Fla.
senator to resign, clear path for Crist
By BRENT KALLESTAD,
Associated Press Writer Fri Aug 7,
7:48 pm ET
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. –
Republican Sen. Mel Martinez's decision Friday to step down 16 months early
gave Gov. Charlie Crist the perfect gift: his pick of who should watch over the
office while Crist tries to win it for himself.
Crist responded
carefully, immediately passing on the opportunity to install himself
as the incumbent leading up to the GOP primary. He is likely to pick a
placeholder Republican who will not run against him, meaning Martinez's
resignation will have no immediate effect on the balance of power in the
Senate, where Democrats control the 60 seats needed to overcome Republican
filibusters.
Martinez, 62, had
already announced he wouldn't seek re-election, but his early departure
immediately sharpened the focus on a race that the GOP can ill afford to lose
next fall.
The only Hispanic
Republican in the Senate, Martinez said he was making good on a promise to
voters that he wouldn't simply keep the seat warm.
"There's no
impending reason, it's just my desire to move on," he said.
Martinez, known as a
voice on immigration and issues involving Cuba, crossed party lines Thursday to
vote in favor of Judge Sonia Sotomayor's nomination
to become the first Hispanic on the U.S. Supreme Court.
He said Friday that the
next phase of his life will be in the private sector, but he didn't have any
specific plans. He said he would serve until his replacement was named; Crist
promised to try to make his selection before the Senate returns from its summer
break after Labor Day.
Much of the talk about
whom Crist would nominate centered on former Florida Secretary of State Jim
Smith, 69, who told The Associated Press on Friday that he would love to have
the job for a little while.
"I'd go
tomorrow," Smith said from Colorado Springs where he and his wife, Carole,
were vacationing. "It would be a great way to end a public career."
Also apparently in the
mix is former Gov. Bob Martinez, 71, though he said he has not talked with
Crist or Mel Martinez, with whom he is not related.
Crist bypassed a likely
safe re-election bid by getting into the Senate race where he is being
challenged by former state House Speaker Marco Rubio, a West Miami Republican.
Rubio is banking on support from GOP conservatives unhappy with the governor
for his support of President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan and because
of his lukewarm opposition to abortion and gay marriage.
U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek
of Miami is the only major Democratic candidate.
Florida's senior U.S.
senator, Democrat Bill Nelson, is midway through his second term.
Crist, who has earned a
reputation for having a strong political antenna, will want to make his pick
appear as one that won't look like it's clearing the path for his election next
year.
"The best way to
make it easy for him would be to do the right thing and that is pick a well qualified person to do the job," said
former state GOP party boss Van Poole. "And I think that's what he's going
to do."
University of Virginia
political scientist Larry Sabato said the appointment
is an opportunity for the Florida governor — one way or another.
"This is a great
opportunity, but you can blow an opportunity," Sabato
said. "The worst thing he could do was to appoint a flunky or
himself."
With the GOP struggling
for relevance in the Democratic-controlled Congress, Mel Martinez is the third
prominent Republican in recent days to announce an early resignation. Sen. Kay
Bailey Hutchison said in late July she would step down this fall to challenge
fellow Republican Rick Perry for governor of Texas. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin
stepped down July 26.
Martinez's resignation
leaves just one Hispanic in the Senate, Democrat Robert Menendez of New Jersey.
Martinez was elected to
the U.S. Senate in 2004 after serving as the U.S. secretary for housing and
urban development under President George W. Bush. He served as general chairman
of the Republican National Committee for 10 months, resigning in October 2007.
Born in Cuba, Martinez
fled to America at age 15 as part of a Catholic humanitarian effort called
Operation Pedro Pan. Catholic charitable groups provided Martinez, who was
alone and spoke virtually no English, a temporary home at two youth facilities.
He then lived with two foster families, with whom he remains close. He was
reunited with his family in Orlando in 1966.
Martinez said there was
nothing in his personal life or about his health that motivated his decision to
leave the Senate early.
"I just feel it is
time for me now to return to my family, to Florida, to home," he said.
"It will give me a chance to get on with the rest of my life ... I never
intended to be in public life all of my life."
___
Associated Press writers Ben Evans and Julie Davis in Washington,
Laura Wides-Munoz and Tamara Lush in Miami, Mike
Schneider in Orlando and Bill Kaczor and Dave Heller
in Tallahassee contributed to this report.