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The effectiveness of the ads depends on the attack, Perlmutter said. A claim that is plausible and at least based in truth is more likely to get traction. And at a time when many voters are angry at the government, outsiders are logically going hard after the records of incumbents and established politicians. In Florida, Scott entered the race in April after McCollum had already been anointed by the state GOP establishment to succeed Gov. Charlie Crist. Scott's immediate and frequent presence on TV commercials and anti-establishment message helped him surge ahead in the polls in the spring. Scott made a fortune building the massive Columbia/HCA hospital chain in the 1990s only to be forced out by his board amid a Medicaid/Medicare fraud investigation that saw the company pay a record $1.7 billion settlement after he was gone. He has said repeatedly that he didn't know about any wrongdoing and was never charged with a crime. McCollum says the 57-year-old Scott is either dishonest or a terrible CEO who didn't see fraud going on under his nose. Scott, who moved to Florida seven years ago from Connecticut, has effectively hung the career politician label on the 66-year-old McCollum, a state GOP stalwart who has twice run unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate. His ads have hit McCollum for his chummy relationship with a former state Republican Party chief who was charged in a fraud scandal, and has made effective use of a McCollum sound bite saying he didn't support Arizona's tough new immigration law. McCollum said he now supports an amended version of the law. Joel Parlin, a 49-year-old Republican who lives near Tampa, said he's watched the tone of the ads get increasingly nastier, but they haven't put him off supporting Scott. "According to the ads, they're making (Scott) out to be a crook, and he may be," Parlin said. "But I'm very anti-establishment as far as the way the government continues its same-old, same-old. If they're an establishment politician, I won't vote for them." Absent from the Scott-McCollum commercials is any talk of the likely Democratic nominee Alex Sink, who is locked in a close race with both Republicans in recent polls. That could be a good thing for Sink, Florida's chief financial officer, whose campaign is just starting to get some traction. ___ Online: Bill McCollum for governor: Rick Scott for governor:
http://billmccollum.com/
http://www.rickscottforflorida.com/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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