"The national media this morning are calling Democrat Alex Sink’s surprise defeat in a bellwether special Congressional election yesterday a foreboding referendum on Obamacare. Perhaps this is so, but only slightly less noteworthy is Sink supporters’ failed attempt to turn victorious Republican David Jolly’s global warming skepticism into a political albatross.
Having just moved into Florida’s U.S. House
District 13, I was shocked these past two weeks to discover how global
warming became the central issue dominating television’s political
commercials. Granted, I haven’t been watching much television, as moving
from one house to another has been nearly a full-time job.
Nevertheless, it seemed I couldn’t go 15 minutes into my limited viewing
schedule without seeing the same Sierra Club/League of Conservation Voters commercial
excoriating Jolly for being a global warming skeptic. I honestly can’t
recall seeing any other political commercials these past two weeks,
either pro-Sink or pro-Jolly. However, I must have seen the global
warming commercial at least a dozen times.
Most campaign analysts and all pre-election
polls named Sink the favorite in the race. Sink held statewide office as
Florida Chief Financial Officer from 2007-2010. In 2010, one of the
bloodiest political years for Democrats ever, Sink came within a hair of
winning Florida’s gubernatorial election. Sink had a tremendous name
recognition advantage over Jolly, a former lobbyist who nobody had even
heard of six months ago. Sink’s campaign outspent Jolly. And Sink
decided to counter anti-Obamacare sentiment by defining Jolly as a
scientifically dangerous climate change skeptic..
Jolly didn’t even fight back against the constant global warming political onslaught. He never answered the Sierra Club/League of Conservation Voters attacks with a defense of his views on global warming, energy and the environment. He simply let Sink’s supporters sink their political war chest on what turned out to be a loser political strategy. Maybe Sink, despite all her advantages, was unavoidably going to suffer the political upset, anyway. Then again, maybe not.
What we do know is a well-known Democrat who had recently served in statewide office lost to a lobbyist running his first political campaign after global warming became the most visible campaign advertising issue in the weeks leading up to the election.
Interestingly enough, the Florida District 13
election occurred just as the Senate Democratic Climate Action Task
Force wrapped up an all-night session in which 30 Democratic senators
filibustered to protest the Democratic-controlled Senate’s failure to
pass a carbon tax. Democratic U.S. Sens. Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Mark
Pryor (D-AR), Mark Begich (D-AK) and Kay Hagan (D-NC), all of whom face
difficult reelection contests in the upcoming November elections, stayed
conspicuously away from the high-profile hijinks.
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Comment: Mr. Taylor says the Tea Party barely exists in Pinellas County. I lived for awhile recently in northwest Tampa, Florida, Hillsborough County, which is adjacent to Pinellas County. I was a member of a grassroots group that was very engaged in the area. The group actually started well before the Tea Party but had exactly the same concerns. In fact the Tampa Tea Party co-founders came from this group. I'm still on the group's email list, and from what I read members were very active in supporting David Jolly. The Tea Party itself in many cases has been co-opted by the GOP establishment. My Florida grassroots friends were there for David Jolly.
Pinellas County in purple outline. I lived in 'Town n Country,' shown on map in NW Tampa.
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