Annette Taddeo, Nikki Fried, Charlie Crist take aim at Republicans, not each other.
Seminole County Democrats got their first chance to hear the three leading Democratic gubernatorial candidates define themselves and the upcoming election Saturday night in terms of who they intend to overcome.
âIâm running for Governor to defeat Ron DeSantis,â declared Rep. Charlie Crist at the Seminole Democratic Partyâs big annual gala.
âIt has been a long, long two and a half decades. We arenât just fighting Ron DeSantis. We are fighting the culmination of four Republican Governors in a row, 14 Republican Speakers of the House, 13 Senate Presidents: complete one-party control of every one of the senior offices in our state,â insisted Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried.
âIâm running for Governor to stop the horrible damage of the Tallahassee red tide,â said Sen. Annette Taddeo.
The trio spoke to more than 300 Democrats at the sold-out SemDems âBlue Rendezvous â22â dinner in Lake Mary. Gov. Ron DeSantis certainly was their target. Except for Friedâs unenunciated slap at Crist â who was the third of those four Republican governors before he changed parties after 2010 â and Taddeoâs effort to define herself as unique in the trio, they mostly aimed away from each other.
Crist, who led off in the alphabetically ordered program, pressed on issues Democrats have been trying to raise and Republicans have largely tried to avoid, notably Floridaâs affordable housing crisis, and the rising costs of energy which he blamed on a âlapdogâ Public Service Commission.
âitâs about as corrupt as it could be. And itâs not right. You deserve better. Florida deserves better. Annette, Nikki, and I, we all deserve better,â he said.
But Crist mostly kept his focus on DeSantis.
âFlorida has been traumatized by this Governor, And itâs for one reason. Heâs more concerned about appealing to one audience, and one audience only. And that is the hard-right Republican, red-meat, Republican primary voter, than he is to his fellow Floridians,â Crist charged. ââMy friends, he cares more about Iowa Republican voter than he cares about Florida people.â
Fried took the harshest shot of the three at DeSantis.
âOver the last four years we have been the only ones standing in his way of becoming a full-blown dictator,â said the lone Democratic member of the Florida Cabinet.
But she focused much of her speech on the change she represents as a Democrat and a woman running for Governor. She framed 2022 as a moment in history, about to be made.
âThat is why we are here in this room, tonight,â Fried said. âWe canât afford to lose this race. We canât go backwards, which is what we have been doing every single day. This is it. This is our last chance to fight,â she said.
âWe are going to make history by electing the first female Governor of our state,â Fried concluded.
Taddeo, speaking third, wouldnât have disagreed with that line. She portrayed herself as someone whose fighting spirit has repeatedly helped her overcome adversity and long odds.
âWe know what doesnât work when it comes to winning the Governorâs mansion. Hereâs what will. At a time when parental rights are the new attack, how about nominating the only parent in the primary, a mom with a daughter in public schools, a businesswoman who has proven she can win in a Trump seat, and reverse the gains that Republican have made with Hispanics?â she offered. âSo here I am. I know the road is long, and the mountain is high, but I have beaten the odds time and time again.â
Taddeo focused on the broader Republican control of Floridaâs government. She said it was suppressing votersâ rights and killing Democracy.
âWhat makes this country great, really great, is the strength of our diversity and I believe when you know your cause is just, you get in there and fight for what you know is right,â Taddeo said. âAnd when I ran for state Senate in that Special Election in 2017, party leaders told me to stand aside, but I won.â
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