FL-Sen, FL-Gov: Last Stand of the Shady Billionaires

Quinnipiac (8/11-16, likely primary voters, 7/22-27 in parentheses):

Bill McCollum (R): 44 (32)

Rick Scott (R): 35 (43)

Undecided: 19 (23)

(MoE: ±3.5%)

Kendrick Meek (D): 35 (23)

Jeff Greene (D): 28 (33)

Maurice Ferre (D): 6 (4)

Undecided: 29 (35)

(MoE: ±3.4%)

A month ago, it was looking like the massively-self-funded vanity campaigns of Rick Scott (in the GOP gubernatorial primary) and Jeff Greene (in the Democratic Senate primary) were actually going to succeed, having bamboozled an adequate number of voters after swamping the airwaves with TV spots. With voters finally seeming to take notice of Scott’s massive Medicare fraud and Greene’s hard-partying ways (stuff that was always out there, but seemed to take a long time to break through the clutter), their implosion seems to be happening — belatedly, but rapidly, all the same.

McCollum’s turnaround is particularly surprising, as he’s actually venturing back into positive favorable territory (at least among the Republican primary electorate) after having temporarily gotten turned radioactive: he’s at 45/30, compared with 34/33 for Scott. (Quinnipiac should ask McCollum supporters how they feel about Scott, and vice versa… I think there might be some mutual exclusivity to those two sets of numbers.) McCollum’s also surviving despite that, by a 42-35 margin, GOP voters prefer someone who’s an “outsider” to someone with “experience.”

There is one other poll, out, though, that gives a small lead to Scott: it’s the GOP side of that Susquehanna poll for Sunshine State News (they released Dem Senate numbers yesterday). It’s a small lead, though; Scott’s up 44-42 (although he was up by 16 in the previous Sunshine State News poll in July). The same sample also took a look at the Democratic primary in the Attorney General‘s race, where state sen. Dan Gelber leads fellow state Sen. Dave Aronberg, 38-27.

McCollum’s also getting some outside help from another new Florida resident: Mike Huckabee is giving his endorsement to McCollum, and will appear with him this weekend. The McCollum camp is also launching a new ad, focusing on Scott’s legal woes and featuring new footage of him running away from cameras, and even turning the C and O in his name into handcuffs for emphasis.

Realizing he’s up against the wall, Scott is pouring another $4 million of his own money into the race. (Somewhere, Meg Whitman was heard scoffing at the foibles of the little people who can only self-finance in the seven-digit range.) Scott’s newest ad references Jim Greer, the disgraced former state party chair, and tries to tie him to McCollum. That seems like it was a bridge too far for even the RGA, which condemned Scott over the ad and danced up to the very edge, in their statement, of almost (but not quite) endorsing McCollum. Also, Scott is going back to the well on the Rentboy scandal, trying to tie McCollum to George Rekers again with a new mailer. Whew! Remember back when we thought the Florida Senate race was going to be the slimy one?

20 thoughts on “FL-Sen, FL-Gov: Last Stand of the Shady Billionaires”

  1. I want Scott to win the GOP nomination, and FL Dems are missing an opportunity to attack and define McCollum if they let him come out of the primary with net positive favorability ratings.  

  2. I’m going to miss it. There be no more attacks of the shady billionaires!!

    Seriously can’t say any of these statewide races in FL aren’t intrestring. FL-Gov with Rick Scott, FL-Sen (D) with Jeff Greene and the topper FL-Sen with Crist becomeing a Indy and finally has chance to win. This is the stuff a political junkie like myself love.

  3. But with undecideds so dang high, and supposedly the rich guys spending so much, do we have any idea how the undecideds will break?  With undecideds so high there is really nothing that can be gleaned from this poll.

    Also, on the polling itself, is a 6-day timefram that runs from a Wednesday to a Monday solid?  Most polls we see are a 2 or 3-day sample.  Is 6 days, including  aweekend, a solid polling methodology?

  4. How does the polling look down-ballot for statewide races.  Our bench has been so lean for so long I’m wondering if we have anyone to replace Sink as a statewide Dem.

    I see Attorney general, CFO, Sec of Agriculture, etc are being held this year.  And news of potentially strong Dems?

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