Will It All Be Over For Giuliani In 10 Days?
THE VILLAGES, Fla. (AP) - Girding for battle as the rest of the GOP field descended upon Florida, Rudy Giuliani challenged his rivals to bring it on.
“We’re waiting for you,” Giuliani said. “We’re waiting for you with a campaign we’ve been working on for I think almost a year.”
Touring the Everglades Saturday, Giuliani took the unusual step of criticizing his opponents by name.
“Do they agree that you should have a national catastrophic fund?” he asked. “I support it—I was the first one to support it. Now let’s find out where the others—John McCain and Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee and Fred Thompson—let’s see what their position is on this.”
For weeks, the former New York mayor has had this state to himself, having pulled out of the early primaries to focus time and cash on Florida’s 57 delegates. While others rallied late votes in South Carolina, he attended a round table about Florida’s space industry and toured the Everglades.
But it has cost Giuliani—in raw delegate counts and lost news cycles to those men who did contend the six Republican contests so far. Giuliani finally won his first delegate Saturday, in Nevada. But he is behind even long-shot Ron Paul in that department, after Paul picked up four out West.
Stretching to stay relevant, Giuliani went on the attack and called two big allies to his side.
Actor John Voight and former FBI director Louis Freeh, Giuliani’s homeland security adviser and Delaware campaign chair, introduced him at a rally in the central Florida retirement community The Villages.
Both Voight and Giuliani acknowledged he’d have to win Florida to stand a chance.
“I know there is no second place,” Voight said. “I know this has to happen, and Florida’s got to do it. This is a very important election; it’s the most important in my lifetime.”
Ten days remain before Florida’s Jan. 29 primary, the longest gap between votes since the nomination process began.
Giuliani used one of his last chances with an undivided spotlight to ally himself with President Bush in a swipe at opponents.
“I supported the Bush tax cuts. John McCain voted with the Democrats against the Bush tax cuts and Mitt Romney was equivocal in his support,” Giuliani said.
Earlier, Giuliani addressed a few hundred outside a Broward County library in South Florida, one of several early voting locations.
At the end of the rally, Giuliani started to chant: “Let’s go vote! Let’s go vote!”
A handful of people made their way inside, voter registration cards in hand.
In a week and a half, he’ll find out if it was enough.
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Associated Press Writer Rasha Madkour contributed to this report from Coral Springs and the Everglades.
FBI director Louis Freeh? Horseshit!
January 19th, 2008 at 6:52 pmI am so sick of Judy, the former Assistant Attorney General in Clinton’s Justice Department and the jerk responsible for busting the Mafia while letting AlQaeda grow like weeds.
I hope Judianni is toast soon.