Matt Towery's Inside
The Numbers:
A Battle for the Heart and Soul of Political Parties Boils Down
to Florida
By Matthew Towery
(1/25/08) As I write this column for Jacksonville's Florida Times-Union
and Creators Syndicate, it is Thursday afternoon, Jan. 24. Our latest
InsiderAdvantage survey of Florida, conducted with our partners
at Majority Opinion Research, shows John McCain and Mitt Romney
in basically a tie going into the weekend before the huge Florida
Republican primary.
It remains my opinion that the winners of the Florida primaries
will be the ultimate nominees of both the Republican and Democratic
parties. This, despite that the Democratic National Committee has
done its party a huge disservice by ruling that no delegates will
be awarded based on Tuesday's primary.
Let's talk about the Democrats first. Every poll has shown Sen.
Hillary Clinton with a big lead in Florida. Sen. Barack Obama is
headed for a clear victory in Saturday's South Carolina Democratic
primary, in large part because he is carrying a large portion of
the African-American vote there, where blacks make up nearly half
of the Democratic voters.
But it is unlikely Obama will get enough of a bump from this expected
win to overcome Clinton's lead in Florida. The only way the race
becomes close is if the turnout in Florida on the Democratic side
is so severely depressed as a result of the DNC's rules that Obama's
supporters turn out in greater numbers and pull off an upset.
If Clinton wins Florida, even if the votes don't count as of now,
she will have the bragging rights and momentum of having won the
first contested truly "big" state. That makes large venues
such as California much easier for her campaign.
As far as the GOP goes, all candidates realize that it's Florida
or bust for them. Our InsiderAdvantage survey asked Floridians not
only if they intend to vote next Tuesday, but if they have already
voted. Many Americans would be shocked to learn that as of earlier
this week, nearly a third of the primary votes expected to be cast
had already been received, either by absentee ballot, or by Florida's
robust early voter program.
The leadership of the Republican Party in America is up for grabs.
If Sen. John McCain wins, the power structure of the party likely
will be wholly different than it has been for years under the watchful
eye of the George W. Bush establishment. McCain has long been viewed
by party mavens as a maverick and an outsider.
If former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney prevails, the GOP as we
know it today will remain intact. Most of the political leaders
and strategists who have helped the Bush family in years past are
a part of the Romney effort.
This may seem insignificant, but intraparty politics is big and
mean business. If those who have been in control lose out, their
potential to have serious political power as elected officials,
lobbyists and political operatives suffers a blow. And for some,
that's a blow to their wallets.
Regardless of the outcome, it is hard to imagine that the winner
of the GOP race in Florida won't emerge as the nominee. If McCain
wins, he will have momentum to go along with a more moderate record.
Both will appeal to Republican voters in California, where he has
a lead in the polls among the GOP field that averages 8 percent,
according to RealClearPolitics.
Should Romney win, the McCain train will have been slowed down.
More specifically, his money flow will slow, too. Even now, with
McCain faring as well as any GOP candidate, it's proving hard for
him to collect cash. If he loses in Florida, he will run out of
gas, and Romney will start piling up delegates.
Is there hope for Rudy Giuliani? Recall that his entire strategy
was based on winning in Florida and then springboarding off of that.
No one really knows the answer. But for all the attacks on the
validity of polls following the New Hampshire primaries, the fact
remains that most of us in the polling business have been close
to on-target in these races.
It would surprise me if Giuliani were to climb his way back up.
I offer that assessment with this caveat, however: Floridians love
their debates, and I write just hours before just such an event.
Remember, the CNN/YouTube contest made Mike Huckabee a front-runner,
at least for a while. It's possible it could do the same for Giuliani.
One final thought. If the Florida Republican primary ends up as
close as it appears, keep in mind that any top two candidates within
half a percentage point of each other means an automatic voter recount!
No, there won't be any "hanging chads" Tuesday night.
Florida has had more than one round of election reform to prevent
that catastrophe from repeating.
Still, it would be poetic justice for a vote-counting controversy
to divide the Republican Party just eight years after George Bush
became president after exactly that.
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Matt Towery served as the chairman of former Speaker Newt Gingrich's
political organization from 1992 until Gingrich left Congress. He
is a former Georgia state representative, the author of several
books and currently heads the polling and political information
firm InsiderAdvantage. To find out more about Matthew Towery and
read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
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