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Jeff Atwater has no regrets about not entering run for U.S. Senate

in The Bay and the 'Burg/Top Headlines by

It wasĀ thirteenĀ months ago whenĀ Jeff AtwaterĀ stunned the Florida political world by announcingĀ he would not run for the U.S. Senate in 2016.

AĀ Quinnipiac PollĀ taken just a week earlier showed him leading the two major Democratic candidates in the race, CongressmenĀ Alan GraysonĀ andĀ Patrick Murphy,Ā and he was considered to have by far the best name recognition of any Florida Republican considering entering the contest.Ā His decision unfroze the field, withĀ David Jolly, Ron DeSantis, Carlos Lopez-CanteraĀ andĀ Todd WilcoxĀ all filing to declare their candidacies in the months that followed (joined byĀ Carlos BeruffĀ earlier this year). Though at one point last fall Atwater talked aboutĀ theĀ ā€œpossibilityā€Ā if getting back into the race, he never did.Ā Now the Florida Chief Financial Officer says he’s content that he made the right move in not making the move for Washington.

ā€œNo, no, no. The timing just wasn’t right for us,ā€ Atwater told this reporter after speaking to the St. Petersburg Republican Club at Parkshore Grill on Beach Drive on Monday afternoon. He said he made the decision roughly around three months after being inaugurated for another four-year term as the state’s CFO, and wasn’t prepared to engage in another year-and-half of campaigning to attempt to succeedĀ Marco RubioĀ in Washington.

“We’re loving what we’re doing,” he said about his current state of affairs, adding that he wished all five of the GOP senate candidates well.”They’re hustling,” he said. “It’s been far to get out of the shadow of the presidential conversation, but they’re hustling, and it’ll be interesting to see how it plays out.ā€

Atwater says for now he’s staying neutral in the race, but will back whomever survives the August 30 primary.

Earlier the state’s Chief Financial Officer presented a glowing report card on the state of Florida’s economy to the 30 or so people in the attendance, and he particularly seemed to relish comparing the state’s financial Ā health with the economies of the nation’s four other largest sizedĀ states – California, New York, Texas and Illinois.

Atwater referenced how a George Mason University study listed Florida as having the 5th best economy in the country. Actually, last fall the Tax Foundation’sĀ State Business Tax Climate IndexĀ ratedĀ Florida the 4thĀ most sound financial state in the nation, trailing only behind Wyoming, South Dakota and Alaska. He then went into some detailsĀ about the where the state was financially in 2004 – when topline revenues were $27 billion and the average home price was $258,000, and how upside down they were in 2009, at the apex of the Great Recession, when the topline had been reduced to $21 million with 500,000 homes in foreclosure and the average priced home had slumped to a miserable $121,000.

He said the state was at a financial crossroads about how to fill that $6 billion funding gap, and said if it had been up to editorial writers throughout the state, that gap would have been patched up by raising taxes.ā€œInstead the answer was, we’ll reduce our run rate of spending to match the run rate of revenue” he said. “We will not pull revenue up. ā€œ

Unlike some other high ranking state officials, Atwater intentionally avoids saying thatĀ the state has created conditions that allowed the economy to recover better here than in other parts of the country. Instead he continuously emphasized to the audience that it was ā€œyouā€ who had done the work to keep business conditions positive.

“Every time the government can trust the marketplace to bring us back, it does,ā€ he said.

He now says top line revenues are at $28 billion, the median price of a home isĀ now $209,000, adding that “you’ve created more jobs in the country the last three years.”

His only notes of discord in an otherwise sunny trip thorough recent history was when he discussed the federal debt and deficit.

ā€œThere’s just not that much time,” he fretted. “I’m not saying that the country is going to disappear, it’s just going to be a far different place to the extent that my children’s income will have to be extorted, to be able to cover the cost of what’s being built,” adding that he also feared that the younger generation won’t ever have the opportunities that he had growing up. He said that should motivate the fellow Republicans in the room regarding this fall’s election.

Mitch Perry has been a reporter with Extensive Enterprises since November of 2014. Previously, he served as five years as the political editor of the alternative newsweekly Creative Loafing. He also was the assistant news director with WMNF 88.5 FM in Tampa from 2000-2009, and currently hosts MidPoint, a weekly talk show, on WMNF on Thursday afternoons. He began his reporting career at KPFA radio in Berkeley. He's a San Francisco native who has now lived in Tampa for 15 years and can be reached at [email protected].

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