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‘Coffee with the Mayor’
with Mayor Cotugno and featuring Dr. David Moore, Superintendent of Indian River Schools, will be this Friday, April 14 at 8:00 a.m. at the Heritage Center at 2140 14th Ave.
Unity Cocktail Party

with

Nikki Fried

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 4:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

Tickets are $75 and available at 

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/mcdec-unity or mail your check to
Martin County DEC
PO Box 1497
Stuart, Florida 34995
 
CALENDAR
 

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

9:00 a.m. – Vero Beach City Council Meeting, Council Chambers, City Hall, 1053 20th Place, Vero Beach 32960 : For agenda and meeting information go to
https://covb.org/AgendaCenter  You can watch here: https://www.covb.org/341/CTYVB-13---City-of-Vero-Beach-Official-T
 
 
9:00 a.m. – Indian River County Commission, County Administration Offices, Council Chambers, 1801 27th Street, Building A, Vero Beach 32960. For agenda and meeting information go to https://ircgov.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx
 

6:00 p.m. – Sebastian Natural Resources Board, 1225 Main Street, Sebastian, FL 32958. For agenda and meeting information go to 
https://www.cityofsebastian.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=343&month=2&year=2021&day=17&calType=0

Saturday, April 22, 2023

9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. - Earth Day Celebration, Sebastian Riverview Park. Volunteers needed to help provide voter information and sell Democrats of Indian River Merchandise. Contact Caryl at [email protected] or call (772)226-5267

Monday, April 24, 2023

5:30 p.m. - SDIRC School Board Meeting.
J.A.Thompson Administrative Center, 6500 57th St., Vero Beach 32967

Wednesday, April 26

6:00 p.m. – Sebastian City Council, 1225 Main Street, Sebastian, FL 32958. For agenda and meeting information go to
https://www.cityofsebastian.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=343&month=2&year=2021&day=17&calType=0

SAVE THE DATE

Saturday and Sunday, May 6 & 7, 2023
9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. - Annual Treasure Coast Seafood Festival, Indian River Fairgrounds. Volunteers needed to help provide voter information and sell Democrats of Indian River Merchandise.

Democrats of Indian River


Saturday, April 15, 2023
 
11:30 a.m. - Democratic Women's Club Scholarship Luncheon at Bent Pine Clubhouse at 6001 Clubhouse Dr 32967. Dr Terri A. Graham, President of IRSC Mueller Campus, to speak. Five deserving students will be awarded
Scholarships for $1500.
Meal choices include Lemon Pepper Chicken or Vegetarian Entree.
Guests are welcome.
Please RSVP to Julie Barone at 
[email protected] or (718) 916-0682. 


Wednesday, April 19, 2023

6:00 p.m. - The Democratic Executive Committee ZOOM meeting.

Thursday, April 20, 2023

6:00 p.m. - The Democratic Club will meet at the Kilted Mermaid (so NO potluck). We can share dinner, drinks, conversation and you can stay for their Thursday night Trivia if you want.
Volunteer sign-up sheets will be available for Earth Day on Saturday, April 22 and for the Treasure Coast Seafood Fest May 6 & 7. We will have a tent and table and provide Voter Registration and Vote-By-Mail forms and sell Democrats of Indian River merch.

Friday, April 28, 2023

2:00 - 4:00 p.m. - Democratic Women's Club Book Group will meet at the Brackett Library on the IRSC Mueller campus and discuss “THE ROSE CODE” by Kate Quinn. Any questions about the Book Group should be sent to [email protected].




************************************

Paper version of our newsletter is now available in the office and in all Indian River County public libraries.
 
 
LETTER TO THE EDITOR 

 

Why certain books scare our state's leaders

 

Dan Armstrong’s letter on April 2 hit the nail on the head as to why there are book bans going on in our schools. In talking about students, he states: “school library books have made them more open minded and knowledgeable about controversial but essential subjects.”

This is what our governor and legislature would call “woke” and it is precisely what they don’t want our children and young adults to become: open-minded and knowledgeable. Because “open-minded and knowledgeable” people tend to be liberal-minded because they are educated and smart and have been exposed to “controversial but essential subjects."

Edward Booth, Port St. Lucie

More:Martin County schools remove more than 80 book titles for sexual, racial content after complaints

 
 

To submit your letters to the Editor, go to:

 
FLORIDA NEWS
 

WHY MOST DEMOCRATS DID NOT VOTE LAST YEAR - And how party leaders plan on changing that
 

When Gov. Ron DeSantis and state Republicans criminalized most abortions, weakened Black political power and passed anti-LGBTQ laws, Florida’s Democrats responded not with a fight, but mass surrender. The majority of the party’s registered voters did not go to the polls in November.

Democrats who stayed home said they didn’t feel inspired by their party or its top candidate. And there were more than enough nonvoting members of the party to overcome DeSantis’ lead over Democrat Charlie Crist, a Palm Beach Post analysis of voting data has found.

Now with Democrats all but shut out of power in Florida’s government, their new leader Nikki Fried says she has a plan to change that, and campaign experts say it might work.

Just 49% of registered Democrats statewide cast ballots in the 2022 election compared with 64% of Republicans, Florida Division of Elections data show.

That’s much worse for Democrats than the last midterm election in 2018 when 61.5% of Democrats and 68% of Republicans voted.

More than 2.6 million registered Democrats did not cast ballots. DeSantis won reelection by more than 1.5 million votes. Republican U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio won reelection by 1.2 million.

Democratic turnout was lower than Republicans’ in all of Florida’s 67 counties and across age groups and ethnic lines. Across the state, fewer than 2.6 million Democrats and more than 3.5 million Republicans voted. About 53% of Democrats and 64% of Republicans in Palm Beach County voted.

The result was a GOP-majority Palm Beach County Commission, a reward for Republicans and a reminder that elections have consequences for Democrats. DeSantis, who won the county, turned its commission Republican when a Democrat resigned in January and he replaced him with the chair of the county Republican Party.

Black and Hispanic Democrats not voting in big numbers was chief issue, analyst says

The reason: Democrats’ core constituencies didn’t vote. Just 42% of Black Democrats and 35% of Hispanic Democrats voted. More than 1.5 million Black or Hispanic Democrats did not vote.

“The biggest issue here was nonwhite Democrats,” said former Florida Democratic Party data analyst Matthew Isbell, who now works independently with Democrats. “African American turnout itself was just so low. On top of that, Hispanics — specifically Hispanic Democrats and Hispanic independents — just cratered.”

The turnout gap between White Democrats and Republicans was much smaller — 61% vs. 67%.

The lackluster showing by Black and Hispanic Democrats spelled doom for the party’s candidates in big urban counties such as Broward, Orange and Duval, where more than 50% of the party’s rank-and-file didn’t vote, despite outnumbering Republicans among registered voters.

“The excitement was not there for voters to go out and support who our nominees were,” said Trevor Mallory, president of the Democratic Black Caucus of Florida.

Mallory liked Crist, he said, but heard some Black Floridians were still calling Crist “Chain Gang Charlie.” As a state senator in the 1990s, Crist supported bringing back chained prison gangs. A disproportionate share of Florida prisoners are Black.

Was Charlie Crist a Democrat or a Republican? Some didn’t trust him

Some Democrats who voted in 2018 or 2020 but skipped 2022 said they didn’t care much for their party’s nominee. Others felt voting would be pointless because the news made it seem like DeSantis would win handily.

“Charlie Crist came across as identifying with whatever party was most convenient at the time, and that was not appealing,” said Palm Beach Gardens resident Rebecca Avila, 39, who voted in 2018 and 2020. Crist served as state senator in the 1990s and then as education commissioner, attorney general and governor in the 2000s — all as a Republican — before leaving the party in 2010.

Avila liked 2018 Democratic gubernatorial nominee Andrew Gillum in part because he seemed more authentic and not a “seasoned politician,” she said. And in 2020, she said, “I was motivated to see Donald Trump not get reelected.” But in 2022 her main news sources — CNN, NPR, Reuters and Vox — didn’t cover DeSantis daily, so she didn’t feel as hostile toward him.

“Maybe because it’s not as widely nationally publicized all the nonsense he does, like Trump does,” she said. Trump’s actions were “in your face every day. Stoking the rage every day. That didn’t really happen as much with De-Santis.”

Why bother? ‘My vote was not going to make a difference’

Robert Bunker, 35, voted in 2018 and 2020. But news reports about voter surveys discouraged him last year. “The poll numbers showed that Florida was going to be decisively Republican in the presidential, governor and Senate elections so I didn’t feel like it was worth taking time away from work,” the West Palm Beach resident said in an email. “My vote was not going to make a difference.”

Christoff Haller, 33, had a similar attitude. “DeSantis’ overwhelming, inexplicable popularity made it difficult to envision any meaningful victories in ’22, especially with such an uninspiring Democratic gubernatorial candidate at the top of the ballot,” the Estera (Lee County) resident wrote in an email.

Now, with the 2022 election leaving Democrats basically powerless to stop Republicans statewide from molding laws and courts, the party’s hopes of rebuilding lay with the last Democrat to win a statewide race: Fried, former commissioner of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

She was elected Feb. 25 as chair of the Florida Democratic Party. She lost her bid for governor in 2022 when Crist defeated her in the August primary election to face DeSantis in November.

Nikki Fried: Democrats were forgetting the basics

As Fried and other politicos in her party see it, Democratic organizations’ failure to do the basics is what did in their candidates — lack of voter registration, face-to-face contact with voters and pushing a unifying, effective message. That inaction turned off potential donors who fuel those efforts, she said.

“The Florida Democratic Party was not doing what they needed to do,” Fried said in a phone interview. “This has been an accumulation over 30 years,” she said, describing the lack of voter outreach.

Florida Democrats went from outnumbering Republicans in voter registrations by more than 1 million in the 1980s to the GOP gaining a 400,000plus advantage this year so far.

To turn things around, Fried said, her party needs to do what it has long neglected or outsourced:

 Register Democrats year-round

 Knock on doors to turn out the vote

Get involved in local races, including school boards, like DeSantis and the state GOP did in 2022 (School board races are nonpartisan, but a measure winding through the legislature could put before voters the question of whether they should be partisan.)

Boosting the messages from the party’s candidates and elected officials on social media and news media “I’m kind of excited to see what Nikki Fried is gonna bring to the table,” Mallory said. They discussed how to keep Black voters “involved” year-round, he said, though didn’t divulge details.

Isbell, the former state party data analyst, said that some Democrats he spoke with felt that Fried’s predecessor, Manny Diaz, was “aloof” and not involved with party operations, but that “they feel Fried is doing her part to unify the party.”

“It’s a start,” said Florida Atlantic University political science professor Kevin Wagner. “Voter contact and registering voters … are fundamental components of a party.” Without those basic parts, a party is not competitive, he said.

These things would also help persuade potential Democratic donors, including those who pulled back from Florida in 2022, to once again invest in the state, Fried said.

In the past, Fried noted, politically unaffiliated groups aligned with Democratic causes would register voters and knock on doors to persuade people to cast ballots for candidates they endorsed — Democrats, usually.

But in 2022, “because there was a lack of communication and organization,” Fried said, “a lot of these grassroots organizations decided not to invest in Florida because they could not see a fruitful return on their investment.”

Voter registration numbers seem to reflect that. Independent organizations collected more than 96,000 voter registrations in 2018, but fewer than 40,000 in 2022, the Florida Division of Elections reports.

How to get more people to register to vote

Former state Sen. Dwight Bullard, political director for Florida Rising, which aims to help racial minorities, agreed with Fried’s point on the state party failing to register new voters.

“You can’t just not do your part as an organization just because you know there’s another organization in your state to pick up the slack,” the onetime Democratic state party chair candidate said.

Florida Rising collected and submitted more than 160,000 voter registration applications from November 2016 through 2020, according to archived Florida Division of Elections website data. Since then, it’s been 30,000, the group’s executive director, Andrea Mercado said.

Bullard lamented state and local Democratic parties’ lack of voter registrations.

“If you’re gonna make a decision to be absentee, there’s rules that prohibit us from picking up the slack,” he said, citing an example — that Democrats stopped showing up to new citizen swearings-in to register them with the party.

All that will change, Fried said. The Florida Democratic Party will send money and personnel to local chapters to help them recruit and train people to register voters year-round.

The party would show local organizers and volunteers “what is legally permissible, what events to go to, how to strategically hit one neighborhood and not the other,” Fried said. “Certainly there are incredible leaders across the state, but we need to make sure the leaders at the top of the pyramid direct the rest of the team.”

That sounds good to the leader of Florida’s third-largest local Democratic organization, Palm Beach County Democratic chair Mindy Koch. “I’ll take all the help I can get to help register new Dems in Palm Beach County!!!” she said.

 

Chris Persaud

Palm Beach Post USA TODAY NETWORK

 

https://palmbeachpost-fl.newsmemory.com/?publink=04fe89139_134ab2f

VIDEO of the WEEK

SNL The Last Supper

https://youtu.be/hj6E2_3nraQ
 

 
 
Office Hours
 
 Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
10am to 3pm
  
 2345 14th Ave. Suite 7
 Vero Beach 32960


 (772) 226-5267 

[email protected]  


 




STAY SAFE OUT THERE!

 
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