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Becky Bowers
By Becky Bowers October 24, 2010

Charlie Crist says Marco Rubio has said people who don't agree with him "ought to leave the country"

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, an independent candidate for U.S. Senate, defends his departure from the Republican Party by criticizing the "extreme views" held by the GOP’s right wing — and by extension his Republican rival, Marco Rubio.

So on Oct. 24, 2010, in their fifth debate of the campaign, Crist strove to paint Rubio as a rigid idealogue who wanted to overturn Roe v. Wade and didn’t support stem cell research. Then he turned it up a notch, saying Rubio had said that folks who didn’t agree with him ought to leave the country.

"You know, these are extreme views that I am not comfortable with," Crist said. "(Rubio) took it to a point so much so that (he) said that, you know, people who essentially don't agree with him, ought to leave the country, like Keith Olbermann."

Could it be true?

Crist campaign spokesman Danny Kanner pointed us to a Palm Beach Post story from March 2010 about a Rubio campaign stop in West Palm Beach. The story ended this way:
 

Rubio also said he was against amnesty for immigrants, believing legal immigration will never work if illegal immigrants are granted amnesty.


Then, he closed the speech with a thought he said originated from Glenn Beck, FOX News' popular conservative talk show host.

 

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"There are millions of people in America that hate our country, so why can't we just do a trade?" Rubio said. "We'll send you Sean Penn, Janeane Garofalo and Keith Olbermann, and you can send us people that actually love this country and want to help us build it."

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The story prompted this impassioned response from the MSNBC host: "You have inadvertently revealed that you don't see those with other viewpoints as merely disagreeing with you. You have inadvertently revealed  that you dismiss them as not loving this country."

Sunday morning, Rubio’s campaign didn’t flinch.

Spokesman Alex Burgos offered this quick response from his BlackBerry after the debate: "It's true what Marco said, and we appreciate the governor bringing it up."

Given the evidence, and both sides’ endorsement of it, we rate Crist’s statement True.

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Charlie Crist says Marco Rubio has said people who don't agree with him "ought to leave the country"

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