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Crist calls "bringing a new tone to Tallahassee of bipartisanship" his proudest achievement. "People are so fed up with the partisan rancor that we are experiencing on a national level," Crist recently told The Associated Press. "I would compare it to children in a schoolyard, but that would be insulting to the children in the schoolyard." The messy primary fight with Rubio in the 2010 Senate race has made him far from the perfect Democratic messenger. He spent much of that race campaigning as a pro-gun, anti-abortion, small-government Republican, saying it would be hard to find anyone more conservative. When GOP activists and donors rallied around Rubio, Crist mounted an independent bid. After the loss, he began backing Democrats in state and federal races and campaigned for Obama in last year's election. "I feel at home, truly," Crist said recently. Republicans have not forgotten -- or forgiven -- Crist's defection. Scott, who spent more than $70 million of his own money on his 2010 campaign, already has raised nearly $18.5 million from donors, promising a withering ad blitz against his opponent early next year. Signaling what's to come, the state party has started painting Crist as a political chameleon "unfit to govern." Some Democrats also are suspicious and are favoring candidate Nan Rich, a former state Senate minority leader. Rich has questioned Crist's Democratic credentials but has had trouble raising money for a statewide campaign.
Crist surprised many Democrats this year when he declared his support for gay marriage. In 2006, he backed a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage in Florida, a position he reaffirmed in 2008 and in 2010. Crist said Obama's support for gay marriage last year prompted him to change his mind. Democratic leaders, who have spent much of the last decade on the sidelines of a GOP-dominated Legislature, are excited by the prospect of nominating Crist. Lawton Chiles was the last Democrat elected governor, in 1994.
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