Vintage Scott

Let’s see if we have this right. Gov. Scott is now requesting a health summit so that he can “work together” with the Obama Administration on health care and lower costs associated with Medicaid. The governor, according to spokesman Jackie Schutz, “wants to work with HHS (Health and Human Services) to identify health care services that are good for Florida families. … He has said that just saying ‘no’ is not an acceptable answer.”

How transparently disingenuous. “No,” of course, is exactly what Scott, Pam Bondi & Co. would still be saying if Mitt Romney were president-elect because “Obamacare” would still be targeted for a Florida-led repeal. Even Tea Party jihadists must be embarrassed by Plan B.

“Flori-duh” Upshot

Another presidential election, another national embarrassment. Florida Sham, The Sequel. But this time, perversely enough, it might have been worth it.

* You could make a case that a voter-suppression cabal translated into voter-backlash results.

* You could also make the case that efforts to reform Florida voting now have the ultimate mandate. No state–certainly not one that aspires to increase its competitiveness and ratchet up its business credibility and profile–can afford Third World labeling on Election Day. Avoiding further national and international disgrace is surely a bipartisan issue. Surely.

* Now everybody else knows what we know. Rick Scott is not merely an economically counterproductive, unpopular ideologue who was shunned by the Mitt Romney campaign, he is also manifestly incompetent, duplicitous and arrogant. The way he defended the election debacle was less impressive than his stonewalling, Medicare-fraud deposition. He never even apologized to South Florida voters who queued up on Tuesday and wound up voting on Wednesday. Even some Tea Partiers had to be wincing at the self-inflicted “Flori-duh” refrain that was regretfully recycled. His problematic re-election chances have likely tanked.

* The chances of somebody–other than Charlie Crist or a member of the McBride household–taking on and defeating Scott have now increased. As in former Tampa Mayor Pam Iorio, who previously served as Hillsborough County supervisor of elections and president of the State Association of Supervisors of Elections.  She’s speaking out authoritatively on the need for a statewide review of voting–and is culling key individuals to brainstorm on reforms.

This is an issue that resonates personally with Iorio. Not only has she supervised elections that didn’t draw detractors, she has studied voting implications–as a civil rights dynamic–when earning her master’s degree in American history at USF.

She’s a well-regarded, popular ex-mayor of an I-4 Corridor anchor city with more yet to do in the public-service arena. Now she has a statewide forum, if not vehicle. It’s what she has been lacking if she wanted to make a gubernatorial run against an ever-more vulnerable incumbent in 2014.

Guns In The News

It has nothing to do with Stand Your Ground, semi-automatic-weapon sales or further perversions of the Second Amendment. But guns are back in the news around here. We now know that a person fronting for someone else in the purchase of a firearm that is used in a double murder is not guilty of a crime. Even if the person fronted for had no way to legally buy it–and the adult “straw buyer” knew it. There are no penalties for those who knowingly buy guns for those legally prohibited from doing so. That’s because no state law has been broken.

That’s the unconscionably outrageous upshot in the case of Benjamin Bishop who gave $279 to a buddy to buy the 12-gauge shotgun that Bishop, an 18-year-old schizophrenic with a criminal record and history of drug addiction, used to kill his mother and her boyfriend.

Bishop might be adjudged criminally insane; a court of law will ultimately determine that. But it’s crazy to allow the straw purchase of weapons. This isn’t addled ideology; this is criminal negligence and statutory stupidity.

R.I.P. And Thank You, Sam Gibbons

Over the years, as a writer for the Tampa Bay Business Journal and media relations manager at USF, I had opportunities to cover and interact with the late Sam Gibbons, the iconic congressman who never lost an election. He was invariably friendly, polite, self-effacing and direct. He was a Tampa native who never forgot his roots or whom he represented.

Thanks to Tom Brokaw, Sam Gibbons became an avatar of “The Greatest Generation.” He was that important–but never self-important. He was what a public official should be–and he was ours.

Once Gibbons retired from Congress (in 1997) after 17 terms, there were far fewer opportunities to meet up with him.

Then about two years ago I heard Sam Gibbons and John Germany give a co-lecture at the Tampa Bay History Center. It was about the birth of USF; Gibbons was its “founding father.” The presentation was informative and anecdote-laden.

I was reminded what a treasure Gibbons was. Some people know history. Some lived through it. Sam Gibbons helped make it. From Normandy to Tallahassee to Washington. Along the way, he was a key catalyst in reshaping Tampa.

But now he was in his ninth decade and needed a cane to get around. Intimations of mortality were manifest. I resolved to reserve some time with this Tampa institution–who was born during the Woodrow Wilson administration–while we were still fortunate enough to have him in our civic midst.

We met at his place, the Canterbury Tower retirement residence in South Tampa. Three hours never seemed like 30 minutes before. It was more tour de force recollections than interview. From parachuting behind enemy lines on D-Day to pushing for the establishment of USF and Head Start. From accompanying President John F. Kennedy in Tampa days before the assassination to jawing with President Lyndon Johnson over Vietnam. From being one of Congress’ staunchest advocates of free trade to throwing a righteous, congressional-committee fit over Medicare reform. The details came cascading back. He was still nimble where it mattered most.

One conversational habit was particularly pertinent. He invariably spoke in the first person plural. “Nobody ever accomplished anything alone,” he explained modestly, sort of a precursor to “you didn’t build that by yourself.”

D-Day Recalled

Nothing was more mesmerizing than his account, delivered in less-than-heroic and sometimes wry fashion, of his Normandy experience. I, however, felt queasy just listening.

Some background: 24-year-old Army Captain Gibbons and the other 600 members of the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment had been practicing in Southern England near Newberry, about 60 miles west of London. But the real thing, come June 6, 1944, was nothing like the dress rehearsal.

For openers, it was at night (1:00 a.m.), and the C-47 had to keep its lights and radio off. It was part of an ultra-tight formation. “Were we scared? We were young and optimistic, but, no, we didn’t think we were immortal,” recalled Gibbons. “But, yes, you always feel like you’ll be one of the survivors. But the actual jump? Hell, it was more of a relief. We were just glad to get out of that airplane. You could hear small arms hitting the sides of the plane. And we have all this fuel on board.”

Gibbons acted as jump master for his 17 fellow paratroopers as they descended from the relative impunity of 2,500 feet to the absolute peril of 800 feet, well within enemy range.

They landed behind Utah Beach in the Cotentin Peninsula near the Normandy town of Carentan on the main road between Cherbourg and Paris. Right in the heart of French dairy-farmland. “Picturesque,” impishly noted Gibbons, “except for the Germans.”

“After about 30 hours without sleep, we had to take a break,” said Gibbons. “The weather was perfect. Not a cloud–or a plane–in the sky. Surrounded by farms. Perfect picnic weather except you were being shot at.”

Living off the land, the Americans, courtesy of Gibbons, were once memorably treated to a touch of home. Gibbons’ 40-pound knapsack contained two cans of Schlitz beer that he had stuffed into his gas mask before jumping. (They were what was left of a case given him by sailors aboard the American cruiser Quincy, a D-Day rehearsal participant.) He bayoneted them open and passed them around during a break in the action. The Schlitz incident had been a local tale until a captivated Brokaw informed readers in “The Greatest Generation.”

The Germans had the Americans outgunned. More than half of the 501st never made it home. Gibbons recalled communicating by clicks of a metal, noise-making “cricket” and living the aphorism of foxholes as atheist-challenged enclaves.

“The Germans were probably100 yards away,” said Gibbons. “You do get kind of introspective when you’re being shot at,” he deadpanned. “I remember praying. And thinking that they were probably praying too. They were, what, Lutherans, I guess. So they were probably praying to the same God. I figured it put God in an awkward place.”

Gibbons went on to fight in the Battle of the Bulge and would leave the service as a major. He would also leave with a Bronze Star. Later he would be awarded the French Legion of Honor. He was a true American hero.

Kennedy Connection

By the time Gibbons reached the U.S. House of Representatives in 1962, he already had some standing within the Kennedy White House. He was John F. Kennedy’s Florida point man in the 1960 presidential campaign, having been personally picked by Robert Kennedy while he was still a Florida state senator. He would later team up with Sargent Shriver to establish Head Start.

As it turned out, Sam and Martha Gibbons and their three kids moved in near Bobby and Ethel Kennedy and their family–by then well on its way to 11 children. The Gibbons and Kennedy kids used to play together and ride ponies at the Kennedy’s. Sam and Bobby stayed in touch after the latter became a senator from New York.

“He was always polite,” recalled Gibbons of Bobby Kennedy. “Called me ‘Senator’ when I was still in Tallahassee. I never saw that ‘ruthless side’ that was written about. He had a wife and all those children who loved him. He had loyal friendships.”

He also knew JFK well enough to help escort him around on his Nov. 18 Tampa visit just days before Dallas. They shared a motorcade limo as well as a stage at old Al Lopez Field.

The crowd that day, said Gibbons, was more “enthusiastic” than expected. “He wasn’t that popular before the election. But now whole schools got off. Whole families got together. The president waved and shouted back. Even had the limo stop a few times to get out and talk with the crowds. I remember him saying, ‘Sam, you’ve sure got a lot of pretty girls in this city.'”

As for security, Gibbons said that he wasn’t privy to details or rumors, although he noted that Secret Service agents rode on the presidential limo’s rear bumper throughout the downtown motorcade. Nor was he overly aware of the beefed-up police presence–from overpasses to the Floridan Hotel. “I guess I was too busy waving to the crowd,” he reasoned.

Later that day Gibbons would accompany JFK to Miami and then back to Washington on Air Force One and on to the White House via helicopter. Among the topics broached on that return trip: JFK’s re-election chances–especially the prospects of his presumed opponent, Sen. Barry Goldwater, the Arizona archconservative. Kennedy’s assessment: “Don’t worry about Goldwater. We’ve got him well researched.”

The Johnson Relationship

Gibbons’ relationship with Kennedy’s successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, was more complicated.

One time LBJ called him to the White House to talk about Gibbons, a member of the House Education/Labor Committee, playing a key role in anti-poverty legislation. Taken aback, Gibbons asked, “Why me?” LBJ’s reply: “Because you can speak Southern but vote Northern.”

Another time Johnson invited him over to try and defuse Gibbons’ increasingly vocal opposition to the Vietnam War. It didn’t work.

“I said, ‘You haven’t got a plan. You can’t win. You’re grinding up people.’ He about threw me out. Held my arm all the way to the door.”

They later resumed a cordial relationship after Johnson left office amid the societal upheaval caused by Vietnam.

When it was time for Gibbons himself to leave office, he knew it, he underscored. And unlike President Johnson, he would be going out on his own terms. After 35 years in Congress, including a stint as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, the 77-year-old knew when his best years were likely behind him.

“You have to know when it’s time,” he explained. “When I was there, I would notice some of my older colleagues had become, in ways, an embarrassment to the institution. I didn’t want that to happen to me. I retired before I stumbled or made an ass out of myself. I didn’t want to overstay.

“Oh, to be 75 again,” he said through a broad smile.

Sam Gibbons left Washington the way he entered. A courtly gentleman from Tampa, Florida. One for whom decency and honesty were givens, not clichés. One who answered to his conscience, not the agenda of “states’ rights” segregationists or the cajolery of lobbyists. He was a Tampa original, as well as a native.

Gibbons Outtakes

* American troops in harm’s way: “It must really be hell. People look alike, dress alike. Which one is the enemy? They can walk right up to you and kill you. I’d hate to be a soldier today.”

* Medical care: “The best medical system in the world? Well, first in cost. Go to Canada, for instance, and see if the average person likes their medical-care system. They love it. It’s mainly the vested interests in this country that say it’s terrible.”

* Cuba: “Our policy with Cuba is stupid. The craziest I’ve ever seen. Yes, from the beginning we had real differences. But that should have been settled with the missile crisis. They’re not a threat. Sure, I’ve been cussed at by Miami Cubans. But, no, I never considered it an actual threat.”

* Prospects of President Barack Obama: “I worry about Obama. That’s all I’ll say on that.”

* Most dramatic societal change he has witnessed: “The status of women in America. Used to be that working women were secretaries, clerks, teachers and nurses. I think we had three women in law school at UF. Now less than half are men.”

* What remains on America’s “to do” list that is invariably ignored: “I still say we should learn the metric system like the rest of the world, and we need a value-added tax.”

* Former President George and Barbara Bush: “I served with George Bush Sr. Smart. Likeable personality. Never saw him get mad at anyone. His wife, Barbara, she was smart too. But she was, well, tough as nails.”

* His D-Day “cricket”: “So many people asked me for it. I had to lie to so many. Finally, I gave it (along with his medals) to the Tampa Bay History Center.”

* Toughest vote: “Martha was the hardest vote I ever got. Her support was critical. More than a few campaigns were run out of (Tampa’s) 940 Sterling Avenue.”

Rick Scott Update

* New depths of disingenuousness were on display last week as Gov. Rick Scott blew into town to address the CEO Council of Tampa Bay luncheon in St. Pete. Rather than repeat contestable, Mitt Romney-denying, self-congratulating claims about how his administration’s policies are spearheading an economic turnaround, he altered the approach to suit his perpetual campaign. As has been his MO of late, he now favors context-free unemployment rates over job creations as a bragging point. So, he congratulated the CEOs for their part in reducing unemployment to an official 8.8 percent.

“In the last 24 months, you have taken our unemployment rate from one of the highest in the country…to, you now have (250,000) to 300,000 job openings every month in this state,” he gushed. Left unsaid but implied: “You couldn’t have done it without the guy at the top looking out for you. Let’s also hear it for me.”

* The governor recently dodged and parried reporter questions about the voter-registration fraud case that has embarrassed the Republican Party of Florida. He’s obviously learned to pivot, if not seamlessly, to a nominally related subject. In this case to underscoring the sheer value of Florida residents registering and then getting involved. “They (voters) need to go talk to the candidates,” he pointed out. “…Vet the candidates, get involved, pick your candidates, support them, and then go out to vote. That’s where my focus is.”

Anyone recall the focus obstacles for voters in the 2010 gubernatorial election? This is the hypocrite who wouldn’t sit down with editorial boards, which help some voters, yes, vet candidates. And if vetting voters wanted to see him in person, they needed to trek to Tea Party outposts such as Eustace or the Villages–and then hope they let non-believers in.

Retaining Merit Retention

Not that it matters to those it should matter most to in Tallahassee, but since 1976 we’ve had a nonpartisan “merit retention” system in this state for the governor’s appointed justices that has been working well, thank you. The MR system, in play every six years, weeds out the corrupt. Vetting takes care of qualifications before governors make their appointments.

The system works as intended even though decisions don’t please everybody. Of course, they don’t. It’s what happens when an independent judiciary goes about its business.

But if Amendment 5 passes next month, we would have a Legislature, already top-heavy in right-wing ideology, with the power to, among other things, confirm gubernatorial justice and judge appointments–to the Supreme Court and the appellate courts–and repeal court rules by a simple majority vote. In effect, we would have a judiciary morphing into another political branch of Florida government. Anybody likely have this in mind back in 1976?

Meanwhile, there is a disturbing, orchestrated, Republican PAC-financed effort underway to remove the three Supreme Court Justices up for merit retention next month. It’s unprecedented, high-handed payback by the state Republican party, outgoing House Speaker Dean Cannon and the usual accomplices who never got over some decisions not going their way. Justices R. Fred Lewis, Barbara J. Pariente and Peggy A. Quince have served honorably and have never had their integrity questioned, something that cannot be said of the loose Cannon, the Koch Brothers and others out to undermine the independence of the Florida judiciary. Justices Lewis, Pariente and Quince deserve better than shameless, political targeting.

Even more to the point, the citizens of Florida deserve better than a Supreme Court in jeopardy of being subject to political intimidation and power grabs. As well as one that could feature three Rick Scott appointees. We’re still stuck with Gov. Scott for two more years, but it’s unconscionable to think he could get the opportunity to add further to an onerous legacy that only begins with the high-speed rail debacle.

That Other Castro

It’s a nondescript, boxy office building amid the commercial clutter of Henderson Boulevard in South Tampa. Up on the fourth floor is a sparse complex of small rooms with the generic ambience of ad hoc office rental. Welcome to the latest–and 100th–Florida campaign office of the Obama campaign.

One of the rooms, however, was packed with audibly enthusiastic volunteers. They were being addressed–OK, “fired up”–by some notable cheerleaders, including Mayor Bob Buckhorn and U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor. Plus one out-of-state, political celebrity: youthful-looking San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, 38, of recent Democratic National Convention keynote fame.

Castro again referenced his grandson-of-a-housemaid, Pell Grants-through-Stanford University-and-Harvard Law back story. But his mission was to gin up campaign workers to push early voting in the ultimate swing state. Florida, he underscored, was “one of just a handful of states that are going to speak with a powerful voice for the nation.” He was also in the region to personify and rev up Hispanic support for the president. With good reason: More than a quarter of eligible voters in Florida are Latino. But, no, he wasn’t going to take the Castro name to South Florida to make the case among Cuban-exile Hispanics.

As for Texas, Castro said he could see his home state going blue within “six to eight years.” The key factors, he noted, were the rapidly increasing percentage of Hispanic voters, the relatively  “moderate” politics of today’s move-ins, and inevitable fall-out from right-wing overreach.

And speaking of ever-changing demographic patterns, might we one day see a Castro-Rubio presidential contest?

“Maybe Rubio, likely not me,” said Castro with an impish grin.

Oy Vey Politics

It’s no secret that a key Republican strategy for winning Florida is to cut into the Democratic margins among Hispanics and Jews. Especially the latter. Thanks to the Republican Jewish Coalition, the outreach approach is notably high profile these days along I-95 and the Florida Turnpike in Broward and Palm Beach counties. Motorists will notice recently launched, red-white-and-blue billboards with the message: “Obama…Oy Vey!!/Had Enough?”

“We’re trying to reach Jewish voters and make them understand that Obama is not a friend of Israel,” said Ira Sabin, a member of the RJC outreach campaign, to the Florida Jewish Journal.

Gawking readers are directed to the MyBuyersRemorse.com web site, which displays a series of ads in which non-actors tell their stories of why they supported Barack Obama in 2008 and what changed their mind. It also allows visitors to upload their own anti-Obama videos.

“I think it’s very troubling,” said state Rep. Lori Berman, D-Delray Beach. “I think it’s trying to put a wedge issue between the Jewish community. I think it’s counterproductive.”

Cuban Pander Update

Not that it matters to those in South Florida who demand politicians genuflect to their Cuban-exile cause, but Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan has voted–more than twice–against the Cuban trade embargo. They were confident that the congressman from Wisconsin, where unfettered agriculture trade and freedom to travel tend to trump the vendetta agenda of Cuban-American hardliners, would come around. He was, after all, a Republican on a presidential ticket. He had no other choice.

And sure enough, last Saturday Ryan had his scheduled epiphany right there in Little Havana’s Versailles restaurant, where political pander is as much a menu staple as cafe con leche. Bearing witness were those who make it their business to leverage their personal exile politics and ample influence against the best interests of this state and this country. Prominent among them: Chairwoman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs Ileana Ros-Lehtinen; Florida Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart; his brother, former Congressman and current Telemundo anchor Lincoln Diaz-Balart; and former Gov. Jeb Bush, who’s fluent in Spanish as well as Versailles-speak.

“They’ve given me a great education–lots of us in Congress–about how we need to clamp down on the Castro regime,” recited Ryan. Not going off script, he accused the Obama Administration, which had eased some travel and remittance restrictions, of “appeasement” and aired out the standard “brutal dictator” applause line for local consumption. He also promised that a Romney Administration would support “pro-democracy” groups in Cuba.

Here’s what he didn’t do: Offer support for pro-democracy groups in South Florida, where a well-heeled, revenge-driven minority still hold American foreign policy hostage when it comes to Cuba. Too bad Ryan didn’t champion a “South Florida Spring,” while he was in the pro-embargo, anti-freedom-to-travel hood.

But that would have taken guts, not to be confused with gall.