The summit felt like a test run for what is increasingly shaping up to be a brutal showdown for the Republican presidential nomination among more than a dozen potential contenders, including a cluster of governors.
While the potential Republican field appears stronger than four years ago, with more than a dozen potential contenders, the Republicans are without a front-runner.
In contrast, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton remains the overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination, should she choose to pursue it.
At the Florida event, the Republicans rarely criticized each other in public, but there were subtle jabs.
Within hours of New Jersey Gov Chris Christie gracing the cover of a magazine in an illustration of him kissing a baby's head, Louisiana Gov Bobby Jindal suggested the party needs bold leaders, not showmen.
Whether it was an intentional shot at Christie or not, the looming 2016 contest changed the context of every speech, interview and panel discussion at the Republican Governors Association's annual conference.
Christie handed over the reigns as the chairman of the RGA at the event, ending what has arguably been a politically life-saving tenure that helped repair his reputation after the political retribution traffic scandal in New Jersey that badly tainted his brand earlier in the year.
During the midterm elections, he raised tens of millions of dollars to help elect Republican governors, boosting his 2016 prospects and broadening his national network.
The candidates aren't expected to start formally declaring their intentions until the first quarter of next year. But the developing tensions were already apparent as five potential candidates appeared together on stage to answer questions from moderator Chuck Todd, the host of NBC's "Meet The Press", a dress rehearsal of sorts for the looming primary.
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