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Giuliani Prepares To Drop Out Of Presidential Race, Endorse McCain

DEVLIN BARRETT   01/29/08 11:07 PM ET   AP

Giulianiquits

ORLANDO, Fla. — Rudy Giuliani, who bet his presidential hopes on Florida only to come in third, prepared to quit the race Tuesday and endorse his friendliest rival, John McCain.

The former New York mayor stopped short of announcing he was stepping down, but delivered a valedictory speech that was more farewell than fight-on.

Giuliani finished a distant third to winner John McCain and close second-place finisher Mitt Romney. Republican officials said Giuliani would endorse McCain on Wednesday in California. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in advance of the public announcement.

"I'm proud that we chose to stay positive and to run a campaign of ideas in an era of personal attacks, negative ads and cynical spin," he said as supporters with tight smiles crowded behind him.

"You don't always win, but you can always try to do it right, and you did."

Asked directly if he was dropping out of the race, Giuliani said only: "I'm going to California."

Republican presidential candidates are scheduled to debate in Simi Valley Wednesday night.

Tuesday's result was a remarkable collapse for Giuliani. Last year, he occupied the top of national polls and seemed destined to turn conventional wisdom on end by running as a moderate Republican who supported abortion rights, gay rights and gun control.

"Elections are about fighting for a cause larger than ourselves," he said at one point, echoing one of McCain's most popular refrains.

The results seriously decimated Giuliani's unconventional strategy, which relied heavily on Florida to launch him into the coast-to-coast Feb. 5 nominating contests.

He largely bypassed the early voting states, figuring that the early states would produce multiple winners and no front-runner.

But Florida proved to be less than hospitable. The state's top two Republicans _ Sen. Mel Martinez and Gov. Charlie Crist _ endorsed McCain. And Giuliani, who once led in state polls, saw his support swiftly erode.

Surveys of voters leaving polling places Tuesday showed that Giuliani was getting backing from some Hispanics, abortion rights supporters and people worried about terrorism, but was not dominating in any area.

McCain, addressing his own supporters moments later in Miami, gave Giuliani a warm rhetorical embrace, a possible prologue to accepting Giuliani's expected support.

"I want to thank my dear friend, my dear friend Rudy Giuliani, who invested his heart and soul in this primary and who conducted himself with all the qualities of the exceptional American leaders he truly is," McCain said. "Thank you Rudy for all you have added to this race and being and for being an inspiration to me and millions of Americans."

Giuliani hung his bid for the Republican presidential nomination on his leadership. His stalwart performance as New York mayor in the tense days after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks earned him national magazine covers, international accolades and widespread praise.

Yet, Giuliani was always a Republican anomaly _ a moderate-to-liberal New Yorker who backed abortion rights, gay rights and gun control in a party dominated by Southern conservatives.

In the end, as he saluted his backers Tuesday night, Giuliani hardly sounded wistful. But his remarks had the air of finality, of a campaign that had run its course.

"The responsibility of leadership doesn't end with a single campaign, it goes on and you continue to fight for it," Giuliani said. "We ran a campaign that was uplifting."

Giuliani, 63, first gained prominence as a crime-busting federal prosecutor in Manhattan. During a nearly seven-year stretch ending in 1989, Giuliani steered dozens of high-profile cases to completion, garnering more than 4,000 convictions. He tangled with mob bosses, Wall Street executives and corrupt politicians _ and was never afraid to invite the bright lights of TV cameras to accompany his quests.

Giuliani's record as a crime-fighter helped propel his next career as a politician, but it wasn't an immediate success. He lost the first time he ran for mayor in 1989 before winning in 1993.

As mayor, he fostered a take-charge image by rushing to fires and crime scenes to brief the press, but some critics felt he was more concerned about taking credit from others for what became a historic decline in the city's crime rate during his tenure.

And, while the cleanup of New York in the 1990s helped the city take advantage of the nation's economic boom, critics _ especially in minority communities _ complained that Giuliani's tactics were too aggressive and trampled on civil rights.

A bout with prostate cancer and the very public breakup of his marriage with second wife Donna Hanover _ she first learned he was filing for divorce when he made the announcement at a televised news conference _ forced Giuliani to withdraw from a race for the U.S. Senate against Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton in 2000.

By the summer of 2001, public esteem for Giuliani was at a low ebb. On the morning of Sept. 11, Giuliani did what he always did: rushed to the scene.

In the minutes, hours, and days that followed, he presented a calm, determined presence _ urging people not to panic, but reminding them of the grim toll of the terrorist attacks. The image of a dusty, sweaty Giuliani walking near Ground Zero, surrounded by firefighters and police, was seared into the national memory.

In December 2001, Time magazine named him "person of the year" and its cover showed Giuliani standing atop a skyscraper in front of the New York City skyline with the label "Rudy Giuliani _ tower of strength."

In the years after the attacks, that reputation helped launch a hugely successful consulting business, and got him a major piece of a Washington, D.C.-based law firm with a long list of big corporate clients.

Yet, while Giuliani has long been known as efficient and tough-minded, he also can be brusque, rude and occasionally harsh.

His past associations in business and politics have come under scrutiny. President Bush, at Giuliani's urging, nominated Bernard Kerik, the former New York police commissioner and one-time close associate of Giuliani to head the Homeland Security Department. Kerik withdrew his nomination, and later pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of accepting a gift from a company suspected of ties to organized crime.

In the final days of his Florida campaign, the former mayor trailed badly in polls but insisted he would win an upset victory. As the actual votes were counted, only about one in six GOP voters chose Giuliani.

With no working strategy, no primary victories, and dwindling resources, the mayor's third-place finish spelled the end of his campaign, even if his crestfallen supporters couldn't believe it.

"They'll be sorry!" a woman with a New York accent called out to the mayor as he spoke. "You sound like my mother," Giuliani joked.

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ORLANDO, Fla. — Rudy Giuliani, who bet his presidential hopes on Florida only to come in third, prepared to quit the race Tuesday and endorse his friendliest rival, John McCain. The former New ...
ORLANDO, Fla. — Rudy Giuliani, who bet his presidential hopes on Florida only to come in third, prepared to quit the race Tuesday and endorse his friendliest rival, John McCain. The former New ...
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06:36 PM on 01/30/2008
Now McCain can pay Rudy back by making him Attorney General....He'd make Alberto Gonzalez look like a liberal....Rudy would shred the constitution in seconds. His demise gives hope to our system. You no longer can get away with the things he's done and run for office. Even if you are a self-proclaimed 9/11 hero.
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05:33 PM on 01/30/2008
This should give everyone a clue as to what a Giuliani administration would have been like. It would have been based on poor strategy, clueless, and feckless, just as his campaign was run. The only thing left to do now is to drive a stake in Nosferatu's heart to make sure he doesn't come back.
04:37 PM on 01/30/2008
Last night was a "two-fer"... I got both Rudy and Mitt losing for the price of McCain winning! And it wasn't even my birthday! Actually, maybe its a two-for-two, as McCain's victory also means that we'll all get to look at his hot ass wife's legs and TITS for a while longer! HHHHot!

Right wingers on talk radio are in pieces right now, a mere 3 years after bragging about how America was a conservative country and how Bush's re-election was a mandate worthy of political capital that would be spent. Rush Limbo actually had the nerve today to say that he never once said that liberalism was dead in America... that's ALL he said in 2005! hahah! The GOP's likely nominee is the most LIBERAL out of the lot! Now, that's what I call a mandate.

So goodbye, Mitt! Soon I will forget about how you kept calling HIllary's health plan "socialized medicine" when your Massachusetts mandate was damn near the same thing.... Soon we will forget about your flip flopping on every single friggin issue... Soon we will forget about America's mayor, Mr Rudy! So long, G! See you in the promised land, bitch! The GOP is off to find itself a new identity, and it will be more to the left than the current crop.

Oh, and special thanks to Karl Rove for RUINING the GOP by trying to ram a bulllshit agenda down America's throat with a 51% majority. Mr Genius ain't so hot shit now, is he? Nope, he CUT AND RAN from the WH when he saw that he screwed things up for at least the next 8 YEARS. He's so bummed out about it that he can't even stand up to some tree-hugging college kids who threatened to protest if he came to their school. Wahhh! Get him some tissues! Hey, Karl, if you can't stand up to a bunch of "libs", its no wonder why you couldn't hack in the BIG GAME. Thanks, Karl, for a great 3 years! Lose some weight, ya fat fukc!
02:47 PM on 01/30/2008
Obama is endorsed by every solider according to ABC reporter: http://www.digg.com/2008_us_elections/ABC_Every_Soldier_I_talked_to_is_for_Obama
09:12 AM on 01/30/2008
Anybody got a link to the vote totals in Florida? I know Hillary beat McCain but Romney beat Ombama. I can't find the totals. I believe Dem turnout would have been higher if the DNC hadn't shown its' ass.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
johnnycanuck
09:11 AM on 01/30/2008
breaking news on cnn Edwards dropping out !
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
robodweeb
'Cause you know sometimes words have two meanings
09:09 AM on 01/30/2008
AP reporting that Edwards will quit today.
09:06 AM on 01/30/2008
The Hillary Haters are the left-wing equivalent of the Rapture Freaks. Ralph Nader is every bit as crazy as Jerry Falwell was. His madness just takes a different form. These people will pull a Samson - if they don't get exactly what they want they'll pull the Temple down on their own heads.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rubiconski
On Crisis Standby Mode
09:06 AM on 01/30/2008
Where do the candidates stand on Israeli terrorism?

High Court okays cutting fuel and power to Gaza

Gain the legal right to pursue a policy of starvation and hypothermia on the children of the Gaza Strip. Denying them even antibiotics and paracetemol. Not the HAMAS or Islamic Jihad, it is the 1.5 million people of Gaza who do not have anything to do with terrorism that suffer.

Supreme Court President Dorit Beinisch should be sent to The Hague along with Dichter Barak and Olmert and charged with Genocide and crimes against humanity.

Hopefully Iran will be proved right. Israel should not be allowed to exist.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
johnnycanuck
08:54 AM on 01/30/2008
It's kind of strange ...he didn't even make it till super tues after all the hype . I guess you can only cry wolf ( 9.11) so often .
08:53 AM on 01/30/2008
I love that the big 'opposition' to Hillary is that she through a party.


If you haven't realized yet that all politicians are all shameless opportunists, you aren't mature enough to be voting anyway.
08:51 AM on 01/30/2008
Ammobob (See profile | I'm a fan of Ammobob)
Damn, the Greatest Generation didn't raise the Greatest Kids. It all begins at home.........

If they didn't raise the Greatest Kids then they're not the Greatest Generation. They failed that test in a big way.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
liberalveteran
08:48 AM on 01/30/2008
This whole Repub campaign is becoming really funny. After years of campaigning against immigrants and illegal aliens, the large number of Hispanic voters in Florida (mostly Cubans) gave the primary to McCain. Guiliani, who ran New York as a sanctuary city for illegal aliens, had to pretend he was against them and lost as a result.

And Mormon Mitt faces a really unusual problem. Baptist Reverend Mike Huckabee knows perfectly well that Mormonism is a strange cult and is fighting Mitt for religious reasons. After all the years of the GOP courting the Bible thumpers and forgetting them the minute they won, they now have a Bible thumper as a major candidate.

Rich kid Mitt had no trouble employing lots of illegal aliens on his enormous Massachusetts estate. But he had to pretend he hated them to win the GOP base. And now an interesting part of the GOP base-Cuban refugees-has done him in.
08:48 AM on 01/30/2008
Hillary won Florida and Obama lost it. Hillary also got more votes than John McCrashPlane. Like Ronnie Raygun said "Facts are stupid things." (He meant to say facts are stubborn things, but he was an idiot.)
08:47 AM on 01/30/2008
It's a 2 horse race in both parties now.

I still believe Shrillary will win the Defeatocrat nomination and MITTHAIR the Rebubs. Both have enuff money and organization to take the national campaign. Can't wait 'till next Tuesday!