Category Archives: COMMENTARY

Roger Stone for Florida Governor? We Hope Not!

Roger Stone and a friend

Roger Stone and a friend

National Review has a story today on the possibility of Roger Stone – former Nixon “black arts” guy and all around egomaniac – running for Florida Governor.  Stone’s would be a libertarian, third-party challenge to incumbent Republican governor Rick Scott and the eventual Democratic nominee (presumably Charlie Crist at this point).

Such a challenge would likely pull votes away from Gov. Rick Scott, since the conventional wisdom is that most libertarians are disaffected Republicans – much like Mr. Stone himself.

While there’s nothing wrong with candidates running to prove a point, Mr. Stone is known for his extreme vanity and ability to stay in the news well past his prime in politics.  If he runs, it’ll all be about him…which we guess is little different than most politicians.  Stone serves largely as a sound bite machine and troublemaker rather than a serious political commentator at present.

Read the full story from National Review after the jump.

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RPOF Annual Meeting Recap; Rising Stars; Commentary

As expected, it was a rather uneventful meeting at the Rosen Center in Orlando as Republican State Committee members from across the state gathered to elect the state party officials, as well as the Congressional District chairs.  Though party leaders put on a public face of optimism with mostly recycled talking points, there was an underlying sense of dread about the prospects for Governor Scott’s reelection, despite a better than usual speech from the Governor.

Chairman Lenny Curry and Vice-Chair Blaise Ingoglia were elected without opposition, as were most of the other seats.  One interesting quote from Lenny Curry: “Being a Republican does not require an unyielding orthodoxy and not thinking.”

Some Winners and Losers and Rising Stars

Kathy King, the Manatee County Chair, was reelected as the RPOF Secretary – beating Stafford Jones, the Alachua County Chair.  Ms. King is not favored by all of the establishment of the RPOF Executive Board, and that’s probably why this challenge came up.  There was also an open seat for Assistant Secretary, for which Clint Pate won against two opponents, succeeding after a runoff.  These seats don’t have much real power, but can often be  a springboard to greater roles — remember that Mr. Ingoglia’s first position on the Executive Board was as Assistant Treasurer.

In more important news, the RPOF Executive Board is getting a little bit of fresh air in some of its Congressional District Chairs.  At long last, and thanks to the redistricting of the Congressional Districts, rising star Joe Gruters - Chairman of Sarasota County and one of the best county chairs in the state – was elected as a Congressional District Chair and will serve on the RPOF Executive Board.  The RPOF Establishment would do well by listening to his insights.  Christian Ziegler - The youthful State Committeeman from Sarasota – became an alternate CD Chair.

Leslie Dougher from Clay County was elected as the Chair of the County Chairs, replacing the aforementioned Kathy King, who held upwards of three titles simultaneously prior to this weekend.  This position is really only important because it gives its holder a seat on the Executive Board.  New Pinellas GOP Chair Michael Guju was elected as the Vice-Chair of the County Chairs, as well as a CD Chair Alternate.  Pinellas State Committeewoman Nancy Riley was elected as a CD Chair.  Former Pinellas GOP Chair JJ Beyrouti, as well as former Hillsborough GOP Chair Debbie Cox Roush, were selected as two of the Governor’s Appointees to the State Committee.  We are guessing that Governor Scott is trying to shore up some support in the I-4 Corridor, and given a recent poll, Scott needs all the help he can get there.

Overall, it was largely more of the same – a lot of empty rhetoric.  Though we hate to have a negative impression about the future of the party, we don’t believe the RPOF Party establishment will make much room for new ideas.

UPDATE: We’ll expand upon our “empty rhetoric” comment above.

As summarized in the Orlando Sentinel: “Scott and Curry urged a similar economic message that Mitt Romney embraced during his failed presidential run: that Republicans stand for freedom of opportunity and business. Ingoglia even suggested the party’s nickname — Grand Old Party — be recast as the Grand Opportunity Party. … “It is up to us in this room to not be tagged as the party of ‘no,’ but as the party of opportunity,” Curry said. … Orange County Republican Chairman Lew Oliver, however, said that message is not enough. Voters heard the “opportunity” message in 2012, he said — they just weren’t that interested.

It’s the “opportunity” rhetoric that we were referring to.  Mr. Romney often utilized this line during the campaign, but it didn’t resonate with the voters. It’s just a recycled line from the Romney campaign.

We believe the RPOF often gets caught up in a lot of discussion of new ideas with very little implementation. We’ve been attending these meetings for years, and have seen new ideas presented but largely ignored…the favored consultants generally run the show, along with staff, and most people presenting new ideas usually give up.   We don’t really have a problem with Mr. Ingoglia or Mr. Curry or anyone currently in power – it’s more of a structural problem. Having a meeting every quarter generally leads to new ideas being tabled or postponed, and thus taking a very long time to be implemented…if they are ever actually implemented.  New members of the committee often get discouraged.  There were a lot of new members on this year’s committee, so hopefully they will stay involved and active in improving the party.

 

Lawsuit Filed by Presumptive Miami-Dade State Committeeman Against RPOF for Not Seating Him

There’s an obscure provision required to become a State committeeman/woman in the RPOF.  You must file a loyalty oath with the RPOF in Tallahassee by June 8th, 2012.  Even if you are placed on the ballot and win the August election, you will not be seated unless the oath is in on time.

It looks like Renier Diaz de la Portilla, who lost a state house race but won the RPOF State Committeeman race, forgot to turn in his loyalty oath on time.  Rules are rules, and someone like Diaz de la Portilla should have known better than to not follow the rules.  Our opinion is that he screwed up and shouldn’t be seated.  But you can expect the inevitable talk about voters being “disenfranchised” and so forth.  Who knows how the lawsuit will play out, but we offer this article below from the Miami Herald about how this fight might be more involved than most observers realize.

We’ve also heard about another loser at the polls – David Rivera – trying to make a comeback by running for the Miami Dade REC Chair position.  If the REC members are foolish enough to reelect Rivera to this post, where he brought shame to the local party for his financial dealings, they deserve everything they get.  We’ve said before and we’ve said it again – REC positions should be for grassroots volunteers – not politicians currently in office or those like Rivera who are clearly looking for a comeback.  When you elect someone like Rivera, all they will do is focus on their own personal interests rather than the interests of the party.  There should be a prohibition in the RPOF rules against current elected officials seeking positions of Chairman or State Committeeman/woman.

Marc Caputo: Republican insider fight becomes headache for GOP

BY MARC CAPUTO
MCAPUTO@MIAMIHERALD.COM
MiamiHerald.com/columnists

A Republican is suing the Republican Party of Florida, saying it disenfranchised him and some Republican voters.

On its face, the lawsuit filed last week by former Miami-Dade School Board member Renier Diaz de la Portilla looks like a simple paperwork fight over an obscure party position.

But the underpinnings of the case are much more complicated, involving the byzantine politics of Miami-Dade and the behind-the-scenes battle in Tallahassee for who leads the Florida House in six years.

The lawsuit is also another public-relations headache for the Republican Party of Florida, which would prefer to focus its energies on bigger matters, like promoting Gov. Rick Scott.

But RPOF has no choice. It has to deal with Diaz de la Portilla.

He was elected Aug. 14 as Republican State Executive Committeeman from Miami-Dade. The party, though, refused to seat him. It said he forgot to submit a loyalty oath to the party in Tallahassee.

Diaz de la Portilla said that’s false.

“The law is on my side,” Diaz de la Portilla said. “I won the election. And I filed my loyalty oath. I don’t see what the problem is, why they want to disenfranchise Republican voters.”

Party spokesman Brian Burgess said RPOF isn’t cancelling Republican votes; it’s ensuring the rules are properly followed.

Burgess said he couldn’t comment on Diaz de la Portilla’s suit, filed last Tuesday. A Friday hearing on the case was delayed until another date.

Under party rules, candidates for executive committeeman were supposed to file loyalty oaths to the party between June 4 and June 8.

Diaz de la Portilla signed the oath June 5, got it notarized and promptly submitted it to the county and state elections offices as well as the local Republican Party, according to documents he filed in his lawsuit.

In a sworn affidavit, Miami-Dade Republican Party Executive Director Yulexis Argota said he faxed the loyalty oath to party headquarters in Tallahassee on June 6 and then personally spoke with a party official who confirmed receipt.

Burgess, though, said that this evidence presented by Diaz de la Portilla wasn’t “definitive proof” that he filed his oath properly. That means RPOF isn’t budging.

And Diaz de la Portilla won’t back down over the executive committeeman position, which has limited say and influence over the direction of the party. But the potential stakes are far bigger than this largely ceremonial party post.

After all, the committeeman battle is bound up in the fight over who becomes Florida House Speaker, from 2018 to 2020.

That post appears at the moment to have been won by Hialeah state Rep. Jose Oliva.

Diaz de la Portilla’s brother, Alex Diaz de la Portilla, wanted the job. But he lost his central Miami state House race in a general-election upset to Democrat Jose Javier Rodriguez.

Months before, Renier Diaz de la Portilla also lost his bid for a state House seat that he sought at the same time he ran for committeeman.

Assuming he and his brother won, Alex Diaz de la Portilla would have had a strong shot at the speakership (their oldest brother, Miguel, serves in the state Senate) because Republican House members choose the chamber’s leader in the GOP-controlled Legislature. Democrats essentially have no say.

Alex Diaz de la Portilla knows something about legislative leadership races; he helped engineer a coup that cost former Miami state Sen. Alex Villalobos his shot at becoming state Senate president in the 2009-10 sessions.

This year, as Renier and Alex Diaz de la Portilla ran for their house seats, Renier hedged his bets by simultaneously running for the committeeman slot. He won that post, salvaging a win against the man who beat him for the House seat, newly elected Rep. Manny Diaz Jr. – an ally of Oliva’s.

Then, in mid-October, the state party informed Diaz de la Portilla that he didn’t properly file his paperwork. It said that Diaz, the runner up in the committeeman race, would be seated instead.

Diaz de la Portilla tried to sound reasonable at the time and said all the votes cast for him should count.

“I hope to work with party officials to make sure that 30,000 Miami-Dade Republicans are not disenfranchised by this misunderstanding,” he told The Herald in October.

But the more the case develops, the less it looks like it’s a fight about the preference of rank-and-file voters for a position that few understand.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/12/09/3134608/republican-insider-fight-becomes.html#storylink=cpy

Shark Tank Blogger Caught Citing Yet Another Phony “Source”

President Obama, on December 3rd, stated via Twitter that:

“I’ve asked Debbie Wasserman Schultz to continue her excellent work as chair of the DNC. Thanks for all you do, Debbie. -bo”

On June 24th, 2012, Javier Manjarres, writer of the Shark Tank blog, wrote the following in an article entitled “DNC Chairwoman Wasserman Schultz Getting Booted”:

Back in April, the Shark Tank floated the likelihood that Democratic National Committee Chairwoman (DNC) Debbie Wasserman Schultz was perhaps on her way out as DNC Chairwoman. We now have learned that Wasserman Schultz will not be back as DNC Chairwoman after the November elections.

According to our source within the Democratic Party, who is also a close associate of Wasserman Schultz, the arrangements have already been made for her to leave DNC regardless if President Obama wins re-election or not.

This same source believes that Wasserman Schultz will be forced to resign behind closed doors and then stage a press event in which she tells Americans that her job as the DNC chair was a temporary one and that she is moving on with her congressional career.

Whoops.  More BS from the Shark Tank.  The only “source” that Manjarres has is largely his own imagination.  So many anonymous sources…so little time to quote them all.

Broward GOP Elects DeNapoli’s Slate of Petrocelli Candidates

It turns out the only drama in last night’s Broward REC election occurred before the meeting started.  Karen Harrington, in a typically classless act, dropped out just hours before the meeting began and attacked outgoing Chairman DeNapoli.  She claimed that “with the announcement that Mr. DeNapoli decided not to seek reelection, there was less of a need for me, and the fine individuals who were running on my slate to become officers of BREC. ”

The fact is that Harrington announced her candidacy two hours AFTER Mr. DeNapoli stated he wasn’t seeking another term.  DeNapoli said weeks ago that he wasn’t running to pursue a job opportunity outside of Broward County and endorsed his Executive Director Mr. Petrocelli as his successor for Chairman.

The reality is that Harrington knew she would be rejected soundly by the voting members of the BREC.  Mr. Petrocelli, who’s campaign for Chair was run by Mr. DeNapoli, released an endorsement list of over 250 REC members…out of a total of 385 or so voting members…to the committee members over the weekend. You can click on the image of the endorsements here: Rico Petrocelli Endorsements 11-29-2012.

Seeing that she was facing yet another loss after her epic losses to Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Harrington dropped out.  But instead of dropping out gracefully, she took more jabs at DeNapoli.  Her statement was probably written by her blogger-for-hire, Javier Manjarres of the Shark Tank, who was employed by Harrington for “advertising” purposes (cough cough).

Hopefully, now that DeNapoli’s entire slate of successors was elected, this is the last that Broward Republicans will ever see of Harrington and Manjarres.