David Holden and Cindy Banyai are introduced by Collier County Democratic Chair Annisa Karim. (Photo: Author)
Jan. 16, 2020 by David Silverberg
Congressional candidates Cindy Banyai and David Holden pledged last night to support whoever is the winner of the Democratic Party’s primary on August 18.
Both are running for Congress in the 19th Congressional District whose seat is being vacated by Republican Rep. Francis Rooney.
The two shared the stage for the first time at the Collier County Democratic Party’s Progressive Caucus meeting at the Party’s headquarters in Naples.
The event gave both an opportunity to introduce themselves to voters in a non-debate forum.
Banyai characterized herself as a mother and small business owner concerned about “our water, our health and our community” with a priority on “clean water, jobs and access to transportation.”
She recounted that when her daughter was stricken with a rare blood disease, she found herself fighting with insurance companies to cover her care and characterized US healthcare as “this absolutely and ludicrously broken system,” which she said she would work to fix.
On environmental issues, she said that people in Southwest Florida felt betrayed by the government that over the past eight years had done nothing to clean or protect the environment and she pledged to hold polluters accountable. When asked about specific measures to take as opposed to further studies of red tide and other water issues, however, Banyai was vague in naming actions that could be taken.
Noting that she had once worked as a professional prize fighter, she said, “I know that when it comes to being tough in Congress, I know that although I may be young, and although I may be a woman, I know I will be the one that goes toe to toe with the toughest opponent to fight for the people of Southwest Florida.”
David Holden, who ran for the same seat in 2018, focused on defeating President Donald Trump and his agenda. Decrying the “abject collapse of Republican leadership” and its traditional values and priorities, Holden argued that Democrats “will not win by disguising who we are.”
Recounting a TV interview, he recalled being asked if he could work with President Trump. “I said, ‘I’ll work with the president when the president’s right.’ Fortunately, they didn’t ask me for any examples.”
He said that if Republican strongholds like Kentucky and Alabama could elect Democrats, then so could Florida. “This state is ready to become Democratic again,” he said. “There are enough Democrats, independents and a little sliver of sane Republicans and if we can get them to the polls we can win.”
Lee County, he said, “is the trump card of Florida’s Republican Party, the only county in the state with a population of over 500,000 that’s still red” and it’s the backstop in the presidential campaign.
“We have neglected vast parts of Lee County,” he argued. “Those are folks who used to vote for Democrats, when Democrats talked to them about the things they were concerned about.”
People, he said are concerned about their safety, their future, their children and their homes. He called for giving people affordable healthcare and “a standard of living that respects their human dignity” as well as good jobs as opposed to the low-wage jobs that are being generated now. He called for investing in people and building a community that helps them meet their needs. In contrast, he said, this year Republican candidates in Southwest Florida are offering nothing but abject worship of Trump.
Holden said he has already raised $100,000 and he was investing the money in staff for a vigorous campaign that will emphasize grassroots organizing and turning out voters. He intends to double the $600,000 he raised in his 2018 race. He also noted that he had been endorsed by Todd Truax, his opponent in the 2018 primary.
“We’re investing in people here to help us get out message out, to identify our voters and to make sure they vote” he said. “And if they vote for me that means they’ll vote for the Democratic nominee for president and we’ll both win,”
The House votes to send the articles of impeachment to the Senate. The final nay tally was 193. (Photo: US House)
January 15, 2020 by David Silverberg
Updated 6:00 pm with comments and statements.
The US House of Representatives at 1:33 pm today voted to send articles of impeachment against President Donald J. Trump to the US Senate by a vote of 228 to 193.
The vote on House Resolution 798 was along party lines with only one Democrat, Rep. Collin Peterson (D-7-Minn.), voting against the resolution.
Southwest Florida representatives, Republican Reps. Francis Rooney (District 19), Mario Diaz-Balart (District 25) and Greg Steube (District 17), followed Party discipline and voted against the resolution.
“House Dems have wanted to impeach @realDonaldTrump since his first day in office and they stopped at nothing to ensure he was impeached in the House. I hope my colleagues in the Senate spend more time examining facts than the House did during our impeachment circus,” tweeted Steube. “Today, Articles of Impeachment that have no basis in the Constitution are being sent to the Senate. If this was a court of law, these Articles would be dismissed upon arrival.”
Rooney did not address the impeachment vote. His mind was on Russia: “Putin’s proposed constitutional reforms to limit his Presidential successor’s powers is a sign that he has no plans to relinquish power after his term expires. Regardless of what happens in 2024, he will continue to rule over the Russian Federation,” he tweeted.
Diaz-Balart did not make a statement on the impeachment vote but did issue a tweet supporting democracy in Venezuela. “The U.S. continues to stand behind Venezuela’s legitimate president @jguaido. Freedom will prevail,” he wrote.
Among candidates, Democratic congressional candidate Cindy Banyai tweeted: “Happy to see progress on the impeachment. Looking forward to a well structured Senate trial. I implore the leadership to allow additional witnesses so we can learn the truth. Every action must be taken to defend our democracy.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi names House impeachment managers. From left to right: Reps. Hakim Jeffries, Zoe Lofgren, Jerry Nadler, Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Val Demings, Sylvia Garcia, Jason Crow.
Jan. 15, 2020 by David Silverberg
Floridian Rep. Val Demings (D-10-Fla.) has been named one of seven impeachment managers appointed today by House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-12-Calif.).
A second-term member of Congress, Demings represents the area around Orlando.
Born March 12, 1957 (aged 62) in Jacksonville, Fla., she was first in her family to graduate college and began her career as a social worker in Jacksonville. In the early 1980s she moved to Orlando to join the police department and was named Orlando’s first female police chief in 2007.
She first ran for Congress in 2012, narrowly losing to Republican Rep. Daniel Webster. She ran again in 2016, winning with 64.9 percent of the vote and was re-elected in in a primary in 2018 with 75 percent of the vote.
The other impeachment managers as announced by Pelosi are:
Adam Schiff (D-28-Calif.), Lead Manager, Chair of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, serving his 10th term. Before Congress, Schiff was a California State Senator and served as federal prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles for 6 years, most notably prosecuting the first FBI agent ever to be indicted for espionage.
Jerry Nadler (D-10-NY), Chair of the House Judiciary Committee, serving his 15th term. Nadler has served as the top Democrat on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitution, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties for 13 years. Before Congress, Nadler served in the New York State Assembly for 16 years.
Zoe Lofgren (D-16-Calif.) Chair of the Committee on House Administration, which has jurisdiction over federal elections, serving her 13th term. She has played a role in three presidential impeachment proceedings: as a Judiciary Committee staffer during Nixon, as a Judiciary Committee Member during Clinton, and now as a Manager.
Hakeem Jeffries (D-8-NY), Chair of the House Democratic Caucus, serving his 4th term in Congress. He is a Member of the House Judiciary Committee. Before Congress, Jeffries served in the New York State Assembly for 6 years. An accomplished litigator in private practice before running for elected office, Jeffries clerked for Judge Harold Baer Jr. of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.
Jason Crow (D-6-Colo.), member of the House Armed Services Committee. Crow served as an Army Ranger in Iraq and Afghanistan. Before running for elected office, he was a litigator in private practice in Colorado.
Sylvia Garcia (D-29-Texas), member of the House Judiciary Committee. Before Congress, where she is serving her first term, Garcia served in the Texas State Senate. Previously, she was the Director and Presiding Judge of the Houston Municipal System and was elected City Controller. She was later elected the first Hispanic and first woman to be elected in her own right to the Harris County Commissioner’s Court.
The managers will oversee the impeachment trial in the Senate.
The vote to limit President Donald Trump’s ability to wage war on Iran, taken yesterday in the House of Representatives.
Jan. 10, 2020 by David Silverberg
Today Rep. Francis Rooney (R-19-Fla.) explained his vote yesterday in favor of House Concurrent Resolution 83, limiting President Donald Trump’s ability to wage war on Iran.
Rooney’s statement in response to a query from The Paradise Progressive follows in full:
“There are several issues in this vote and resolution. First, the Congress must exercise its authority under Article 1 of the Constitution to declare war or approve military engagement. Unfortunately, ever since the Vietnam War there has been a steady and consistent evisceration of Congress’ role in consultation, review or approval of military engagement.
“Second, we need a long-term strategy for Iran which exploits the asymmetry between what the people want and what the government will provide. Our Farsi radio broadcasts into Iran show clearly a connection with the people which runs counter to the repressive Iranian regime. Like the containment strategy which brought down the Soviet Union, we can play long ball in Iran.
“Third, the internecine conflicts in Iraq among Shia subsects is a positive development for the United States which we should let percolate instead of giving the people a new enemy to focus on.
“None of this deals specifically with the killing of General Soleimani, which in fact has worked out well—one less bad guy and a deliberate deflection of conflict by Iran, ending the stage-by-stage escalation between the United States and Iran which has ensued since May.”
Rep. Francis Rooney (R-19-Fla.) defied President Donald Trump and Republican Party discipline tonight and was one of only three Republicans voting for House Concurrent Resolution 83 (HConRes) calling for restrictions on Trump’s ability to go to war with Iran.
In another astonishing vote, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-1-Fla.), a vociferous Trump defender, also voted for the resolution. The third Republican breaking ranks was Rep. Thomas Massie (R-4-Ky.).
Southwest Florida Reps. Greg Steube (R-17-Fla.) and Mario Diaz-Balart (R-25-Fla.) voted the party line against the resolution.
The final vote was 224 to 194, largely along party lines. Eight Democrats voted against the resolution.
As a concurrent resolution, the measure is not a law, is non-binding and does not require the president’s signature. Rather, it expresses the sentiment of both houses of Congress concurrently. Despite this, concurrent resolutions can be powerful indicators of congressional opinion.
As of this writing, Rooney had not issued a statement regarding his vote.
The resolution directs the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to terminate the use of United States Armed Forces to engage in hostilities in or against Iran.
“Over the past eight months, in response to rising tensions with Iran, the United States has introduced over 15,000 additional forces into the Middle East. The killing of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani, as well as Iran’s ballistic missile attack on Iraqi bases, risks significant escalation in hostilities between the United States and Iran,” states the text of the resolution. “When the United States uses military force, the American people and members of the United States Armed Forces deserve a credible explanation regarding such use of military force.”
While the resolution calls for termination of hostilities against Iran unless there is a declaration of war or a need to defend against imminent attack, it calls on the president to consult with Congress “in every possible instance” before introducing United States Armed Forces into hostilities as required in the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541).
In an 8:20 am tweet, Trump stated: “Hope that all House Republicans will vote against Crazy Nancy Pelosi’s War Powers Resolution.”
Gaetz explained his vote on Twitter and in a floor statement: “I represent more troops than any other member of this body. I buried one of them earlier today at Arlington. If our service members have the courage to fight and die in these wars, Congress ought to have the courage to vote for or against them. I’m voting for this resolution.”
Steube also issued his statement on Twitter: “Today I voted against House Concurrent Resolution 83, also known as the War Powers Resolution. This resolution puts House Democrats’ political agenda ahead of American security by limiting the ability of the president to respond to imminent threats on American and our interests. During these uncertain times, the president must have the ability to take decisive action against the terrorist Iranian regime.”
House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-12-Calif.) denounced Trump’s attitude toward Congress as “disdainful” given his lack of consultation. She said the killing of Soleimani had not made the United States any safer.
“We must avoid war,” Pelosi told Mary Bruce of ABC News. “And the cavalier attitude of this administration, it’s stunning. The president will say, ‘I inform you by reading my tweets.’ No, that’s not the relationship that our founders had in mind in the Constitution of the United States when they gave power to the White House to do one thing in terms of our national security and to the Congress to declare war and to allocate resources and the rest.
“It’s a very big issue now because it’s nothing less than preventing war as we honor our first responsibility to protect the American people,” she said.
The progressive activist organization, MoveOn.org, is calling for a Day of Action to protest against war with Iran on Thursday, Jan. 9 at 5 pm.
MoveOn.org Civic Action is a progressive 501(c)(4) organization which primarily focuses on nonpartisan education and advocacy on national issues.
As of this writing the closest event scheduled in Southwest Florida is a protest scheduled at the Charlotte County Courthouse in Punta Gorda.
“We will not be forced into another war. On Thursday, January 9, at 5 p.m. local time, the anti-war majority in this country will get visible to oppose Trump’s war and say #NoWarWithIran,” states the organization’s “No War with Iran” website.
“Trump’s reckless action has needlessly endangered countless lives of U.S. troops, Iraqis, Iranians, and countless other civilians. The devastation that a war with Iran could bring upon the earth and humanity cannot be overstated—millions of lives hang in the balance,” it states. “When Trump acts with ignorance, fear, and ego, we will act with diplomacy and prioritize what is best for humanity. We are the majority. We stand united. And we oppose Trump’s war with Iran.”
Byron Donalds embraces President Donald Trump at a 2019 awards ceremony in South Carolina. (Byron Donalds campaign video)
Jan. 6, 2020 by David Silverberg
Byron Donalds
The 19th Congressional District has an eleventh declared candidate today as State Rep. Byron Donalds (R-80-Immokalee) announced in a campaign video that he will be running for the seat currently held by Rep. Francis Rooney.
This makes eight Republicans vying for the seat.
Donalds, long a self-described conservative, is running on a pro-Trump platform.
“I am everything the fake news media tells you doesn’t exist: a strong, Trump-supporting, gun-owning, liberty-loving, pro-life, politically incorrect black man,” he says in the video.
Donalds, 41, born in Brooklyn, NY and now a resident of Naples, has served in the Florida House of Representatives since 2016. He describes himself as a businessman.
He attended Florida A&M University and graduated Florida State University with a bachelor of science degree. He’s married to Erika Donalds, a vocal public education critic, and has three children. The rural 80th District covers parts of eastern Collier and Hendry counties.
Donalds first ran for Congress in the 19th District in 2012 when he was defeated in a five-way Republican primary by Trey Radel. In 2016 he defeated Joe Davidow in the 80th District Republican primary, which he won with 64.3 percent of the vote, putting him in the seat he holds now. In 2018, he defeated Democrat Jennifer Boddicker and Independent Dustin Lapolla in the general election, with 62.1 percent of 61,019 votes cast.
In his video, Donalds starts with a past drug bust that he says prompted him to turn his life around. “As a young man I was arrested for drug possession and theft. I knew I had to get my life together—and through the grace of God, I did,” he says of the undated event.
In a slap at gun control measures passed by the Florida legislature in the wake of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas shooting, Donalds states in his video: “When my own party caved to the liberals on your Second Amendment rights, I fought them—and will again.”
He also states that “I believe in the Constitution, the wall and that Socialism is another name for disaster” and he says, “Make no mistake, I will stand with the president against these impeachment radicals who trample our Constitution and paralyze our country with their dangerous lies.”
As of noon today, Donalds’ candidacy was not yet registered with the Federal Election Commission.
Campaign launches
This week two congressional candidates will officially launch their campaigns.
On Friday, Jan. 10, Democrat David Holden will hold his official campaign launch with a rally at Fleischman Park in Naples, from 4 to 7 pm, followed the next day by a second event in Fort Myers at the Broadway Palm Dinner Theater from 10 am to 12:30 pm.
On Wednesday, Jan. 8, Republican Rep. Heather Fitzenhagen (R-78-Fort Myers) will hold her campaign kickoff event at the Society restaurant in the Bell Tower mall in Fort Myers from 5 to 7 pm.
Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, head of the Iranian Quds Force, killed in a US drone strike in Iraq this morning.
Tracking official statements and positions by candidates and sitting officials is important for an informed electorate, so this year The Paradise Progressive will attempt to report official statements by Southwest Florida candidates and incumbents when major events break, in addition to its usual coverage.
Jan. 3, 2019 by David Silverberg
These are the official statements in reaction to the US killing of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Iraq, as of noon today, expressed through Twitter or Facebook.
Of three SWFL incumbents, two made statements.
Of two Democratic candidates, one made a statement.
Of seven Republican candidates, three made statements.
Incumbents:
Rep. Greg Steube (R-17-Fla.):
“Qassem Soleimani was an integral part of Iran’s terrorist regime and I applaud President Trump’s decisive action to bring him to justice. When I served in Operation Iraqi Freedom, many of my brothers and sisters in arms were killed by Iranian explosives at the direction of Seleimani. America, and the world, are safer now that his reign of terror has ended.”
“Soleimani plotted international acts of terrorism & has the blood of Americans & our allies on his hands. As the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds force, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization, who operated within Iran. Soleimani was responsible for numerous terrorist acts, instability in the region, & violence. I commend the Trump Admin for ridding the world of this evil man, and for taking the steps necessary to protect Americans and our allies from the terrorist threat posed by Iran.”
Republican congressional candidates (in alphabetical order)
Dane Eagle
“This decisive military action deals a blow to our chief adversary in the Middle East and will certainly save American lives. Very proud of our President, and once again disappointed in the Fake News for trying to portray this as anything other than an extraordinary victory.”
“The United States has an incredible intelligence apparatus that works hand in hand with the greatest military on earth. We are so fortunate to have a Commander in Chief like Donald J. Trump who acts swiftly and proportionally. Soleimani killed over 600 Americans and was the leader of terrorism sponsored by Iran. This was a good day for the United States of America.”
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on the streets of New York in her campaign video, Courage to Change.
Jan. 2, 2020 by David Silverberg
The story is told that Napoleon Bonaparte, when asked which historical generals he most admired, responded: “The ones that won.”
As it is with generals, so it is with political candidates. All the ideals in the world don’t make a difference if you don’t win your election.
It’s no secret for Democrats in Southwest Florida that the odds of winning an election are long. But there are candidates who faced similar odds in other circumstances and overcame them. What did they do right and what lessons can Southwest Floridians learn from them?
This article, the first in a series, will examine some of the mechanics of campaigning. In this one, we’ll look at elements of the ground game, the getting from A to B, or as one person called it, “the hustle.”
Pound the pavement, knock on doors
Perhaps no one is a better embodiment of the successful, come-from-nowhere insurgent than Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-14-NY), now nearly universally referred to as AOC. On June 26, 2018, the 28-year-old Boston University graduate and sometime bartender defeated Rep. Joe Crowley, a 10-term incumbent and the fourth-most senior Democrat in the House of Representatives in the Democratic primary.
AOC campaigned early, often and relentlessly—and her supporters did the same.
“In a year of campaigning, Ocasio-Cortez and her volunteers made a hundred and seventy thousand phone calls, knocked on a hundred and twenty thousand doors, and sent a hundred and twenty thousand text messages,” wrote David Remnick in a New Yorker profile. “Ocasio-Cortez spent the last week of the campaign going door to door, hoofing it to the end.”
AOC stops to change shoes as depicted in her campaign video.
“Look, it’s a credit to her. She did a very good job of organizing and in generating a turnout spike among younger voters,” an unnamed political expert told reporter Grace Segers of CityandStateNY.com.
“Something I can’t emphasize enough: There is no replacement for strong volunteer canvass. $3 million dollars is not a replacement for volunteer canvass. If you’re wondering what you can do to change the political situation right now, the answer is ‘volunteer canvass,’” analyst Michael Kinnucan wrote in Jacobinmag.com. “Ocasio-Cortez — a brilliant candidate at the right moment — brought in a whole mess of volunteers from all over the place, from other organizations as well as off the street.”
The same went for volunteers for Doug Jones, the insurgent Democrat who in 2017 defeated Republican Roy Moore for the US Senate seat in Alabama.
Doug Jones celebrates his 2017 senatorial victory in Alabama.
“Roy Moore had no ground game,” Rebecca Rothman, a Doug Jones organizer told Collier County Democrats during a visit to Party headquarters in December 2017. “They were so confident of winning that they didn’t put out any lawn signs or go door-to-door.” In contrast, Jones supporters vigorously went door-to-door, canvassing neighborhoods. The visits were critical even in areas that were regarded as safely Democratic because they helped turn out the vote there.
Closer to home and on a state level, the 2018 special election victory of Margaret Good in State District 72 in Sarasota was also the result of activist mobilization and grassroots, door-knocking efforts.
Margaret Good
Good was running in a majority Republican district very similar to those in Lee and Collier counties but overcame her numerical disadvantage with a strong field operation.
“Very early we made a conscious decision to invest in the field organization,” Reggie Cardoza, the director of political operations for Democrats in the Florida House, told the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. “The most effective and efficient way to reach a voter is face to face.”
That kind of campaigning not only introduces the candidate to voters, it expands the electorate; people who may never have voted before can be inspired to go to the polls for the first time.
Margaret Good is now running for Congress in the 16th Congressional District against Republican incumbent Rep. Vern Buchanan.
In Southwest Florida, where Democratic candidates have to find new voters in order to win, face-to-face campaigning can start to make the necessary difference—and nowhere is it more important and more effective than when it’s done by the candidate in person.
Keeping tech in its place
Digital technology is seductive. It’s a great ego boost for a candidate or campaign to put up Facebook posts and see the yellow line of page visitors rise and count the numbers of “engagements”—actions taken by visitors—and to believe that this constitutes real progress in convincing voters.
It does constitute progress—but without face-to-face, on the ground introductions and follow-up, it also means nothing.
Before going further, let’s ask a crucial question: What do we mean when we refer to “technology?” Marshall McLuhan, the famous thinker and author of Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, wrote that technology is an extension of a human capability by artificial means. In this instance, think of a loudspeaker or amplifier broadcasting or amplifying the sound of a person’s voice.
All recent successful campaigns have used technology, chiefly digital media, in new and creative ways to broaden their messages. Savvy politicians have always realized that new technologies extend their ability to reach voters. What newspapers and telegraphs did for Abraham Lincoln and radio did for Franklin Roosevelt, so Twitter did for Donald Trump—and for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
If Donald Trump uses digital media, especially Twitter, as a weapon, he uses it like a madman waving a club, swinging it insanely in all directions and battering anything and everything around him. AOC uses digital media like a dagger, thrusting it at a focused target and driving it home with the greatest impact.
In addition to her 2018 campaign’s 120,000 text messages and her massive Twitter use, AOC’s campaign produced a moving, beautifully crafted 2-minute video called “The Courage to Change.” It effectively introduced AOC, her platform, the issues and called for action. It cost less than $10,000 to make and it was durable; no matter what was happening in the news, it served over the long term of the campaign. It was never broadcast by local television stations or used in paid advertising but while it was only distributed digitally, it went viral and has had over a million views—and keeps being accessed to this day.
Unfortunately, in Southwest Florida, there is no reliable, publicly-available data on people’s media habits, so it’s very hard for a campaign to determine which platforms people use most and trust. As a result, campaigns can’t focus their messages accordingly.
However, it seems safe to say that given Lee and Collier counties’ high proportion of older people, traditional media (television and print newspapers) and more established social media (Facebook, perhaps Twitter) are probably their leading information sources, as opposed to newer applications like Instagram or Tik-Tok.
In Southwest Florida, Democratic candidates cannot rely on established mainstream media to do its traditional, constitutional job of objectively and comprehensively covering politics and government. Politics is a very low priority for local media and Democratic and progressive activity is usually overlooked, ignored or dismissed (hence the reason for The Paradise Progressive).
As a result, any Democratic campaign in Southwest Florida has to build its own media machine and aggressively push out its message. Fortunately, digital media provides a low-cost means of doing that. (Ironically, various digital platforms’ crackdown on false and misleading political messages also means cutting off a channel for low-financed, insurgent political campaigns.)
But media can only do so much. For those voters—and most importantly, new and potential voters who might not subscribe to digital media channels, nothing can take the place of a knock on the door, a friendly greeting and a handshake, or what’s known in campaign slang as “pressing the flesh.”
There is simply no substitute for committed, energetic, continuous, face-to-face campaigning, especially in person by the candidate.
Pressing the flesh—effectively
Former President Bill Clinton addresses a crowd in Immokalee, Nov. 1, 2016. (Photo: author)
Former Democratic President Bill Clinton is the ultimate “people person.” Those who have met him have commented on his uncanny concentration on the person he’s with, making that person feel like he or she is the most important person in the universe—indeed, the only person in the universe.
Clinton’s people skills were on display on Nov. 1, 2016 in Collier County when he visited Immokalee on a campaign swing for his wife Hillary.
Although it was a small gathering for a man who has addressed massive crowds, Clinton nonetheless treated the audience with the same respect he would show a national convention. He was articulate and intelligent, addressing people as peers. He was unfazed by brief heckling and argued convincingly when challenged, showing full command of facts and figures.
But it was actually after he finished speaking that the complete Clinton treatment was on full display. Clinton just loved being there. An observer could see and feel it. Clinton gave the impression that there was nothing in the world he would rather be doing than shaking hands and posing for selfies with voters in the heat of Immokalee. His enjoyment seemed to just wash over the crowd and radiate outward. These were the people he most wanted to meet and the crowd reciprocated his pleasure. He would have stayed for hours if his entourage hadn’t pulled him away.
Clinton’s famous empathy and focus won him his elections in Arkansas and took him to the White House. It marks him as one of the most effective politicians in American history. And speaking clinically, it’s a key to making personal appearances effective with voters.
It’s also something AOC has, according to Michael Kinnucan: “If you’ve ever been in a room with Ocasio-Cortez, you know what I mean. She has the thing. You don’t need the thing, lots of sitting politicians don’t have it, but when you find it —it’s something else.”
It’s best if a candidate has “the thing” in her or his bones but it can be developed.
“The digital age has turned many of us into multitaskers who are constantly on the lookout for our next dopamine burst of novelty,” according to Geoffrey Tumlin, author of Stop Talking, Start Communicating: Counterintuitive Secrets to Success in Business and in Life. Clinton, on the other hand, “has the ability to connect with an audience and then turn around and make the person who was helping with the slideshow feel like they’re the most important person there.”
In the 2014 article “How to Communicate like Bill Clinton” in the magazine Fast Company, Tumlin provided tips on making effective personal appearances. (They are: unplug from technology; seek out conversations; adopt “we-based” communication forms; empathize; and practice.) They’re lessons Southwest Florida Democratic candidates need to learn.
A winning candidate here should enjoy meeting people, being with them, listening to them and winning them over. It’s best if this is instinctive behavior but if it’s not, it can be learned. By the same token, a candidate who is detached, remote, aloof, dismissive or passive will definitely not succeed.
Hustle
So in-person campaigning, technological savvy and empathy are some of the tactics that will help Democrats win in Southwest Florida. But all of this is nothing without sheer hard work, the willingness and drive to get up every morning and do what needs to be done, to campaign at every moment and opportunity, to inherently want to win over voters.
AOC put this very well after her victory. Her stunning upset had pundits pointing to every possible factor to explain her success, a major one of which was the change in her district from majority white to majority Latino.
But AOC was having none of it. She knew how much work she and her campaign had put into the effort. On June 29, 2018 she tweeted out her reply:
“Some folks are saying I won for ‘demographic’ reasons.
“1st of all, that’s false. We won w/voters of all kinds.
“2nd, here’s my 1st pair of campaign shoes. I knocked doors until rainwater came through my soles.
“Respect the hustle. We won bc we out-worked the competition. Period.”
Pound the pavement; expend the shoe leather; respect the hustle: that willingness to work is the key ingredient if Democrats are ever to win in Southwest Florida.
Yet another Republican candidate has filed to fill Florida’s 19th Congressional District seat being vacated by Rep. Francis Rooney.
Darren Dionne Aquino, a resident of Naples, formerly of New York, filed his candidacy with the Federal Election Commission on Tuesday, Dec. 17.
Aquino’s filing brings to 10 the number of candidates running for the seat: seven Republicans, two Democrats and one Independent.
In a single, unpunctuated, 228-word run-on sentence on his Facebook page, Aquino states that he’s running “to make a difference for the American people we all sit by and watch our elected officials do more self-serving than they do constituent serving…” [sic].
Aquino declared his candidacy for mayor of New York City in 2017 but did not file for the Republican primary election. He has been an advocate for veterans and the disabled. He played a disabled police officer on “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” a mobster on “The Sopranos” and mayor of New York in the 2017 movie, The Streetz.