Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers:
* In Florida, state Attorney General [tag]Charlie Crist[/tag] (R) is not only leading comfortably in the Republican gubernatorial primary, he’s also building a big general-election lead. In a new Rasmussen poll, Crist now leads Rep. [tag]Jim Davis[/tag] (D), 49% to 35%. The likely GOP nominee holds a smaller, but still large, lead over state Sen. [tag]Rod Smith[/tag] (D), 46% to 36%. Crist is viewed favorably by 62%, Davis by 44%, and Smith by 41%.
* With Lt. Gov. [tag]Michael Steele[/tag] (R) running for the Senate, Maryland Gov. [tag]Bob Ehrlich[/tag] (R) announced a new running-mate yesterday, [tag]Kristen Cox[/tag], the legally blind head of the state disabilities office. Cox, 36, has lived in Maryland for only six years after having been raised in Utah. As a relative unknown with little political experience, Cox’s views on the issues are still unknown, and Ehrlich campaign officials would not allow reporters access to her yesterday.
* Helping highlight a blue-state/red-state divide, the president makes appearances in two new ads from Democratic Senate candidates — but in very different contexts. In Nebraska, Sen. [tag]Ben Nelson[/tag] (D) shows [tag]Bush[/tag] praising him as “a man with whom I can work, a person who’s willing to put partisanship aside to focus on what’s right for America.” At the same time, [tag]Ned Lamont[/tag] (D) features Bush morphing into Sen. [tag]Joe Lieberman[/tag] (D) in a new ad in Connecticut.
* In South Carolina, Gov. [tag]Mark Sanford[/tag] (R) still enjoys a big lead over state Senator [tag]Tommy Moore[/tag] (D), but the gap has narrowed a bit. In the latest Rasmussen poll, Sanford is ahead, 51% to 39%, but a month ago, Moore was trailing by nearly twice as much, 52% to 33%.
* And in 2008 news, New York City Mayor [tag]Michael Bloomberg[/tag] (R), who has deflected questions about any presidential ambitions, seems to be taking the idea a bit more seriously. The New York Daily News reported this week that Bloomberg has “privately said he has more than enough money to run for President – and now he may have a potential entry strategy.” Bloomberg’s main political adviser, [tag]Kevin Sheekey[/tag], said if John McCain stumbles in the GOP primaries, and Dems nominate someone Bloomberg considers unelectable, then the NYC mayor believes he might be able to fill a third-party niche.