Posted on 10/01/2001 6:42:11 AM PDT by areafiftyone
Driving around Florida Southern College's filled parking lot Thursday evening looking for a space confirmed a suspicion I had had a few weeks ago.
Gov. Jeb Bush may have a she-coon on his hands.
The last time he encountered the breed was in his first run for governor in 1994. During a debate, the native Floridian he was running against, the late Gov. Lawton Chiles, told him that the "he-coon walks just before the light of day."
Bush was befuddled, and then, defeated. It was the turning point in a close election.
While watching, on television, another native Floridian talk politics on the campaign trail several weeks ago, I was reminded of the ol' he-coon. The politician was a woman in a wide-brimmed straw hat and a floral-print dress. A reincarnation, of sorts, of Chiles' plaid shirt with rolled-up sleeves and well-worn hiking boots. She looked earnestly into the faces of those to whom she spoke. They smiled back like she'd offered them ice water on a hot Florida day.
She exuded the Lawton Chiles aura: down to earth, underdog, populist, blunt and not your everyday politician.
I was surprised that I had such a thought about former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno. She has more baggage around from the Clinton administration than a Samsonite warehouse. Weeks ago, I'd dismissed her in a conversation about politics, saying she may win the Democratic primary, but she couldn't contend against Bush.
She is abrasive. She is from South Florida -- a section of the state distrusted by the rest of it.
She may, indeed, as the polls show, have enough name-recognition and money-raising ability to easily win a Democratic primary. Two big names dropped from the race shortly after she announced.
But she would still face the obvious Republican candidate -- Gov. Bush, who, mano-a-mano, was a solid 20 percent ahead in one early poll.
Then again, Florida has had two Republican governors before Bush and neither could manage to win re-election. Women and minorities can provide the crucial votes needed by a candidate; Reno could attract both groups. My first thought while seeking an elusive parking space was that there must be something else going on at the college at the same time.
This is, after all, Polk County, and Reno is not only a Democrat, but a Clinton Democrat. When Chiles ran against Bush in 1994, Polk voted for Bush over its native son.
Reno had been scheduled as the speaker to open the college's Florida Lecture Series long before she decided to run for governor. The election is a year away. Surely not this many would come to hear a once-was attorney general talk about Florida history? There must be other things going on.
The college had moved the program from a smaller setting to Branscomb Auditorium, which seats about 1,800. The lower-level seats in the auditorium were nearly filled.
Reno spoke for about 45 minutes, telling how her grandfather, who didn't speak English at the time, didn't feel welcome in his new country until he arrived in Bartow in the early 1920s.
She told of how her mother built the house on the edge of the Everglades in which Reno grew up, because her parents were too poor to have it built. It was built on 21 acres, costing $11,500 back then, of what is now Kendall outside of Miami. It is the home where she and her mother rode out Hurricane Andrew in 1992. Except for a single lost shingle and screen damage, it was unaffected.
Reno told of losing her first election for the state Legislature in South Florida (barely losing to a Republican in the Nixon landslide of 1972), and waking up the day after the election feeling good about herself because she had followed the advice of her political mentor and had been true to herself rather than just telling voters what she thought they wanted to hear.
She answered questions for 10 or 15 minutes more. When she did not have an answer to one question, she asked the questioner to stay after the program and educate her.
She rides around the state in a red pickup truck. What you see with Reno is what you get.
Reno may radiate aw-shucks, but behind the scenes she has a sophisticated campaign organization, which, those close to her say, she mostly ignores in favor of gut feelings. Or, as she told one FSC student who asked for advice in his run for an office in student government, "Make sure you know what you are talking about. And don't be afraid to lose for standing up for what you believe in. You tried your best. Pick yourself up and move on."
That, she said, was exactly what she did after the Waco disaster and the controversy over reuniting Elian Gonzalez with his Cuban father.
I would have bet that conservative Polk County wouldn't have turned out more than a few hundred people to see Reno. But, then again, I didn't think a lanky Lakelander would be elected to the U.S. Senate by walking from the tip of the Florida Panhandle to the Florida Keys either.
In the long run, Thursday's turnout means nothing. Republican leaders in Polk can easily dismiss it as people turning out to see the first woman to be appointed U.S. attorney general, and only the second Floridian ever to hold such a high political office.
But Reno was well-received, and appeared to be just as personable a campaigner close up as she seems on television.
Assuming she wins the Democratic primary, can she beat Bush?
Probably not, at this juncture. But, then again, the time just before the light of day is far away. And the governor has this thing about underestimating the craftiness of the native raccoon population.
And that should frighten the hell out of Floridians.
Lawton Childs beat Jeb by scaring seniors, push-polling and other nefarious methods (plus your typical Democrat machine politics). I certainly expect Jeb to face the heat from these typical tactics coupled with the motivation of all those "disenfranchised minority voters" from last fall (let's see... that would be maybe 2 or 3 people according to that Civil Rights Commission's work).
If Janet Reno had an honest bone in her ugly body, she would confess her sins and her crimes during the Clinton years and go off to perform community service for the rest of her days.
Just one of the guys.
If I were a racoon, I'd be deeply offended.
Brown could have just plainly stated the number of attendees. He decided to play cute word games instead.
I bet there were a few hundred people there, tops.
She is a KILLER of innocent women and Children....how she can even show her ugly face is beyond me....Floriduh!! is just her kind of place...ignorant fools in the southern part.
She sure gives me the buckwheats.
The scary thing is that Reno believes people will vote for her, and many will.
It's time to drastically overhul and reform education, and while we're at it we need to all chip in and buy a network to fight the massive left wing hypnosis by the anchors.
Do you know, when Michael was asked to the meeting that resulted in him walking away from his job on L&0 over the attempts by Reno to control the content of TV from the hours of 6-11 at night, that all the NBC execs and Michael were prepped by Reno's staff to refer to her as "General"
No... I'm absolutley SERIOUS...
That would be one heck of a good whisper campaign... especially since she is trying to drop her "Top Cop" image for a kindler gentler "Ol' Shakey" straw hat approach to politicking.
I think large posters with images of all the kiddies that she fire bombed and murdered, at her various campaign do's would be cool... With LARGE RED LETTERS saying "How Many MORE OF OUR CHILDREN WILL YOU BE "SAVING" General Reno?" Oh yeah.. lots of Elian Gonazales stuff would be good as well... Especially the photo of the Storm Trooper holding a gun to the screaming Elian in the closet.
Whaddya say?
I'd move to FLorida to help out on that campaign... all the way from Canada. There is NO way that Janet Reno should hold ANY kind of public office. She outta be in PRISON!!!
MWW
Having said all that it's time for a grass roots effort by FReepers everywhere. SPEAK THE TRUTH! Tell everyone you know, leftists, liberals, democratic voters especially, about how the failed policies of the Clinton administration led to 9/11. These folks are very receptive to the truth right now. Talking points to consider:
* Algore's 1996 Review of Airport Security, letting the airlines off the hook for more stringent security, with $$$ showing up latter to Clinton's and algore's campaign chest.
* Clinton's pardon of terrorists--Puerto Rican and others--to get his wife elected.
* Clinton's launch of cruise missiles--and then nothing else--at Bin Laden and Sudan the DAY MONICA testified.
* Clinton's bolstering of Arafat and the Palestinians throughout the 1990's. Never demanding Arafat stop Hamas and Hezbollah for American support of the PLO.
* The telling and scandalous abandonment of the US Military for 8 long years. If they dispute this, ask your Demo friends to simply ask some GI's. there is lots of first hand testimony out their.
Focus on these things and the Clintonistas will be history. Keep bringing it up. When someone talks about 9/11, never fail to mention the Clinton administration's failures in standing up to terrorism. I don't think they can survive the anger, scorn, and outrage.
Since the 1940's, until his retirement Florida's first Congressional U.S. Representative was Robert L.F. (Bob) Sikes. Sikes was famous in the panhandle as the "he coon". I even once heard him make a racial joke about it to U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, Orville Freeman.
When Chiles ran for governor he unashamedly stole the slogan and called himself the "He Coon". Most Floridians never knew he stole the name from Sikes. He also stole the mantra of a good ole boy conservative when he was in fact a radical leftist. Many uninformed florida voters voted for the skunk thinking he was one of their own.
I don't think Reno will pull it off, even if she does call herself the "She Coon".
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