Posted on 09/12/2008 8:01:41 PM PDT by Chet 99
Florida may be falling from Obama's grasp
By Adam C. Smith, Times Political Editor
Published Friday, September 12, 2008 10:16 PM
Barack Obama could be on the verge of falling out of contention in Florida.
Despite spending an estimated $8-million on campaign ads in America's biggest battleground state and putting in place the largest Democratic campaign organization ever in Florida, Obama has lost ground over the summer. Florida has moved from a toss-up state to one that clearly leans toward John McCain, fueling speculation about how much longer the Democratic nominee will continue investing so heavily in the state.
Obama can still win Florida despite the polling gains McCain has made since naming Sarah Palin his running mate, and there is no sign Obama is pulling back in Florida yet. Far from it. Obama allies say he has about 350 paid staffers in the state and about 50 field offices, including in places not known as fertile ground for Democrats, such as Sun City Center, Lake City and Sebring.
But for all the attention to Florida from the Obama campaign, there's little tangible evidence it's paying off.
He is farther behind in the state than John Kerry was at this point in 2004, even though McCain began buying Florida TV ads only last week. By this time in 2004, the Bush-Cheney campaign had spent $13-million on Florida TV. In the rolling average of Florida polls compiled by the Web site RealClearPolitics.com, Obama has never taken the lead over McCain in Florida, and the latest average shows him behind by 5 percentage points. They were tied in early August.
Four Florida polls came out this week, with one showing a tied race, the others showing McCain leading by 5 to 8 percentage points.
"They've had everything going for them momentum, enthusiasm, money, a complicit national press, a stiff wind at his back for a long time, and he hasn't been able pull ahead in Florida,'' said Republican strategist Alberto Martinez of Tallahassee. "I think Florida is one of those states that's taken off the board pretty soon, as they start focusing resources on states they can win."
Democrats say that's nonsense.
"Look, except for a little bounce after the Republican convention this race has basically been anywhere from a dead heat to a two- or three-point race all along,'' said Steve Schale, Obama's Florida campaign manager.
"Our job is to stay focused and continue building the largest and most comprehensive campaign organization this state has ever had. Compared to what McCain has on the ground at this point, our operation is far superior," he said.
The McCain campaign, while sounding a lot more upbeat about Florida than a few weeks ago, takes nothing for granted.
"We're certainly not planting a victory flag. I think Florida will be competitive,'' said Buzz Jacobs, McCain's campaign manager for the Southeast. "But the base of our party is energized like it's never been before. I think we are attracting Democrats and independents into our party at a greater rate than we were a few weeks ago. We are getting some of those Hillary Clinton supporters especially, and I think the Obama campaign is very worried about that."
McCain is scheduled to campaign in Jacksonville, Orlando and Miami on Monday and hold a rally at the Tampa Convention Center on Tuesday morning. Obama will be in Coral Gables raising money Friday, though no public events are scheduled yet.
"If we don't start seeing more of Obama in Florida it will be a clear sign that, like Bill Clinton in 1992, he will pull his resources out of Florida in the final weeks," said Brian Crowley, a longtime political reporter who is now an analyst in North Palm Beach. "He can still win here, but he needs to focus on the economy and spend a lot time campaigning in Florida, especially among swing voters along the I-4 corridor."
The scope of the Obama investment in Florida to date makes it less likely the campaign will scale back anytime soon, said Karl Koch of Tampa, who helped run the Florida campaigns for Bill Clinton and Al Gore.
"They've invested very heavily in this state, and it's clear to me that investment will pay off on election day,'' said Koch. "To make a decision that denies you the opportunity to put that operation in place I think would be misplaced."
I hope that’s true, because from what i have observed first hand here in Tampa, McCain’s organization is pretty well, ..disorganized..
You shouldn’t make fun of old people in your ads, Obama.
Sarah Palin is worth a 10 point gain in all battleground states. Even California is showing approval for her nomination.
ROTFLOL---sounds like Obama's got ahold of Giuliani's campaign routine.
Seems Rooty' strategy was to "save himself" for Florida figuring he'd make a big splash there, flying in a "powerhouse" of his American supporters from Israel to vote for him.
Actually the dolt campaigned in (and lost) every early primary/caucus state. Giuliani campaigned in Florida 61 days straight and came in a distant third.
When he dropped out, he'd spent $60 million and won 1/2 delegate (he shared the one delegate he won).
Rooty's "save myself for Flordia" strategy is now in the history books as the studpidest in US campaign history.
I think I read on FR a few days ago that the (mostly retired) Jewish community in Florida is not happy about Obama’s Muslim/anti-Israel roots.
Being nervous a bit is not a problem, it is a part of our human nature :)
I can't see Colorado and New Mexico going for Obama.
Finally, Obama's lead in the state of Washington is only 2 points by one poll. Of course with King County dirty tricks, Obama might pull out the state of Washington...
Changing demographics. Influx of illegals that could very well be voting in a few years.
McCain needs to hire Dick Morris as a Consultant...he has a demographic insight that can push MCCain and Palin over the top!!
Any poll or map that shows ND going for Obama is just plain bunkum. President Bush took ND in 2004 with (if I recall correctly) something like 80%. A popular Republican governor who handily won his last re-election, and a very popular former governor (Ed Schafer) now serving as Secretary of Agriculte, mean that ND is NOT trending towards The FAKE Chosen One.
Whatever happened to Iowa, that used to be such a conservative state?
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