Florida Democrats, Republicans join to ask delay in candidate petition deadline

03-23-20 Virtual press conferenceCandidates in a virtual press conference call for a delay in the petition deadline to get on the August primary ballot. From left to right: Cindy Banyai, Michael Blueming, Steven Meza, Darlene Swaffer, Sakinah Lehtola and Willie Anderson.

March 23, 2020 by David Silverberg.

Florida Democratic and Republican candidates joined today in appealing to Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) to postpone or waive the election petition deadline and reduce the filing fee to get on the ballot for the August 18 primary election.

The letter and a virtual press conference to publicize it was organized by Democrat Cindy Banyai, running for Congress in the 19th Congressional District and Republican Michael Blueming, running for Congress in the 21st.

“The current outbreak of COVID-19 and the mounting health concerns for the global community is making this task of collecting signatures a near impossible venture,” their letter states. “By not postponing or extending the deadline for candidates to reach their petition numbers, you are effectively disenfranchising many grassroots funded candidates who are unable to pay for the filing fees.

“We request you remove the ballot verification deadline and qualifying date, in addition to waiving or reducing the filing fee for all currently active candidates,” it stated.

Under Florida election rules, by noon today a candidate for federal office was to submit petitions equal to 1 percent of a congressional district’s voting population or pay $10,044, the equivalent of 4 percent of a US representative’s salary. State and local fees are lower.

“The community is working together,” said Blueming during the virtual press conference, in which 14 candidates spoke. “I encourage the governor to move swiftly with this.”

“This process in Florida is really unconstitutional,” said Andrew Ellison, the Democratic candidate in the 17th Congressional District where he is running against Rep. Greg Steube. “The fee is discriminatory. It keeps a lot of minority groups out of the process. It keeps a lot of great talent from running.”

“Anything but online organizing is the only thing possible,” said Adam Christensen, a Democratic candidate in the 3rd Congressional District. “Our office is closed and business is providing sick leave. We should completely waive the filing fee or take it down to 20 percent or make it $1,000. Right now it’s not feasible. For me and a lot of other people, this is not sustainable. We have one of the highest filing fees in the country.”

“The past week we have not been able to get petitions,” said Sakinah Lehtola, a Democratic candidate in the 24th Congressional District. “Our volunteers are out of work. I greatly reduced my hours and now I’m out of work too. I grew up really poor and money has been a problem my entire life and money should not be a barrier now.”

“We must ensure elections are fair,” said Elijah Manley, a Democrat for the Florida House of Representatives in District 94. “We cannot fundraise. We cannot collect petitions. This is about public health, this is about democracy. We should allow virtual petitions. My ballot fee is about $1,700. It can be compared to a poll tax. I’m making a heartfelt plea to Gov. DeSantis to allow virtual petitions. Let’s get this done. Let’s do the right thing.”

As of the 1:00 pm press conference, no word had been heard from the governor’s office or the Division of Elections, according to Banyai, who stated that court action against the deadline is being considered.

A question from The Paradise Progressive to the Division had not received an answer as of this posting.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

 

 

Banyai appeals, Holden goes virtual, and a revolution in Naples: SWFL’s State of Play today

03-20-20 Banyai petition appealCindy Banyai appeals to Gov. Ron DeSantis to extend the petition deadline.     (Image: @SWFLMom2020)

 March 20, 2020 by David Silverberg

Monday, March 23 marks the deadline for turning in petitions to get on the August primary ballot—unless Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) and the Florida Division of Elections say it ain’t so.

That’s what 19th Congressional District Democratic candidate Cindy Banyai is hoping. She says candidates deserve an extension of the deadline because the Coronavirus crisis has made face-to-face petition gathering and door-to-door campaigning impossible.

But Banyai isn’t alone. In a March 18 letter to DeSantis, her appeal for a delay was joined by Gabriele Spuckes, chair of the Lee County Democratic Party and five other Florida Democratic congressional candidates: Adam Christensen of Florida’s 3rd Congressional District, Allen Ellison of the 17th, Kimberly Walker of the 12th, and Sakinah Lehtola and Christine Olivo, both of the 24th.

Banyai also made her appeal in a 4-second video on Twitter, in which she said directly to DeSantis: “Postpone the ballot petitions. We deserve a shot.” Adding in the letter, “we must take action to keep our election fair and balanced and to ensure the health and safety of the citizens of Florida.”

Under Florida election rules, by March 23 a candidate for federal office must submit petitions equal to 1 percent of a congressional district’s voting population, which comes to 5,052 signatures in the 19th Congressional District, or pay $10,044, the equivalent of 4 percent of a US representative’s salary.

As of this writing, Banyai told The Paradise Progressive that she had not heard back from the governor’s office or the Division of Elections and noted a new wrinkle: “I will add that the local supervisors of elections [offices] are closed. So we can’t even submit the petitions if we wanted to.”

Holden goes virtual

David Holden, the other Democrat seeking the 19th Congressional District’s seat, put his entire campaign on a digital footing and announced on March 12 that he was suspending face-to-face campaigning.

David Holden town hall portrait 2 3-21-18
David Holden

“To be clear,” he emphasized, “we are continuing our campaign, just with an abundance of caution.”

For Holden, going virtual means holding town halls, Qs&As and fundraising events by digital means. (A Holden virtual town hall meeting is scheduled for this evening, according to his campaign Facebook page.)

Most importantly, Holden announced that he was suspending petition collection but seeking donations to meet the $10,044 filing fee.

“Together we will get through this,” he vowed.

Allison Sardinas, Holden’s campaign manager, added further details.

“The technicalities of [going virtual] are several,” she pointed out in an e-mail. “One, our organizers are now focused on creating digital content and phone banking for various virtual events. We’re setting up town halls and virtual fundraisers as well as expanding out lists and digital presence.

“This also means that our staff meetings are held via Zoom and we skype into call time with David instead of providing call sheets for him in person. We’re also moving our house parties into the digital realm and fully utilizing the features [next generation platforms have] to offer to maximize contributions to our campaign.”

According to Sardinas, the Holden campaign is also focusing on turning out the vote and preparing for the possibility of a vote-by-mail-only election in November. Preparing a digital volunteer force now should serve the campaign later.

Republican response

With Coronavirus shutting down all face-to-face campaigning, one Republican congressional candidate dropped out of the race and one announced suspension of his campaign (tantamount to dropping out altogether), both yesterday, March 19.

Ford O’Connell, the bombastic Fox News pundit, announced the end of his campaign in a statement to followers.

William Figlesthaler, the Naples urologist, similarly issued a statement. However, Figlesthaler’s suspension was interesting because he had already begun running television commercials. Also, his was the highest financed campaign of all the 19th District candidates, thanks to a $410,000 loan from the candidate.


Commentary: We won’t have Figlesthaler’s urinal screens to pee on any more!


Figlesthaler’s suspension leaves State Rep. Dane Eagle (R-77-Cape Coral) as the best-financed candidate. Eagle hasn’t made any announcements regarding his campaign but has been frequently tweeting his support for President Trump despite the Coronavirus pandemic and the financial crash.

Analysis: Revolution in Naples City

On Election Day, Tuesday, March 17, the entire elected leadership of the City of Naples was voted out, with Teresa Heitman winning as mayor along with a completely new slate of city council members.

The election was non-partisan and there were many local issues that decided it. Nonetheless, Southwest Florida residents could see in this result a rising discontent and demand for complete change. If it’s so strong in a place as conservative and set in its ways as Naples, it just may be bigger in the region, the state and the country.

The blue wave could in fact turn out to be a blue tsunami.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

BREAKING NEWS: Figlesthaler suspends campaign for 19th Congressional District seat

02-05-20 Figlesthaler speechDr. William Figlesthaler in a campaign video.

March 19, 2020 by David Silverberg

Dr. William Figlesthaler, a Republican candidate for Congress in the 19th Congressional District, the seat currently held by Rep. Francis Rooney, has announced suspension of his political campaign.

“This morning I made the difficult, but important decision to temporarily suspend our on-the-ground campaign activities moving forward,” Figlesthaler announced in a 12:15 pm tweet.

Figlesthaler, a Naples-based urologist, stated that he was launching a medical hotline and online help center.

Figlesthaler was the highest financed congressional campaign for the 19th District thanks to a $410,000 loan from the candidate.

The Figlesthaler suspension brings to 10 the number of candidates seeking Rooney’s seat: seven Republicans, two Democrats and one Independent.

Figlesthaler’s full statement follows below:

This morning I made the difficult, but important decision to temporarily suspend our on-the-ground campaign activities moving forward.

As a physician, I have seen first-hand how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected us all.

Over the last few months, we have built an incredibly talented and robust campaign team completely dedicated to winning this election.

My team has worked tirelessly over the last couple of days to transition our campaign operations into a resource center designed to help the citizens of Southwest Florida navigate the multitude of resources available to help them through this time of uncertainty.

Our entire campaign team will be focused on managing our “Need Help? Ask!” crisis hotline and resource center.

If you, or a loved one is in need of assistance or has questions regarding the virus or the fallout because of it, please do not hesitate to reach out.

Our team can be reached via phone at 239-424-9868 or online at NeedHelpAsk.com

I want to reiterate, America is the greatest and most resilient nation on Earth, and we will get through this.

Thank you, God Bless.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

BREAKING NEWS: O’Connell drops out of race for Rooney’s seat; cites impact of Coronavirus

02-12-20 Ford O'Connell on Fox
Ford O’Connell

March 19, 2020 by David Silverberg

Republican Ford O’Connell has dropped his bid for Congress in the 19th Congressional District currently held by fellow Republican Rep. Francis Rooney.

He is the first candidate and the first Republican to withdraw from the race. There are now 11 candidates seeking the office: Eight Republicans, two Democrats and one Independent.

In a statement issued at 11:00 am this morning, the former Fox News pundit stated that he could not run the race he had planned due to the Coronavirus outbreak. He did not endorse any other candidate. He stated he was donating his remaining campaign funds to local charities but did not say if this included the $200,000 loan he made to his campaign committee.

O’Connell was a fierce defender of President Donald Trump.

His full statement, issued as an e-mail to supporters, follows below:

After much thought and careful consideration, it is with a heavy heart I announce that I have decided to withdraw my candidacy for the FL-19 U.S. congressional seat.

We are in the midst of a global pandemic. Lives are at stake. The time for action is now. As a result of the Chinese coronavirus outbreak, we cannot run the type of campaign we wanted to run; one where we go to local events and meetings, schools and libraries, museums and restaurants, and speak to voters and hear about the issues that matter to them, where we get our message out face-to-face with citizens at the grassroots level through an exchange of ideas, having real conversations that matter, rather than in 30-second TV ads. Public safety is paramount, and an election where voters’ health may be endangered to run a campaign by, for, and of the people is not one in which I can in good conscience continue.

To that end, I have decided to donate a portion of my campaign funds to the Harry Chapin Food Bank of Southwest Florida and to the American Red Cross to assure our friends and neighbors are taken care of during this difficult and uncertain time.

I owe a debt of gratitude to my fiancé, Sarah, my family, my dedicated campaign staff, my friends and supporters; to everyone I spoke with over the past several months who shared their story, their concerns, their humanity – to each and every one of you – thank you. I am humbled by your support and by your belief in me and in what we stand for.

We fought a good fight, and we should all be incredibly proud of that. Now, we turn our battle to a new horizon; one with much higher stakes and that will in the coming days and months impact us all. Stay safe. Stay strong. Together, there is nothing America can’t do. While this campaign has reached its end, know that I’m not done fighting for you, for Southwest Florida, and for our great nation.

FORD

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

Tulsi Gabbard ends presidential bid, won some votes in SWFL

March 19, 2020 by David Silverberg

03-19=20 Tulsi_Gabbard,_official_portrait,_113th_Congress
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-2-Hawaii) has dropped her presidential bid and endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden for president, according to video statement made by her campaign.

She was the last active candidate other than Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to seek the Democratic presidential nomination and she was on the ballot in Florida’s presidential preference primary on Tuesday, March 17.

In Southwest Florida she won 217 votes in Lee County and 75 votes in Collier County, according to the state Division of Elections. She won 8,708 votes or .5 percent of the vote statewide.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

Biden takes Southwest Florida, wins statewide, also Illinois and Arizona

03-18-20 Primary resultsFlorida results for the Democratic Primary held yesterday.   (Chart: Florida Division of Elections)

March 18, 2020 by David Silverberg.

Joe Biden, Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President, swept both Lee and Collier counties in yesterday’s presidential preference primary, in keeping with statewide results.

On the Republican side, President Donald Trump unsurprisingly and overwhelmingly won his primary against three challengers.

Biden also won in Illinois and Arizona.

In Southwest Florida, turnout was light. Lee County had a turnout of 24.39 percent or 114,721 voters, according to the Lee County Supervisor of Elections. Collier County had a higher turnout at 38.6 percent or 62,256 voters, according to the Collier County Supervisor of Elections.

Lee County

In Lee County Biden won with 57 percent of the vote or 28,168 votes, the majority of which were cast by mail. Statewide, Biden won with 61.9 percent of the vote, according to the Florida Division of Elections.

He was followed by Bernie Sanders with only 19.7 percent or 9,749 votes.

Although they had dropped out of the race prior to the primary, Michael Bloomberg received 11.3 percent (1,465 votes) Elizabeth Warren received 2.3 percent (1,133), Amy Klobuchar 1.9 percent (961 votes) and Tulsi Gabbard .44 percent (217 votes).

In the Republican primary Donald Trump received 92.9 percent of the vote (58,565 votes), which was actually a percentage point less than his statewide total of 93.8 percent. He was followed by Bill Weld at 3.8 percent (2,364), Joe Walsh at 2.4 percent (1,479) and Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente at .96 percent (604).

Collier County

Overall, Biden did better in Collier County than he did statewide, winning in the county by 65.9 percent compared to his statewide margin of 61.9 percent.

In the presidential primary, results are reported by both congressional district and county. Collier County spans both the 19th and 25th congressional districts. The 19th covers the coastal strip from Cape Coral to Marco Island. The 25th includes rural Lee and Collier counties, Immokalee and Hialeah on the eastern part of the state.

19th Congressional District

Joe Biden won with 67.3 percent of the vote (8,768), followed by Bernie Sanders with 14.2 percent (1,846), Michael Bloomberg with 11.3 percent (1,465), Pete Buttigieg with 3.4 percent (442), Elizabeth Warren 1.5 percent (191), and Amy Klobuchar with 1.4 percent (184).

On the Republican side, Donald Trump took 93.1 percent (20,651) followed by Bill Weld with 4.2 percent (936), Joe Walsh with 1.8 percent (389) and Roque De La Fuente with .9 percent (199).

25th District

Joe  Biden won 64.2 percent of the vote (6,789), followed by Bernie Sanders (1,901), Michael Bloomberg with 10 percent (1,059), Pete Buttgieg with 3.5 percent (372), Elizabeth Warren with 1.7 percent (178) and Amy Klobuchar with 1.2 percent (130).

On the Republican side, Donald Trump won 94.9 percent (14.200), Bill Weld with 3 percent (442), Joe Walsh with 1.5 percent (220) and Roque De La Fuente with .7 percent (99).

Results for the 17th Congressional District, which includes Port Charlotte, Punta Gorda and Venice, were not available as of this writing.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

UPDATED: SWFL congressmen split three ways on major Coronavirus vote

US_Capitol_west_side 3-2-19

March 14, 2020 by David Silverberg

Updated 5:00 pm with statements.

Southwest Florida’s congressmen split three ways on the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (House Resolution 6201), passed last night by a vote of 363 to 40.

The bill provides for free Coronavirus testing, paid sick leave, employer protections for health care workers, food assistance and unemployment benefits during the Coronavirus pandemic. It was endorsed by President Donald Trump in cooperation with House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-12-Calif.).

Rep. Francis Rooney (R-19-Fla.) was absent from the voting. He has not issued any statement as of this update.

Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-25-Fla.) voted for the bill.

In a tweet he stated: “Tonight, I proudly voted for the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, a bill that will provide much-needed additional resources to expand our testing capabilities and accessibility, and it will also ensure that American families are prepared to address this pandemic.”

Rep. Greg Steube (R-17-Fla.) voted against it, along with 39 other Republicans. Late Saturday afternoon he issued a statement explaining his reason:

“Last week, I voted for $8.3 billion in funding to directly address the Coronavirus outbreak in the United States. This funding sped up the development of vaccines, increased access to testing and treatment, and expanded access to telemedicine services.This package also included nearly $1 billion for state and local response,$300 million for the CDC’s Infectious Diseases Rapid Response,and much more. Yesterday, the president declared a National Emergency, which opened up an additional $50 billion that we can use to address the outbreak. The bill that was rushed to the floor early this morning­ with only 30 minutes to review over 100 pages-expanded unemployment insurance and welfare programs, increased additional spending not related to the Coronavirus without an offset to the deficit, placed mandates on private companies, temporarily removed work requirements from SNAP, and allowed for uncapped federal spending. The bill was filled with policy positions I could not in good conscience support.”

Allen Ellison, Steube’s Democratic challenger, also issued a tweet stating: “In the face of a pandemic, #RepGregSteube voted “NAY” on the #Coronavirus Relief Bill: #HR6201. Whether it’s hurricane relief or environmental protection, he has failed the residents of FL. It’s time to chart a new path forward. Together we can do this.”

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

Rooney misses virus vote; Steube seeks silencers; Banyai wants delay—SWFL Roundup, Coronavirus edition

03-11-20 CoronavirusA Coronavirus.           (Image: CDC)

March 13, 2020 by David Silverberg

The coronavirus crisis has elicited different responses from Southwest Florida’s elected officials and candidates—but they’ve also been busy on a variety of other fronts.

The most important measure taken in Congress regarding Coronavirus was passage of the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2020 (House Resolution (HR) 6074) providing $8.3 billion in funding to fight the disease.

The bill passed the House by a whopping 415 to 2 vote on Wednesday, March 4. Among the Southwest Florida delegation, Rep. Francis Rooney (R-19-Fla.) did not vote on the measure. Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-25-Fla.) and Greg Steube (R-17-Fla.) voted in favor. (The two “nay” votes were Reps. Andrew Biggs (R-5-Ariz.) and Ken Buck (R-4-Colo.)).

The bill was rushed over to the Senate where it passed the next day by an overwhelming margin of 96 to 1, with both Florida’s senators voting for it. (The lone opponent was Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.)). Immediately thereafter, President Donald Trump signed it and it became Public Law 116-123.

Other than that major action, Southwest Florida reactions have varied.

Rep. Rooney: On March 3, Rooney posted a generic Coronavirus information page on his website but did not explain the reasons for his absence from the appropriations vote and all other votes since Feb. 26.

11-16-19 Francis_Rooney_official_congressional_photo cropped
Rep. Francis Rooney

In other matters, on March 4, Rooney’s Harmful Algal Bloom Essential Forecasting Act (House Resolution (HR) 3297) was unanimously passed by the environmental subcommittee of the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee. The legislation exempts the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science from government shutdowns, an issue that arose during the 2019 government shutdown.

Interestingly, the bill now has 14 co-sponsors, 10 Democrats and 4 Republicans, with heavy support from the Florida delegation. It next needs to be passed by the full committee and sent on to the full House.

But Rooney’s mind was also on other matters. On March 9 Rooney’s op-ed, “The Electoral College is the Bedrock of Federalism,” was published by the conservative media platform, The Daily Caller.

12-19-19 Mario Diaz-Balart
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart

Rep. Diaz-Balart: Diaz-Balart’s seat on the House Appropriations Committee affords him an active role in considering Coronavirus funding and he made the most of publicizing his vote for HR 6074. He also took credit when the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention announced its allocation of $27 million for Florida to fight the virus out of $560 million nationwide, part of the initial Coronavirus appropriation.

Rep. Steube: Steube tweeted out a list of links to get more information about the Coronavirus and let constituents know that the Capitol and House office buildings are closed due to Coronavirus. He voted for HR 6074.

12-13-19 Steube votes on impeachment
Rep. Greg Steube

Otherwise, his attention went from life-saving to life-taking. On March 5 Steube introduced a bill to speed approval of applications for gun silencers (technically known as suppressors) by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATFE). The ENDS Act (End the Normalized Delay of Suppressors Act) (HR 6126) would amend the tax code to give the ATFE a deadline of 90 days to decide whether to approve a suppressor application.

Steube argues that the ATFE is deliberately too slow in processing civilian applications for suppressors, which are used for silent killing. His bill would speed up the process and impose a deadline, getting more gun silencers into more hands more quickly.

“I have personally experienced the unnecessary delay of a suppressor application and as a member of Congress, I have met with many Floridians who have also experienced similar delays,” Steube complained in a press release. “A policy of delay, delay, delay is unacceptable and frankly violates the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding gun owners.”

In other activities, Steube proposed ensuring that veterans have access to state-approved marijuana and introduced an amendment to Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2020 (HR 5602) to include Antifa, the Black Hebrew Israelite movement and a group called Anti-Police to the list of white supremacist groups to be monitored for terrorist activities. The amendment was approved and passed by the Judiciary Committee.

Candidates

Coronavirus has made normal political activities like rallies, meetings and town halls nearly impossible—and canvassing and petition collecting are especially hard hit.

10-19-19 Cindy Banyai
Cindy Banyai

Cindy Banyai, Democratic congressional candidate, issued a call Wednesday, March 11 to delay the deadlines for petition submissions due to the Coronavirus, which is making face-to-face petition collection nearly impossible. Deadline to turn in the petitions is noon, March 23 for verification and April 20 to 24 is the general qualifying period.

To get on the federal ballot for Congress a candidate has to either pay $10,440 to the state of Florida or submit signatures equal to 1 percent of the district’s registered voters, which in the case of the 19th District comes to 5,052 signatures.

“By not waiving or extending the deadline for candidates to reach their petition numbers, you are effectively disenfranchising many grassroots-funded candidates who are unable to pay for the filings fees,” Banyai stated, directly addressing the Florida Department of State’s Election Division. “Governor DeSantis has already declared a state of emergency amid the spread of the coronavirus and he needs to step up to allow enough time for candidates to strategize about the next steps for their campaigns and ways to keep their communities safe.”

According to her statement, she is being funded by over 450 donors contributing about $50 each and she is refusing corporate or political action committee contributions. Since entering the race she intended to get on the ballot through petition signatures.

Among Republicans, State Rep. Dane Eagle (R-77-Cape Coral) on March 6 tweeted that there was no need to panic over the virus and urged caution: “Unfortunately we have confirmed that a Lee County resident who tested positive for COVID-19 has died. This is the 6th confirmed case in Florida & 1st in Lee County. While there is no need to panic, it is extremely important that all take the necessary precautions to reduce risk.”

He was also at pains to defend Trump from accusations that he was responsible for a virus-related stock market crash that has been called the “Trump slump,” tweeting yesterday, March 12:

“For those that are blaming @realDonaldTrump for the stock market dip, just ask yourselves this: Did Trump sell out our manufacturing jobs to China? The answer is no. Establishment Republicans & Democrats like Joe Biden did. This would be much worse if Biden was President.”

The lone medical doctor among the candidates seeking the 19th Congressional District seat, Republican Dr. William Figlesthaler, issued a statement on his Facebook page urging calm and praising Trump for his measures shutting off travel to Europe.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

 

 

 

 

Yet ANOTHER Republican candidate enters 19th Congressional District race-UPDATED

March 11, 2020 by David Silverberg

Updated April 13, with correction and additional policy position.

Another Republican candidate has filed for Congress in the 19th Congressional District of Florida, bringing the total number of candidates to an even dozen.

03-11-20 Christy McLaughlin
Christy McLaughlin

Christina “Christy” McLaughlin filed her candidacy with the Federal Election Commission on Monday, March 9. This brings the number of Republicans running for the seat being vacated by Rep. Francis Rooney to nine. Also running are two Democrats and an Independent.

According to her campaign website, ChristyforCongress.com, McLaughlin is a Naples, Fla., native, and a graduate of Florida Gulf Coast University and Ave Maria School of Law. She states that she sat for the Florida Bar but does not state if she passed the examination. She interned at the Florida state attorney’s office in the 20th District for two summers and for a judge of the 20th Circuit Court. In the summer of 2019 she interned in the office of Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-25-Fla.).

On her website McLaughlin declares that she “supports all of President Trump’s agenda. I have supported President Trump since he descended the escalator” and calls him “the greatest president ever.”

She is anti-abortion, pro-border wall, opposes birthright citizenship, opposes gun regulation, denounces socialism, applauds the Space Force and supports Israel’s right to exist.

There is no initial mention on her website of any local or environmental issues. She subsequently stated that “In Congress, I will fight to receive the necessary funding we need for the restoration and proactive measures we must take to keep our waters clean.”

McLaughlin states that she is the daughter of Cuban immigrants who came to the United States in 1961.

In addition to her professional activities she states that she established the Republican National Lawyer’s Association Chapter at Ave Maria School of Law and served as its president in 2018 and 2019. She also expanded the Young Republicans Party of Florida into Collier County and serves as the Collier County Chair. In 2014 she was crowned Miss Naples and Miss South Florida Latina.

Her father, Hugh McLaughlin, a software consultant, serves as treasurer of her campaign committee.

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

 

Endorsement: Joe Biden. Yes, Joe Biden.

03-09-20 Joe BidenFormer Vice President Joe Biden in his campaign video.

March 10, 2020

If our current world were a TV show, it would be “The Apprentice.” An untrained, uneducated, unstable apprentice rules a fake boardroom, inciting turmoil and stress and cutthroat conflict—and every week someone gets fired.

People are tired of this show. It’s clear that they’re ready for a change and not one that provides even more conflict. They want something akin to “Father Knows Best” (if anyone remembers that); something scripted, civilized, with clean language and healthy family values and if it’s kind of dull and formulaic and corny, well, that’s OK.

This TV metaphor is not as farfetched as it might seem at first glance. Hosting “The Apprentice” was a truly formative experience for President Donald J. Trump. Its storms and stress drove ratings and as a creature of television Trump governs as though he’s constantly reaching for ratings. This is not conjecture or deduction; it shows up repeatedly in his infamous tweets.

But government is not what we’ll call “unreality” TV. It’s serious business that has enormous impacts on our lives and futures and the state of the nation and the world. It’s partially because of this (among so many other reasons) that Trump has got to go.

Both Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and former Vice President Joe Biden realize this. Now the time has finally come for Florida voters to weigh in.

Early voting in the Florida Democratic presidential primary began on Saturday, March 7. The early voting goes on until next Saturday, the 14th, then Election Day is next Tuesday, the 17th. It should go without saying but every eligible voter should vote.

For many Florida Democrats the choice they’re left with after the early primaries and caucuses is disappointing and uninspiring. Out of a field that covered a wide range of personalities, races, genders, ideologies and ages, they’re left with two old white men and a flaky outlier without much of a chance (Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-2-Hawaii)).

It has always been the position of this author that a media outlet covering politics has a duty to endorse a candidate when choices are difficult. Following candidates and political developments on a regular basis gives journalists insights and knowledge that need to be shared with voters. Whether the outlet is national or local television, print newspapers or even a simple blog, it is the obligation of independent media in a free society to help voters make an informed choice. Any endorsement offends some people but that comes with taking a stand on anything.

As the headline of this editorial makes clear, The Paradise Progressive is endorsing Joe Biden. But as the Declaration of Independence put it, “a decent respect to the opinions of mankind” requires that the causes of the decision be explained.

So let’s look at some of the big issues in turn.

Democracy versus dictatorship

The overriding issue of this election is whether the United States will remain a democracy or become a dictatorship under Donald J. Trump. It is that stark.

Biden clearly understands the threat and he put it directly and forthrightly in his April 25, 2019 campaign launch video.

“We are in the battle for the soul of this nation,” he said at the time. “The core values of this nation, our standing in the world, our very democracy, everything that has made America, America, is at stake.”

Campaign videos are in part propaganda intended to sway voters to elect the candidate. However, they also reflect who the candidate is and what he or she most cares about.

In his launch statement and subsequent speeches, Biden demonstrated that he really gets it; he fully understands the risks and the stakes in this election.

“I believe history will look back on four years of this president and all he embraces as an aberrant moment in time,” he said. “But if we give Donald Trump eight years in the White House, he will forever and fundamentally alter the character of this nation — who we are — and I cannot stand by and watch that happen.”

The launch video drew heavily on events in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 and Trump’s reaction to it.

“…That’s when we heard the words from the president of the United States that stunned the world and shocked the conscience of this nation. He said there were ‘some very fine people on both sides.’ Very fine people on both sides?” Biden said incredulously. “With those words, the president of the United States assigned a moral equivalence between those spreading hate and those with the courage to stand against it. And in that moment, I knew the threat to this nation was unlike any I had ever seen in my lifetime.”

He continued: “Folks, America’s an idea, an idea that’s stronger than any army, bigger than any ocean, more powerful than any dictator or tyrant. It gives hope to the most desperate people on earth, it guarantees that everyone is treated with dignity and gives hate no safe harbor. It instills in every person in this country the belief that no matter where you start in life, there’s nothing you can’t achieve if you work at it.

“That’s what we believe. And above all else, that’s what’s at stake in this election.

“We can’t forget what happened in Charlottesville. Even more important, we have to remember who we are.

“This is America.”

All of this is correct. This election is not really about healthcare, or Social Security or particular policies or who cast which vote on whatever issue way back when. The election is about freedom versus tyranny and Biden fully understands that.

Sanders understands it too but while his crusade for social justice is admirable, he has not focused as much on the fundamental question the way Biden has—or at least he has not articulated his concern with the same focus.

If Biden wins, Sanders has the possibility of continuing to work for the goals in which he believes and even achieving them; if Trump wins, Sanders could be jailed for simply believing what he does. If Trump changes or amends the Constitution in a second term to suit himself (the usual dictator’s playbook) Sanders could lose the constitutional and political mechanisms to keep fighting for the American people and the American people could lose their freedom altogether.

Normality versus upheaval

In addition to the issues, elections are lost and won on underlying sentiment and today more than anything, exhaustion is the dominant underlying sentiment in much of the country.

People are longing to return to “normal”—a time when politics were distant, when celebrity trivialities made headlines, when people didn’t wake up every day to some new outrage or horror to dominate their breakfast conversation. They want a president they can reasonably trust, in whom they have confidence and one who behaves with dignity and good sense. They don’t want to overturn the existing order; that’s what Trump’s done for the last three years. They’d rather be secure and they want reasonable, predictable governance. It’s what Trump calls “boring.”

These are actually not revolutionary times. There’s ferment among some parts of the population, notably younger people and Latinos, but it’s safe to say that the majority of Americans are just weary.

Bernie Sanders is offering revolution while Biden offers renewal. While Sanders and his followers express legitimate grievances and there’s a need for reform, Biden can win vast swaths of voters offended and appalled by Trump’s behavior and madness.

This is the “electability” argument and Biden has shown that he can inspire moderate, centrist Democrats and mobilize them to the polls; presumably he can do this with the rest of the population.

Donald Trump has nicknamed Joe Biden “Sleepy Joe.” But that’s not so bad. After losing lots of sleep over the past three years, we could all use a little rest in the next four years.

The fact is that the next president is not going to be spending his term creating new programs or expanding existing ones; he’s going to be repairing all the terrible damage that Trump has done to the nation, its Constitution, its laws, its government, its diplomacy and its standing abroad. He will especially have to cope with the gigantic deficits Trump has run up. In fact, his most pressing problem will probably be staving off a national bankruptcy and restoring equity to the tax code in order to do it.

This brings us to a third major issue…

Healing versus wounding

When Biden gave his victory speech after Super Tuesday he said, “We need a President who can fight, but make no mistake about it, I could fight, but look, we need this badly, as badly, someone who could heal,” adding as well, “We need a President who can heal the country as well, and that is what I will do as your President. I promise you.”

Perhaps it’s not as eloquent as Abraham Lincoln’s “with malice toward none, with charity toward all,” but the sentiment is there. In fact, Biden is the only candidate to use the word “heal” in a victory speech.

Healing will be another major task ahead of the next non-Trump president. Biden already sees that.

Back in June 2019 when Donald Trump addressed his campaign kickoff rally in Orlando, he inadvertently revealed his real state of mind when he accused Democrats of being driven by “hatred, prejudice and rage.” It was as clear and obvious a case of projection as any politician has ever uttered.

For the 2020 election Trump and the Republicans were setting up a Wagnerian scenario of a cosmic clash between Trumpism and socialism. Like pirates, they were loading their guns with all the hatred, prejudice and rage they could ram down the muzzles and were preparing to fire volleys of vileness and vitriol at all who dared oppose Trump.

It’s as though Biden has rained on all their powder. Trump would love to run against Sanders. One of the reasons that he was so intent on getting dirt on Biden from Ukraine was that he knew that a reasonable, moderate, centrist was his most dangerous opponent.

The answer to hatred, prejudice and rage is not more intense hatred, prejudice and rage—it’s healing, tolerance and calm. That may sound wimpy or weak but it has power, as Biden’s electoral totals have shown. Instead of an apocalyptic clash between socialism and America that Trump could mount like a pale horse to Armageddon, Biden presents the prospect of reason overcoming madness and—to repeat it once again—democracy overcoming despotism.

Biden can ride these currents and he understands the whirlwind.

As of this writing, it looks like Biden will likely win the Democratic primary in Florida and ultimately be the Democratic nominee.

But there’s a lot that will be happening between now and Election Day in November. Not only are we facing a global epidemic but we have a financial meltdown on Wall Street. The Russians will be interfering. Trump may look very weak now but he’ll be fighting back, no doubt using every imaginable dirty trick as well as voter suppression, vote rigging and outright fraud. Hopefully, this will not include a physical attack or assassination. A lot can happen.

Still, Joe Biden represents the best chance of victory in 2020.

It is said that Democrats fall in love while Republicans fall in line. All Democrats may not love Joe Biden but they can respect him and if they can unite, if they can fall in line, then Americans just may have the last, best hope for a nation that Lincoln called “the last best hope of earth.”

Liberty lives in light

© 2020 by David Silverberg

Coming soon: The hidden story of the Democratic primaries.