Posts Tagged ‘marco rubio’

Rubio Comments on Florida’s Record Unemployment

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Miami, FL – U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio issued the following statement regarding today’s news that Florida’s unemployment rate has reached 11.9 percent, the highest level in state history:

“At the one year mark, it’s clear that President Obama’s and Governor Crist’s stimulus has failed the people of Florida. What was billed by them and other proponents as a job-creating panacea has instead served to grow government and increase our debt. For the record, the only backs I care about in this race are the backs of our children, upon which big government proponents continue piling trillions of dollars of debt.

“Today’s jobs report is a warning sign to Washington. If President Obama and his allies finalize their push for costly taxes, spending and regulation initiatives like the health care reform bill, they will put our economy in even further short and long term danger. As President Obama and Washington Democrats prepare to ram through their government takeover of health care, they do so at their peril. It’s alarming my opponent doesn’t believe this plan should be scrapped.

“While my opponent is focused on trivial and fabricated matters, I remain focused on my campaign to go to Washington, stand up to President Obama’s job-killing agenda and offer an alternative that encourages job creation by providing entrepreneurs with the incentives to invest and assurances their risk-taking will not be penalized. The first needed step towards creating jobs and lasting economic growth is for Washington policymakers to cease their assault on the free market, beginning with a scrapping of the current health care proposal on the table.”

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Hypocrisy: Crist Blasts Rubio for “Pork” Spending Crist Himself Approved

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Letter from Crist thanks Rubio for project Crist now calls “pork”

Miami, FL – Governor Charlie Crist’s hypocrisy was on full display today when he attacked Marco Rubio for so-called “pork” spending on projects that Crist himself supported and approved. In addition, Crist’s claim to have vetoed the so-called “pork” spending is laughable considering the fact that he supported close to 98 percent of it. In fact, Crist even sent Rubio a letter saying how “thankful” he was to be able to support one of the projects he now labels as “pork.”

Here are the facts:

• Crist approved more than $120 million of what he now refers to as “pork.”

• Crist actually attended a bill signing ceremony at the University of Miami’s Human Genomic Institute, a project labeled as “pork” by Charlie Crist and The Miami Herald today.

• In a letter dated February 11, 2008 and signed by Crist himself, the governor actually lavishes praise on Marco Rubio for his efforts regarding the human genomics project at the University of Miami.

• “Dear Marco,” the letter begins. “It was truly a pleasure to see you recently during the University of Miami Human Genomic Institute Press Conference. I am thankful that through such efforts, we can provide medical doctors a new research facility and a novel approach to biomedical research so that we can prevent, detect and treat more diseases.”

• Crist ends the letter, “I hope to see you again soon!” This represents a very different side to Charlie Crist than the bitter and increasingly bizarre-acting politician voters have seen recently.

“When it comes to telling the truth, Charlie Crist seems to have lost his way,” said Rubio for Senate spokesman Alex Burgos. “It appears Charlie Crist was for all of this spending before he decided he was against it. The fact is taxpayers know they simply can’t trust Charlie Crist to protect their money.

“There’s a reason Marco Rubio is supported by real fiscal conservative leaders like Jim DeMint, Dick Armey, Grover Norquist and organizations like the Club For Growth,” continued Burgos. “It’s because of his common sense conservative record of limited government, less taxes and less spending.”

READ THE LETTER

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Rubio Comments on Crist’s So-Called Everglades Plan

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Miami, FL – U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio today issued the following statement regarding Governor Charlie Crist’s so-called Everglades plan, about which weekend news reports raised troubling new questions:

“This deal is nothing more than a massive taxpayer-funded bailout for a top Charlie Crist campaign donor and a profitable bonanza for Crist’s inner circle.

“Once again, Charlie Crist has put his political ambition ahead of the people of Florida, and once again the results are disastrous for taxpayers. In fact, this bailout plan is the second most expensive photo op Charlie Crist has ever staged.

“Charlie Crist’s bailout plan will require higher taxes and increased debt, and it does nothing for the Everglades. In fact, it actually halts real restoration projects started by Jeb Bush, which were already underway.

“Charlie Crist simply can’t be trusted to go to Washington to fight massive government spending because, more often than not, he’s the one proposing it.”

NEW YORK TIMES BOMBSHELL: CHARLIE CRIST’S TAXPAYER-FUNDED BAILOUT

Excerpts from:
The New York Times
A Deal to Save the Everglades Could Rescue U.S. Sugar Instead
3/7/2010

Read the Full Article

“Nearly two years later, the governor’s ambitious plan to reclaim the river of grass, as the famed wetlands are known, is instead on track to rescue the fortunes of United States Sugar.”

“United States Sugar dictated many of the terms of the deal as state officials repeatedly made decisions against the immediate needs of the Everglades and the interests of taxpayers, an examination of thousands of state e-mail messages and records and more than 60 interviews showed…documents and interviews suggest that the price tag and terms of the deal could set back Everglades restoration for years, or even decades.

Negotiations favored United States Sugar from the start, when the state accepted two outside firms’ appraisals of the company’s land that used figures from the height of the real estate market, according to documents.

When a “fairness opinion” commissioned by the state found that those appraisals had overvalued the land by $400 million, Florida officials orchestrated a public relations campaign to discredit the findings, internal e-mail showed. Appraisers from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, which was required to sign off on the deal, were also cut out of the process after raising concerns, e-mail messages showed.

When it came time to decide which land to buy, state officials acknowledged that United States Sugar was, as one official put it during an interview, “pretty much in the driver’s seat.”

Supporters of the plan said the land would enable the state and federal government to build reservoirs and water treatment systems. But doing so would require deep financial reserves from the South Florida Water Management District, which oversees restoration and is financed by taxpayers in 16 counties. Internal district documents put the price tag at up to $12 billion and projected that the district would have nowhere near that amount.

In the meantime, more than a dozen projects under way as part of a 10-year-old federal and district restoration effort have been suspended or canceled in anticipation of the cost of the United States Sugar deal. Among them is a massive reservoir in western Palm Beach County that was seen as a major step toward restoration of the Everglades. In total, $1.3 billion had already been spent on the projects, according to an internal water district document.

Former Gov. Jeb Bush, who initiated most of that work, said in an interview that he was “deeply disappointed” with the decision by Mr. Crist, his successor and a fellow Republican, calling the move to halt the projects a setback for restoration.

“To replace projects that were under way for a possibility of a project decades from now is not a good trade,” Mr. Bush said. “On a net basis, this appears to me there has been a replacement of science-based environmental policy for photo-op environmental policy.”

In its current form, the deal’s only clear, immediate beneficiaries would be United States Sugar, a privately held company based in Clewiston, Fla., and its law firm, Gunster, which is expected to collect tens of millions of dollars in fees for its work on the sale, according to current and former United States Sugar executives.

The sale, scheduled to close March 31, amounts to a lifeline for the company, which entered negotiations at a time of profound weakness; it was facing a costly shareholder lawsuit, sinking profit margins and increased foreign competition. The deal would enable it to wipe nearly all the debt from its books.

United States Sugar had an unusually powerful advocate in Gunster, a West Palm Beach law firm that had represented it since 1990. Gunster’s chairman, George LeMieux, was Governor Crist’s chief of staff when the deal was first conceived. Mr. LeMieux, who began working at the law firm in 1994, returned to it in January 2008 as the deal was being renegotiated.

He and Mr. Crist are confidants, and the governor referred to Mr. LeMieux as the “maestro” of his 2006 election victory. When a United States Senate seat was vacated in 2009, Mr. Crist appointed Mr. LeMieux to fill it. The governor is now campaigning for that post and has often described the United States Sugar purchase as a crowning achievement of his administration.

For United States Sugar, “it’s a fantastic deal,” said a former senior executive of the company, who described his colleagues as “elated.”

“I won’t lie to you — it’s a damn good price for that land,” said the executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he had signed a nondisclosure agreement. “But it’s not as good a deal for the Everglades. If the district doesn’t have any money after this purchase, then they won’t be able to do any restoration projects. It could be a disaster in the making.”

On June 24, 2008, with Florida already experiencing a recession and property values sinking, Ms. Estenoz stood beside the governor at the edge of the Everglades as he unveiled the $1.75 billion deal. Local cheers and sweeping national headlines followed.

Politically, the timing was perfect. Mr. Crist was on the short list of potential running mates for Senator John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee for president.

Ellen Simms, a former United States Sugar comptroller who views the deal skeptically, said that despite the high cost to taxpayers, it was difficult in those early days to question it. “Who can be against it?” she said. “This was going to save the Everglades. It’s like being against motherhood and apple pie.”

The growing financial crisis in the summer of 2008 was rapidly changing the scope of the deal. On Nov. 11, 2008, Mr. Crist announced a smaller, $1.34 billion purchase of just over 180,000 acres of United States Sugar’s land, but this time not including its other assets.

At a press conference, Mr. Crist called the new deal “miraculous.”

For United States Sugar, at least, it looked that way. David Guest, an environmental lawyer and vocal supporter of the full buyout plan, said that the state’s lead negotiator, Michael W. Sole, secretary of Florida’s Environmental Protection Department, had given away far too much to United States Sugar.

“He got scammed,” Mr. Guest said. “Everyone gasped in disbelief when he came back with what he did.”

Paying for the land was only the beginning. A slide show prepared by the district on restoration projects and construction detailed one estimate that put the effort at $8.6 billion and another at $12.3 billion, according to records obtained by The New York Times.

Even at the lower estimate and with the federal government paying its share, the district would struggle to bear the costs. The details of the deal were now raising concerns among some district board members and environmentalists.

An unlikely cheerleader emerged. George LeMieux, despite having insisted that he had nothing to do with the deal, appeared at a legal conference in Deerfield Beach and offered “an insider’s account” of Everglades restoration.

In a keynote address that went uncovered by the local media, Mr. LeMieux described the United States Sugar deal as “an unprecedented opportunity, really a game changer.”

“We really stand at the intersection of opportunity and possibility,” he said. “We have a historic opportunity to change the face of the Everglades and our environment with this acquisition of the U.S. Sugar lands.”

In April 2009, Governor Crist announced a second downsizing of the deal, necessitated again, he said, by the state’s shrinking economy. The district would now buy 72,800 acres for $536 million. Critics said that as the deal got smaller, it got better for U.S. Sugar.

Under the terms of the new deal, United States Sugar will be able to keep farming some of the land for at least seven years. As a result, some environmental experts believe, the Everglades will be worse off in the short term.

“What you have is just another step in the category of kicking the ball down the road and chasing it,” said Alan Farago, the conservation chairman of Friends of the Everglades.

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FLASHBACK: The Last Time Charlie Crist Did “Meet The Press”…

Friday, March 5th, 2010

MR. GREGORY: Do you think the president has the right prescription to ease this recession?
GOV. CRIST: I think he’s on the right track.

Here’s a reminder of Charlie Crist’s stimulus victory lap the last time he was on “Meet The Press.”

WATCH THE VIDEO

Between his negative personal attacks against Marco Rubio and his sudden interest in debating, it’s clear Charlie Crist is a desperate politician in search of a game-changer to distract from his support for stimulus spending, higher taxes and cap-and-trade. For someone who repeatedly ignored Marco Rubio’s year-long call for debates because he claimed he was “governing,” it’s also interesting that Governor Crist suddenly wants to debate just as Florida’s legislative session begins.

As Marco has said all along, he would be glad to debate Charlie Crist on Meet The Press any time after he keeps his commitment to debate first on FOX on March 28. After that, he looks forward to discussing why Charlie Crist was wrong to endorse and promote the stimulus the last time he appeared on Meet the Press.

Unfortunately for Governor Crist, no one really believes Marco Rubio is afraid to debate him, just like no one trusts him to stand up to Barack Obama.

Alex Burgos, Rubio for Senate spokesman

FLASHBACK: Following Passage Of The Stimulus In February 2009, Charlie Crist Took A Victory Lap On Meet The Press

GOV. CRIST: It’s not a matter of bucking the party, it’s a matter of helping the people. I mean, I really view it as an issue of what can I do that’s best for the people of Florida? We’ve got almost 20 million people that live in the Sunshine State now. I think my obligation is in essence the CEO of the state, to do everything I can to help us get through this tough economy. Certainly this stimulus package, about $12.2 billion to Florida, will help Florida an awful lot.

MR. GREGORY: You heard Governor Jindal on the program just a couple of minutes ago. Much different view, thinks they got the plan all wrong. You disagree with the government role that’s being exercised here in trying to fix the economy?

GOV. CRIST: I do. I think that, you know, there are times when you’re in a crisis and we all need to work together in order to get through those crises. And I think that this is one of those times. It is fundamental to be able to make sure that we help our children in school. This is going to help us in our education in Florida by about $3.5 billion. It’s going to help us with Medicaid, the most vulnerable among us who really need help and need it now. That’ll be in excess of $5 billion for Florida. It also helps us in road construction and producing jobs. That’s almost $1.5 billion for the Sunshine State. It’s fundamentally important that we help the people, we reach out to them, we understand they’re in a time of need. In the past five weeks, I’ve visited six unemployment offices throughout Florida. I look into the eyes of these people and I understand that the challenges are serious that they’re having to deal with, and I want to do everything I can to help them.

MR. GREGORY: There’s no Republican from Florida in Congress who supported the stimulus. One prominent Republican consultant said this about you and your support for it: “I don’t think he’s helped any national Republican ambitions he may have had by stepping up to the plate and batting for the other team. … There’s a difference between working in a bipartisan way for the common good and switching sides and putting on the other team’s jersey. At the one moment when we finally found our voice and remember who we are as Republicans, Charlie Crist forgets. It is stunning.” Governor of South Carolina, Mark Sanford, also said nobody thinks you’re a fiscal conservative. Are you an Obama Republican?

GOV. CRIST: I’m a Florida Republican. And in the Florida way, we work together in a bipartisan fashion to do what’s right for the people. That’s really what it’s all about. You know, people run for office in order to try to help their constituents, the people of their state or their district or their country. In my case it’s Florida, and that’s all I care about. And in Florida we work across the aisle. My friends in the House and the Senate that are of the Democratic Party, I reached out to them. People like Robert Wexler. He wanted to have a paper trail for our elections. We had some embarrassing elections in the past in my state. I didn’t want my state to be embarrassed anymore. So I’ll take ideas from anybody. It really doesn’t matter if they’re a Republican, a Democrat or an independent; if they’re a Floridian and they care about the people of our state, I want to work with them to make sure that we have a better future and a brighter future.

MR. GREGORY: Do you think it’s a mistake for the Republican Party to define itself by opposition to the stimulus?

GOV. CRIST: Well, it may be. All I know is I have to do what I think is in the best interest of the people of Florida. And from my perspective, it’s to try and help them. Help them every single day in every way that I can in education, in infrastructure, in health care; do the kinds of things that keep us from having to raise taxes. You know, another part that people don’t talk about in the stimulus bill is that it cuts taxes. About a third of it cuts taxes. That’s an important thing for people to remember, I think, because people need a break. We’ve been able to cut taxes in Florida. We have reduced our property taxes. It’s the largest single tax cut in the history of my state. I’m very proud of that. At the same time, because of the stimulus we’ll be able to pay our teachers more next year than we were this past year. So I think it works, it works well, it helps people, it does what’s right.

MR. GREGORY: Do you think the president has the right prescription to ease this recession?

GOV. CRIST: I think he’s on the right track. I don’t think anybody says this is a perfect bill. I don’t. I don’t think even President Obama says that. But we’ve got to do something. We are at a time of need, and to do nothing certainly is not acceptable. This is not perfect, but we’ve got to do something to try to get our country back on track for the benefit of our people.

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Reinvention Alert: “Frugal” Charlie Crist’s $430K European Junket on Taxpayers’ Dime

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Crist Now: “I’m the most frugal cheap guy you’ll ever meet.”
Crist in 2008: “Crist enjoyed pricey perks on business trip to Europe thanks to taxpayers.”

Miami, FL – Governor Charlie Crist’s latest reinvention into a “frugal” spender was on full display in today’s National Review Online (NRO). Actually, that is partially true. By all accounts, he might be frugal when it’s his own money. But he is more than happy to spend the taxpayer’s dime on things like lavish European trips for himself and his entourage.

When he endorsed and campaigned for the $787 billion stimulus, Floridians saw firsthand how Charlie Crist’s personal frugality does not translate into fiscal restraint with taxpayer money.

But before that, Floridians saw it in Crist’s 2008 European junket, which came complete with a two-dozen person entourage, an official photographer to chronicle the governor at “work,” a $2,100 a night luxury suite in London, $1,300 in room service and mini bar charges for Crist alone, and first class airfare at $8,000 per ticket. Total cost? Over $430,000, with nearly $30,000 in personal expenses for Crist, picked up by special interest groups.

“Charlie Crist might be frugal when it comes to his own money, but he loves spending taxpayer money on a failed stimulus, on $2 billion worth of tax hikes, and on a luxurious lifestyle for himself and his buddies,” said Rubio for Senate spokesman Alex Burgos.
“Floridians are not going to take lectures on frugality from a guy who embraced the largest spending bill in American history, stays in $2,000 a night luxury hotel suites where he racks up $1,300 in mini bar charges, and doesn’t pay for a dime of it himself.”

“The record is clear,” added Burgos. “While Marco Rubio was fighting to eliminate property taxes in Florida, opposing Charlie Crist’s big government cap-and-trade energy tax plan, and saving taxpayers $30,000 in travel costs, Charlie Crist was gallivanting around Europe on a lavish junket. The hypocrisy coming from Charlie Crist these days is stunning.”

In his latest personal salvo against Marco Rubio, Crist tells NRO:

“… it is easy to see that he’s not conservative, but one of the most irresponsible spenders I’ve ever seen. He talks about how we need to spend less in Washington, but he sure seems to like spending other people’s money. … I’m a true-blue Reaganite Republican. … My opponent and I are polar opposites when it comes to who is really frugal. His statements are just unbelievable.” (“Crist: Rubio Campaign The ‘Greatest Fraud Perpetrated On People,” National Review Online, 3/4/10)

Crist’s remarks this morning build on his recent claim of being “the most frugal cheap guy you’ll ever meet.” (“Crist Assails Rubio’s Spending,” Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 2/27/10)

FLASHBACK: European Trip For Crist, Entourage Cost $430K
Associated Press
Gov. Crist’s office says fostering overseas business is even more important when the economy is hurting.
12/7/2008

TALLAHASSEE – Gov. Charlie Crist took a pricey 12-day trip to Europe this summer, hitting taxpayers with a $430,000 bill amid a sagging economy, a newspaper reported.

Crist flew to London, Paris, St. Petersburg and Madrid to drum up business in July on a trip that was supposed to cost $255,000, but the tab came in much higher, the Sun Sentinel reported today.

Expenses included Crists’ entourage of more than two dozen, including a photographer and nine bodyguards, who alone spent more than $148,000 on meals, hotels, transportation and incidentals. The news comes as the state budget has a roughly $2 billion deficit.

Crists’ office says fostering overseas business is even more important when the economy is hurting and has been “instrumental in keeping our state from greater distress,” spokeswoman Erin Isaac said in a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press on Sunday.

State money was not used to pay for Crist’s roughly $30,000 in expenses. Business executives who went on the trip picked up that bill – which included a $2,179 a night London suite, where he conducted meetings.

First class tickets for about $8,000 round-trip, room service and minibar tabs of more than $1,300. And $320 on electric fans to keep him cool while giving speeches, the newspaper reported.

Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Gerald Bailey, was also there on a crime-solving agreement with British police. He billed taxpayers $5,135 for less than 12 hours of official duties during four days, the newspaper reported.

He stayed an extra week at his own expense. His spokeswoman said he was on call around the clock and complied with state travel and vacation policies.

The company that organized the trip said the hotel costs were not extraordinary by European standards and that they negotiated rates wisely, but the weak dollar posed a challenge.

Former Gov. Jeb Bush used tax dollars to cover his costs on similar trade missions.

Crist’s office said the countries he visited combined have more than 900 companies in the state employing some 50,000 Floridians and have invested nearly $6 billion in our economy.

“These nations are strategic trading partners with Florida,” Isaac said in a statement.

Florida corporations made $5.5 million in sales and laid the groundwork for an additional $96 million in deals and 2,245 new high-tech jobs during the trip, according to Enterprise Florida, the company that arranged the trip.

A Spanish company also said it would negotiate to build a solar-energy plant in Florida during the trip. Other officials promised greater cooperation between Florida and European companies, universities and law enforcement.

Some political experts speculate Crist used the trip to bolster his image in foreign affairs. At the time, he was widely speculated to be a potential running mate for Sen. John McCain.

“This was a way of increasing his gravitas, his bona fides in foreign policy,” Florida political expert Robert Watson, director of American studies at Lynn University in Boca Raton. “Charlie can say that even though he’s governor, he’s met with all of these world leaders.”

Crist gave TV and newspaper interviews in London and repeatedly answered questions about whether he would be the Republican vice-presidential nominee.

About 65 Florida business executives accompanied Crist, including lobbyists and two people with ties to the sugar industry. At the time, the state was negotiating a $1.75 billion deal to purchase large tracts of sugar fields for Everglades restoration.

Crist’s fiancee, Carole Rome, and her sister also went along. The couple met Prince Andrew at Buckingham Palace and Prince Charles at Clarence House and sipped cocktails with the British Foreign Office minister.

FLASHBACK: Florida Gov. Charlie Crist enjoyed pricey perks on business trip to Europe thanks to taxpayers
Orlando Sentinel
Commentary – Taking Names
By Scott Maxwell
12/10/2008

So how does one rack up a $430,000 travel bill?

It’s a valid question, since we’ve learned that Charlie Crist, his fiancée, his fiancée’s sister, nine bodyguards and several dozen of Charlie’s closest friends and business associates somehow managed to spend that much money this past summer on a European trade mission.

I’m beginning to think someone should’ve explained to Gov. Good Times that “free trade” didn’t mean all the expenses were on the house.

Sure, Charlie’s $30,000-plus bill was picked up by businesses, and others paid their own way. But taxpayers footed the bill for the state employees who went on this 12-day, high-class trip that hopscotched through Europe. And it seems like we deserve to know exactly what we bought and what perks our governor enjoyed in the name of “public service.”

Unfortunately, while state officials were good about turning over records, they didn’t have detailed receipt breakdowns for the crackerjack reporter at our sister paper, the (Fort Lauderdale) Sun Sentinel, who broke this week’s story. So I did a little checking of my own.

*Room service. Let’s start with Crist’s room-service and minibar bills. They totaled $1,300.

First of all, I’m thinking soon-to-be Mrs. Gov. Good Times was responsible for some of the drink bills. Because “minibar” receipts show someone (or some ones) in Crist’s room imbibed 14 times in Crist’s suite on the first day in London alone.

Still, you have to figure Charlie downed a couple of Red Bulls a day. They are, after all, Gov. Peppy’s caffeine-charged beverage of choice.

So I contacted The Westin Paris, where $1,385 a night not only gets you a lovely suite with a view of the Eiffel Tower but a staff of first-rate professionals willing to cater to your every whim.

And one of those first-rate professionals was kind enough to tell me how much the hotel charges for each bottle of Red Bull: 10 euros.

Oh, mon dieu!

At the current exchange rate, that’s more than $12 a pop.

If that was the case, Crist probably could’ve gotten a better deal by sending a member of his massive traveling entourage out to the French version of 7-Eleven (Sept-Onze?) and paying retail.

Which brings us to the next reason the trip tab was so high . . .

*Entourage envy. I obtained a list of those who traveled with Crist. It was six pages long.

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Rubio: Health Care Proposal & Process Fundamentally Flawed

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Miami, FL – U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio today issued the following statement regarding President Barack Obama’s health care proposal:

“For nearly a year, the health care debate has served as a textbook example of the dysfunction in Washington today. In terms of both policy and process, this health care bill has been fundamentally flawed. At this stage of the debate, incorporating some of the sensible reforms Republicans like Tom Coburn have suggested does not address the underlying problems of a proposal that would mark the first step towards a government takeover, cost nearly $1 trillion, raise taxes, expand taxpayer-funded abortion, and add new anti-business regulations.

“How many bipartisan, Massachusetts-like pushbacks is it going to take for President Obama to understand the American people want to reform health care without changing and abandoning all the things that have made our system great? How many town halls, tea parties and elections will it take for the American people to finally convey to Washington that we need to scrap this flawed proposal and process, and start anew on step-by-step reforms?

“I join the American people in opposing this proposal on policy grounds as well as the procedural approach being considered to ram it through. If President Obama and Congressional Democrats go down the road of reconciliation, they will leave no doubt in the American people’s minds that Washington is broken and 2008’s promise of ‘Change’ was little more than a campaign slogan that should not have been believed in the first place. The health care proposal is a deeply flawed plan that should be scrapped entirely in favor of a truly bipartisan approach that pursues step-by-step reforms.

“Unfortunately, my opponent disagrees and has said he would not scrap this bill and process. It underscores why, fundamentally, this campaign is about trust. It’s about who Floridians can trust to go to Washington to unapologetically stand on principle against ideas like the stimulus, cap-and-trade and government-run health care. Again and again, from tax hikes to runaway government spending, my opponent has demonstrated he cannot be trusted to keep his word on the promises he’s made to voters. His recent comments, in which he broke ranks with Republicans and said he would not scrap the health care bill and process, is just the latest example of why Floridians can’t trust Charlie Crist to go to Washington and stand up to the misguided agenda of President Obama and Congressional Democrats.”

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Oh, You Can Trust Charlie Crist…

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Miami, FL – Lately, Governor Charlie Crist has seized on a new campaign buzz word: “trust,” which U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio has long insisted is what this election is all about – who Floridians can trust to go to Washington, stand up to the Obama-Reid-Pelosi agenda, and offer a clear alternative.

According to the Miami Herald, “Crist used the loaded word at least a dozen times in a 10-minute speech at a breakfast in Miami hosted by the Christian Family Coalition, an offshoot of the well-known Christian Coalition.” (Miami Herald, 2/27/10)

“Florida voters can trust Charlie Crist alright…to raise taxes, embrace Barack Obama on the stimulus and health care, and be completely untrustworthy on mainstream Republican values,” said Rubio for Senate spokesman Alex Burgos. “Marco Rubio has said all along this race is about trust – it’s about who Floridians trust to go to Washington, stand up on principle to the current misguided agenda, and offer a clear alternative.

“Marco’s record and deeds prove he’s the only one in this race who can be trusted to do this, whereas Charlie Crist has proven time and time again he can only be trusted to stand with the big government, big spending agenda that is threatening America’s future.”


You Can Trust Charlie Crist To Embrace ObamaCare

“Gov. Charlie Crist, a Republican U.S. Senate candidate, told the Palm Beach Post editorial board on Friday that, unlike many Republicans in Washington, he didn’t think President Obama should scrap his health care reform proposal: ‘There may be parts of it that you don’t have to scrap.’” (Palm Beach Post, 2/27/09)

You Can Trust Charlie Crist To Continue Supporting The Failed Stimulus

“Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, who is facing a stiff Republican primary in his bid for the state’s Senate seat, said he had no regrets over accepting federal stimulus money or working with President Obama. ‘I don’t apologize for it at all. We needed the money,’ Crist said in front of the White House after a governors’ meeting with Obama. Asked whether he had regrets, given the political headache the stimulus has become, Crist replied, ‘None whatsoever…by golly, when we agree on something … I’m going to be there and I’m going to thank him,’ Crist said of Obama.” (Washington Post, 2/22/10)

You Can Trust Charlie Crist To Break His Word on Taxes

“Breaking a pledge against raising taxes, Gov. Charlie Crist signed Florida’s $66.5 billion budget into law Wednesday and barely used his veto pen. … Also, the budget includes $2.2 billion in new fees and taxes. … Democrats, particularly in the House, assailed the tax hikes. … By not vetoing the new taxes, Crist violated a no-new-taxes pledge he made on the campaign trail in 2006. He also has signed an antitax pledge geared toward governors, written by the conservative Washington group Americans for Tax Reform. Earlier this month, the Republican governor signed a similar no-new-taxes pledge for federal candidates now that he’s running for the U.S. Senate.” (The Times/Herald, 5/28/09)

You Can Trust Charlie Crist To Flip-Flop On Abortion

“Gov. Charlie Crist, who wanted to change hearts and not abortion laws when he ran for governor, now wants to fight for pro-life legislation if he’s elected to the Senate, according to statement by his campaign Friday. As a candidate for governor in 2006, Mr. Crist said, ‘I would rather encourage adoption. I would prefer not to change law, I would rather change hearts.’ His Senate campaign said the ‘pro-life’ legislation Mr. Crist would support included tax credits and subsidies for parents who adopt, but his camp refused to say whether he would seek changes to abortion laws.” (Associated Press, 1/11/10)

Question: “So as a person running for office, does that mean you favor overturning Roe v. Wade or do you favor any restrictions on abortion rights beyond what’s there now, if you’re in Congress?” Charlie Crist: “I don’t, no. My position is that I’d rather change hearts, than law.” (Charlie Crist Interview With Palm Beach Post Editorial Board, 2/26/10)

You Can Trust Charlie Crist To Reinvent Himself Every Time He Runs

“Choosing or changing positions based on what’s politically popular is nothing new for Crist. Whether it’s abortion laws, oil drilling or even the politicians he associates with, Crist can be a political chameleon.” (Associated Press, 12/7/09)

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Rubio Comments on White House Health Care Summit

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Miami, FL – U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio issued the following statement regarding today’s White House Health Care Summit:

“It’s clear from today’s Health Care Summit that President Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid have no intention of seeking a commonsense compromise on a health care reform bill. Instead of scrapping this job-killing government takeover plan, Washington Democrats remain intent on ramming through legislation that will fundamentally change our health care system while inflicting additional damage on a significant segment of our economy.

“Unfortunately, they fail to recognize the American people’s overwhelming pushback on this health care bill and continue harboring plans to use the reconciliation maneuver to ram it through. This is the wrong approach on both policy and procedural grounds. Today’s summit reinforces my belief that we need leaders in the U.S. Senate who will stand up to this agenda and offer a clear alternative, not people who will indulge these P.R. opportunities and work to advance policies that would be detrimental to Florida and our nation.

“The American people deserve better than this health care bill. This is a fundamentally flawed bill that is an impediment to job creation and helping the American people attain more affordable, higher quality health care.”

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What They Are Saying: About Crist’s Latest Act of Desperation Against Rubio

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Politico: “Rubio says he paid back all the personal expenses which, if true, would eliminate any problem.” (“Rubio’s Expenses,” Politico, 2/25/10)

Former Florida GOP Chairman Tom Slade: “Marco raised about $12 million during the period of time he was spending that money. You could probably pick nickels and dimes off the credit card statements and be critical, but if he paid back nearly $20,000 it ought to cover it. It doesn’t do me any heartburn, what does me some heartburn is the fact that the (former) executive director’s card was about $130,000 for one month up there. That gives me a lot of heartburn – $130,000 was our entire operating budget. Those people were spending money like crazy.” (“Tom Slade: ‘Hell yes’ The Florida GOP Should Release All Credit Card Statements,” St. Petersburg Times, 2/25/10)

Miami Herald: Donor Asked Charlie Crist For His Money. “Developer Al Hoffman, a major GOP donor who recently moved from Fort Myers to North Palm Beach, asked Gov. Charlie Crist to return the $9,600 he and his wife gave to Crist’s U.S. Senate campaign. … ‘I lost my confidence in Charlie’s leadership ability simply because he looked the other way when so many people were warning him about Jim Greer,’ he said. ‘As much as it pains me, I felt this was a significant oversight on Charlie’s part.’” (“Donor Asked Charlie Crist For His Money Back,” Miami Herald, 2/25/10)

National Review: “It seems that Marco Rubio won’t become the next senator of Florida without the Crist Establishment first trying to destroy him with a smear campaign. The current imbroglio involves Rubio’s use of a GOP credit card. Rubio denies any wrongdoing and swings back at Crist and his henchmen for leaking internal financial documents.” (“For Crist’s Sake,” National Review Online, 2/25/10)

Red State: Scorched Earth: Charlie Crist Steals State GOP Records & Leaks Them to Press to Smear Rubio. “There is growing speculation that Charlie Crist is going to run as a independent candidate in Florida as he continues sinking in the polls. … Before he goes, however, Crist is determined to do everything possible to run a scorched earth campaign against Marco Rubio. The latest is beyond the pale. Crist has taken the private credit card records of the Republican Party of Florida and leaked them to the press. … Remember, the NRSC threw its weight behind Crist because he was ahead in the polls and the NRSC did not want to have to spend a bunch of money. If Crist runs a scorched earth policy against Rubio, throwing every possible smear and lie at Rubio, the NRSC is going to have different arithmetic in Florida.” (“Scorched Earth: Charlie Crist Steals State GOP Records & Leaks Them to Press to Smear Rubio,” RedState.com, 2/24/10)

RNC National Committeewoman Sharon Day: “‘I’m not upset with Marco Rubio at all,’ said Day. ‘If you can raise $12 million on $110,000, we all should be that good.’ Day said Greer told her and other party leaders in a private meeting that if he went down, he would take others down with him. … ‘It’s very convenient that the only one that gets released (is Rubio’s),’ she said. ‘This is silly. They want to talk about $110,000 in 25 months when Delmar spent $130,000 in one month.’” (“Rubio: Crist Leaked AmEX Statements; Charges Legit,” Associated Press, 2/24/10)

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Rubio to RPOF Chairman: Credit Card Statement Leak is Appalling Act of Desperation from Crist Campaign

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Miami, FL – U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio tonight delivered a letter to Republican Party of Florida Chairman John Thrasher regarding the Crist campaign’s leak of Rubio’s American Express credit card statements during his time as Speaker. The full text of the letter follows:

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

The Honorable John Thrasher
Chairman
Republican Party of Florida
420 E. Jefferson Street
P.O. Box 311
Tallahassee, FL 32301
TRANSMITTED VIA EMAIL AND FACSIMILE: (850) 681-0184

Dear Speaker Thrasher,

Congratulations again on your election as Chairman of the Republican Party of Florida. Our Party needs your leadership now more than ever. I have every confidence in your ability to repair the financial mismanagement that occurred under the previous administration, and restore the confidence of the staff, donors and most importantly the grassroots of our party.

As I mentioned to you on Monday, I applaud your call for a full forensic audit of the RPOF. Our Party’s generous donors deserve to know how their money was spent, and often misspent, during the previous administration. We must do this not to simply rehash what has already happened, but instead to learn from the mistakes of the past so they will never be repeated.

I have always agreed with your position that these issues are internal party matters which must be decided by the Republican Party of Florida, and not in the court of public opinion through selective information leaked to the media. As you know, I have maintained that I would not unilaterally disclose my personal American Express statements. I made this decision out of respect for any internal review process a new chairman might initiate, and to avoid creating a media circus that at best would be a distraction, and at worst could actually hurt our Party.

However, as I told you Monday, at least one Florida media outlet is now in possession of my statements. No one other than the previous RPOF administration and myself had access to this information. It is clear these internal documents were taken from the RPOF by former Chairman Jim Greer, or someone working for him, and were leaked to the media by the Crist Campaign.

These actions are an appalling act of political desperation. The idea that the former chairman of the RPOF, or those working for the Governor, would selectively leak internal RPOF documents is disturbing. But sadly it is not surprising because these are the very men who put the party in the mess it is in today. The Florida GOP under Jeb Bush was never run with this sort of arrogance, mismanagement, lack of integrity and lack of leadership.

During my leadership at the party, my efforts focused on promoting a strong conservative agenda and raising more than $12 million dollars to protect Republican seats. In order to accomplish these goals, I had an American Express card from February of 2005 through November of 2008. While that card is commonly referred to as an “RPOF AMEX,” it was in fact secured under my name, my Social Security number, and my personal credit through the Corporate Division of American Express. On its website, Americanexpress.com, the company clearly outlines the billing practices for the corporate card as follows:

“Each Cardmember submits an expense report in accordance with your company policy. Your company issues a single check to American Express for all authorized charges, streamlining your payment process. Cardmembers can pay American Express directly for unapproved and personal charges.”

In accordance with this procedure, each month, the RPOF would approve and pay only those expenses related to my role with the Republican Party.

When it came to incurring expenses, I erred on the side of caution and maintained two operating principles: If it was questionable as to whether the expense was state or Party related, I tried to err on the side of saving taxpayer money by charging that expense to the Party. If it was a question between Party expenses or personal expenses, I tried to err on the side of protecting Party money by paying personally for those charges directly.

During the 25-month period covered by the leaked documents, the Party authorized and made payments of $109,618.45 for my charges directly related to my work for the Party.

As you will see, 89% of my Party expenses were for travel, lodging, fuel, car rentals and meals related to my official work for the party. During this time I crisscrossed the state countless times for Lincoln/Reagan dinners, GOP fundraisers, and other party business. In all, more than half of my expenses were transportation costs: 40% for commercial airline travel and 14% for car rentals, tolls, parking and fuel.

As a point of reference, during this time period, the charges on my card amounted to approximately 3% of the Party’s total American Express expenditures. In fact, I had fewer expenses in two years than my opponent’s handpicked RPOF Executive Director spent in just one month.

During the period in question, there was no formal process provided by the Party regarding personal charges made on an AMEX account. At no time during my four years as a cardholder did the party ask me to provide additional information about, or personally pay, any of the charges I submitted for payment. I always took it upon myself to identify and directly pay American Express for all non-official expenses. During the two-year period in question, I made $16,052.50 in direct payments to AMEX to cover non-party related expenditures.

To the greatest extent possible, I made sure the Party never paid for any personal charges. In fact, all of my statements were- at least I certainly hope they were- reviewed and approved by former Chairman Jim Greer or others designated by him.

Thank you again for taking on this new leadership position in our party. It is a huge responsibility and a tough task. And while I wish you didn’t have to deal with politically motivated distortions and distractions like this, I’m confident that we as Republicans will overcome and quickly get beyond them.

Our party is much bigger than any one administration, person or problem. With common sense, conservative reform, and simple honesty and integrity in our operations, I believe the principles that define our party can once again fix it too.

Sincerely,

MARCO RUBIO

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