TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - 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.
Much of the talk about whom Crist would nominate centered on former Florida Secretary of State Jim Smith, 69, who said Friday that he would love to have the job.