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A year ago, a Quinnipiac University poll showed Crist ahead of Rubio by 46 percentage points. Last week the same poll showed Rubio ahead by 23 percentage points. Meek is the leading Democrat in the race. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, campaigning with Rubio in Tampa on Monday, also said Crist should either stay in the primary or drop out altogether. He said he expects Crist to "do the right thing." Romney is often mentioned as a potential 2012 presidential candidate, and backing Rubio could help endear him to Republican voters uncomfortable with his moderate stands on abortion and gay rights when he ran for office in Massachusetts. In an interview after the event, Rubio declined to pressure Crist to drop out, saying the reason he is running will not change no matter who is in the race. "I think we need to send someone to Washington who will stand up to the Obama agenda and offer an alternative, and both Kendrick Meek and Charlie Crist, I think, to one extent or another, would support the Obama agenda," Rubio said. He said he hadn't thought about how his campaign strategy would change with Crist running as an independent. Crist, Rubio and Meek are running to fill the seat held by George LeMieux, Crist's former chief of staff. Crist appointed him after Martinez resigned before completing his first term, saying he wanted to spend more time with his family.
[Associated
Press;
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