TAMPA Fla. (Reuters) - Charlie Crist won
the Democratic nomination for Florida governor on Tuesday, defeating his
primary challenger with almost 75 percent of the vote and setting the
stage for a nationally watched governor's race.
Republican Governor Rick Scott easily cruised toward victory with
more than 87 percent of the vote over two little-known primary
opponents.
Voter turnout was low - under 17.5 percent - in an election lacking
tight races at the top of the tickets to help draw voters.
With Scott and Crist virtually tied in polls, the race is shaping up
as one of the most expensive gubernatorial contests, with both
parties seeking a major bully pulpit going into the 2016
presidential elections in the nation's most populous swing state.
Primary vote results provide an initial gauge of Democratic
enthusiasm for Crist, who governed Florida as a Republican from 2007
to 2011 and now wants the job back under a different party label.
In accepting the party's nomination, Crist stressed his moderate
track record as a Republican on issues including public education,
women's reproductive rights and U.S. President Barack Obama's
economic stimulus plan.
"When I was governor, serving the public was never about right
versus left, it was always about right versus wrong," Crist said.
Crist largely ignored a primary challenge from Nan Rich, a former
state legislator from south Florida who in conceding called on her
supporters to help vote out Scott.
"I entered this race to defeat Rick Scott and to get Florida back on
the right track," Rich said at an election night event. "That is the
goal that I remain committed to."
General election themes have been the focus of an already blistering
televised ad campaign, with Scott and Crist bashing each other’s
records on everything from taxes to jobs, education and energy
policy.
"The next few months are about talk versus action," Scott said in a
statement. "Florida will have a choice between a governor who sent
our state into a tailspin and a governor who gets results."
Votes cast against Crist will be scrutinized to reveal his ability
to galvanize the base of a party he only recently joined after
spending most of his political life as a Republican, said Daniel
Smith, a political science professor at the University of Florida in
Gainesville.
"He has not played to the base as he has to the middle," Smith said.
"In doing so, he risks alienating those core Democrats he is going
to need in the general election."
Early voting results indicated low voter turnout, especially in the
Democratic stronghold in south Florida, which could be crucial to
the party's chances in November.
Florida Democratic leaders, seeking to move quickly past the
primary, have plans for unity rallies featuring both candidates on
Thursday in Orlando and Fort Lauderdale.
"With Charlie Crist as our nominee, Democrats are fired up, ready to
work hard, and ready to win in November," said Florida Democratic
Party Chair Allison Tant in a statement.
(Additional reporting by Barbara Liston in Orlando, Bill Cotterell
in Tallahassee, David Adams, Daniel Wallis and Zachary Fagenson in
Miami.; Editing by Bill Trott, Andre Grenon and Eric Walsh)