The leading Democratic candidate for Florida's open U.S. Senate seat, Kendrick Meek, says he is on track to meet his goal of collecting 130,000 signatures by March 29, making him the first statewide candidate to qualify for the Florida ballot by petition.
Yet his campaign has been largely overshadowed by the fierce GOP contest between Gov. Charlie Crist and former House Speaker Marco Rubio.
Meek's campaign manager, Abe Dyk, announced Monday that the campaign has 112,000 signatures, though only a portion of those have been turned in to state election officials.
But the campaign may still pay the qualifying fee in case it gets "dragged into" a legal dispute over the validity of the signatures, Dyk acknowledged. The roughly $10,000 fee is due April 30.
"We expect that we are going to make the ballot and make it with enough that we won't be paying that fee,'' and if the campaign paid the fee it would be "doing it only to make sure," he said.
Meek has been crisscrossing the state to gather signatures and raise his profile, with 10 trips to Jacksonville, five to Pensacola and "too many to count" to Tampa Bay and Orlando, Dyk said. Polls show him trailing Crist and Rubio.
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