingly Georgia US Senate race in 1986 isnt our best memory. Then again, everybody in the GOP went down that year.)
Murphys entrance in the campaign was the first spark in the Gallagher effort, said Towery.
Then came the first Crist-Gallagher debate. From the standpoint of strict forensic scoring, Crist won it. But from a strategic angle, Gallagher set forth in the conservative attack mode that brought more focus to the race, he said.
Heres another hidden dynamic in this race: Consider how Ralph Reed was upset in his GOP lieutenant gubernatorial race in Georgia. He got beat by an unknown state senator. Our analysts say a prime reason was that while Reed did not pick up the support from social conservatives he was banking on, opponent Casey Cagle lined up the support of fellow senators. The result was a makeshift but effective get-out-the-vote apparatus throughout that state.
A similar dynamic could play to Gallaghers benefit. House leadership hasnt openly endorsed him, but it has officially backed the perceived more conservative candidate for state chief financial officer, Randy Johnson of Celebration. Insiders say there are many in the highly conservative state House who may work their constituents on behalf of Gallagher, although there are certainly many who back Crist.
Theres been little attention given to the legislative support Gallagher is receiving from the Jeb Bush-associated House of Representatives, said Towery. Legislators have been playing a role in these low turnout GOP primaries in the South. They may not have much of a machine, but when there isn't anyone voting, any machine is better than nothing."
Same liberal pollters that said Jeb would lose to Mcbride before Jeb won by 15%.