I'd like to know what Charlie really thinks. In The Miami Herald oped page this morning, Michael Putney takes aim at off-course Charlie, running for US Senate in a tight primary race against Miamian, Marco Rubio. The Herald reported a recent editorial board meeting where Charlie (that would be Florida Governor Charlie Crist) appeared distracted and lackluster. Putney's editorial concentrates on a recent event-- pulling together both sides of the contest to be the next US Senator from Florida-- for the benefit of Miami's politically powerful Cuban American community.
While Charlie has reason to be distracted-- his opponent has surged, his erstwhile campaign contributors are major embarrassments-- Putney missed the root of Charlie's problem. Like the rest of the Miami Herald editorial board and writers (with the exception of Carl Hiaasen, an increasingly distant force), Putney writes around the determinative factor in local politics: Cuban American developers and the supply chain feeding into the Growth Machine.
Putney discloses a major double-cross involving the withdrawal of the Crist endorsement by brothers and congressmen Diaz Balarts. He attributes the retraction to their commitment to the Meek family. Congressman Kendrick Meek, a Democrat, has closely followed the lead of his Republican congressmen on Cuba, Putney reports, and as a result the Diaz Balarts will "sit out" the 2010 US Senate contest. But there is more to the double-cross than this, Putney surely knows. In politics, it is always "follow the money": where it came from and where it will come from, in the future.
In a long career as a member of the Florida House of Representatives, since 1978, and a senior member of the Florida congressional delegation, Carrie Meek was closely affiliated with the Miami-based Growth Machine; represented by the directors of the Latin Builders Association. These Cuban American business leaders started as field workers in Homestead tomato farms in the 1960's and worked their way out, using county contracts to leverage their way into the prime business ventures that would secure their foothold in South Florida and, then, state politics: it was all about converting Miami farmland and wetlands into suburban sprawl. The landscape tells the story.
Meek, representing a poor African American district in Miami-Dade, proved willing and able at zoning decisions that favored Cuban American developers: it is all in the public record. As we've written about often on Eyeonmiami, the mother's milk of zoning and permitting decisions is what really defines the relationship of African American politics to the dominant majority. When the Diaz Balarts sat down with Carrie Meek and her son, Kendrick, that was the scenery backdrop.
As reported by Putney, Crist took the opportunity of addressing the Cuban American audience in Miami by throwing away his bullet points and sticking to the message that he, too, understood the value of pulling oneself up by the bootstraps: his own father had started life in America as a shoe-shine boy. What Crist was saying, I hazard to guess: listen, guys, we don't speak the same language but we all started at the bottom of the ladder.
What Crist didn't say: that in recent sessions of the legislature, Crist has gone even further than his predecessor, Jeb Bush and his acolyte, former House majority leader Marco Rubio -- who was pushed forward to the governor's mansion by Cuban American developers-- in delivering streamlined zoning and permitting through new state laws. These, of course, benefit those at the top of the ladder today: Cuban American production home builders and their supply chain who are burning through cash or not paying mortgages on land purchased at speculative values.
If Charlie Crist feels like he is wandering in the desert, it is because he knows the public is unlikely to pick up these complexities, or, how the Cuban American insiders might be steamed at recent decisions by the Crist administration to uphold the Urban Development Boundary. The mainstream media, that missed entirely the hyper-development and origins of the housing market crash in Florida, is still reticent to talk candidly about the underlying weave of quid pro quos. And it doesn't help that at the same time, the Crist campaign -- a machine at fundraising-- is grinding down sources of political money that have turned out to be corrupt.
In sum it has been a tough year for Charlie Crist. He started it by saying sunnily that it was a great time to invest in Florida real estate, he spent time and energy helping to knock down regulatory barriers to more growth and development-- "jobs, jobs, jobs"-- and now finds himself at the short end of a double-cross by Cuban American insiders who need to set roots in opportunities, in Cuba, more than ever.
While the Growth Machine might be angry at the Crist administration and the agency that has stood up for the Urban Development Boundary in Miami-Dade, the future profits are there, 90 miles away in Cuba, not in wasted wetlands or new suburbs west of Kendall. And for that equation-- where Kendrick and Marco both fit neatly--, Charlie Crist doesn't have a solution. But there is still hope for Charlie Crist. He could be the populist candidate for US Senate in 2010. For more on how to do that he would have to pick up the phone and call me, or, he could click into the website, Florida Hometown Democracy.
15 comments:
Two words missing from the Putney article: Scott Rothstein.
First off, I'm pretty sure Carrie Meek was never a Dade County Commissioner. Where the heck did you get that from.
Second, I can't believe you are even implying that Crist's campaign is falling apart because the developers are aligning themselves behind his opponents on both sides of the race.
Charlie has raised over $6 million in this race so far. You don't raise the kind of money Charlie has in both his gubinatorial race and now his Senate race without developers dumping massive money into his coffers as well as that of the Party.
Charlie's campaign accounts have blown up like a can of biscuits, thanks to some of the biggest scumbags ever to pillage this state (Scott Rothstein, Alan Mendleson, and the damn Mutual Benefits Steinger brothers).
You really need to brush up on your theories.
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Crist is a low IQ man who photographs really well. He will make a great greeter at some Indian Reservation casino.
Florida voters elected him to lead the State. Immediately he decided to quit to move to Washington, DC. Florida has huge problems. Crist neglects the State as he travels campaigning.
Crist "streamlined zoning and permitting through new state laws?" Name a single such law. SB 360? Name a single development that it has "streamlined." As usual, your monomania prevents you from being credible.
Crist is still light years ahead of Rubio...he did put Pelham in as DCA chief. I think the fact that he didn't veto Senate bill 360 was for fundraising reasons and it was unfortunate and I hope it won't be his downfall. Amendment 4 support would be welcome or he could switch parties.
Ah, come on lobbyists. SB360 hasn't stopped much yet because developers are in the middle of a giant vacuum. If it isn't fixed, it will be Crist's awful legacy.
As far as the vote, the average resident does not understand what's happened. Maybe you can just hope that they continue to be hood winked -- OR -- maybe more people will start to get it. Who knows. We have a black president with an Islamic sounding name at a time when we are at war with Islam. When times get bad and people start paying attention, interesting things happen.
Crist should have vetoed SB 360. Crist was pandering to developers.
GoD is correct about Crist picking Pelham to head up DCA. His agency has been tough on the County and even the author of SB 360 - Mike Bennett. Sen Bennett argued that Pelham was misinterpreting the "intent" of the law by allowing the changes to be adopted by local governments instead of using it as a cudgel on locals trying to protect against sprawl.
He wrote a withering retort to Bennett and that Crist has stood by his DCA chief is at least pennance for allowing the damned bill to become law.
Cato I did not write this post. I love my Republican brothers at the LBA. I aspire to the American dream to have a lot of money, just can't find the boot straps..
g.o.d. drives an Escalade? has this blog been a put on from the start?
I don't tell what I drive --you just missed the Cato thread of goofing on me for changing political parties
"Cato I did not write this post."
Your off the hook then the poisining plans at the next LBA luncheon have been cancelled Bon Apetite Genius, though I can't guarantee Gimleteyes safety at any LBA event.
"I love my Republican brothers at the LBA. I aspire to the American dream to have a lot of money, just can't find the boot straps.."
It's probably because your not wearing constrction boots.
"I don't tell what I drive"
Just hope its not a Prius or Smart Car
It is not a prius or a smart car. I do have chrome wheels.
"Thanks too the existense of developers we don't live in caves lit by candles and have to go out daily to hunr for our sustenance."
hahahaha! In spite of the spelling errors, that's some funny shiiite. Too bad you're serious.
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