The making of the mayor: Lenny Curry’s rise to lead Jacksonville

Curry Victory Rally

A year ago, a small cadre of party insiders and money men were the only ones who could be said to believe that Lenny Curry had what it took to be mayor of Jacksonville.

Up against a charismatic incumbent with high approval ratings, people said he was foolish to even try. Fast forward to May 20, 2015, and that candidate no one gave a shot to is now Jacksonville’s mayor-elect.

Who’s really surprised? Those who didn’t listen to Lenny Curry when he said that every day, he woke up to realize he’d had to fight for everything that he had. He was the son of a Navy veteran who became a TV repairman, who wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps. Instead, though, at his father’s behest he went to school, became an accountant, then a Duval County Republican Party treasurer, then the party chairman, then the state party chairman, and now …

Mayor-elect.

On a night full of justly-earned jubilation for Curry, his supporters, and most importantly to him his family, the candidate was preceded in speaking by GOP luminaries who helped him win.

They included Republican Party of Florida Chairman Blaise Ingoglia, who described Curry’s victory as a “big win for the city of Jacksonville” aided and abetted by the RPOF, which was “in the trenches, making phone calls.” There also was Duval GOP Chairman Robin Lumb, who worked behind the scenes to push  his party to six electoral victories out of eight city contests, ensuring a message discipline unlikely before he assumed his current role. And Councilman Richard Clark described Curry as having “outworked the rest of us 10-to-1.”

The one who got to the heart of who the real Lenny Curry is, though, was his father, Roy Curry. He told a story about when his son played football for Middleburg High School, which lost often. After those losses, though, the father told the son that losing “built character.”

One year, they lost to Georgia powerhouse Camden County. Lenny and his teammates redoubled their efforts; the next year, they beat Camden.

That led his dad to observe: “He’s got the character.”

Roy introduced Molly Curry, the mayor-elect’s wife, with a quote from Proverbs: “Whosoever findeth a wife findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favour of the Lord.”

Molly, so indispensable throughout the campaign. made sacrifices, but she said it was worth it. Her husband showed “heart, vision, and determination to lead Jacksonville in the right direction.”

Through it all, “his family was the first priority.” He coached and watched his son at games, and made voter calls from the sideline. On the Sunday before the election, rather than having a rally, he took his daughter to a dance recital.

No way he’d miss it.

Curry, derided for months as a “party boss,” is a humble man from humble origins who would not sacrifice the people who loved him for a political goal. And as the Jacksonville election showed, he didn’t have to.

When he took the mike, the crowd was rapturous. They knew the sacrifices he’d made, the adversity he’d conquered. And he did, too, with the emotion evident on his face.

“Soak it in with me,” he said to the cheering crowd of volunteers, donors, and well wishers. “This wouldn’t be possible without you.”

Curry acknowledged his adversary, Alvin Brown, describing how he called to concede and was “incredibly gracious,” signaling that they had common ground: “One Jax, one purpose, one city.”

He acknowledged his parents, his kids, and his wife.

“You’re it, Molly. I don’t know how to express it.”

Also, of course, he acknowledged the volunteers again: “You had my back; you had the city’s back.” And Ingoglia and the RPOF: “You guys stepped up and you made a statement tonight.” And the RNC and the local party.

He talked about how Jacksonville “will be a safe city again,” and articulated a conservative vision that embodied compassion — “every family, every person, every kid will know that we care about them” — and a chance at the “American dream” for everyone in Jacksonville, especially those left behind in the current economy.

Ebullient in victory, Curry acknowledged “a lot of doubters along the way” but that winning likely will make them believers.

They wouldn’t be believers, though, if Curry hadn’t had a strong organization.  Tuesday night, Florida Politics talked with those who worked on his campaign, those who supported him, and those who saw, when few did, that he wasn’t just a viable candidate, but capable of defeating Brown.

IBrian Hughes, the spokesman who never let his candidate lose a news cycle, said as he had during the campaign that one group made the difference.

“For all the hype, the thing that made the difference was Democrats crossing over.” Their data had told them that was a viable target, and in communicating his message to “all of Jacksonville, people heard it.”

Campaign Manager Brian Swensen, on the ground four years ago at the end of the failed Mike Hogan campaign, said the difference came down to Curry’s belief in Swensen’s ability to execute the game plan.

“I was empowered to build a ground game. I had to be creative with resources, which were sometimes limited. We built relationships, and engaged with the community,” including oft-neglected parts of the Republican coalition, such as the African-American, Asian, and Hispanic communities, and women, who were key.

What about 2011? “What I learned was that sign-waving does not work,” Swenson said. “You have to engage in the community.” The ground game he was able to orchestrate in 2011 “kept it close,” but “that was then.”

Swensen attributed a large part of the victory to his “phenomenal staff,” many of whom he had taught the fundamentals.

“Empower good people,” Swensen said, and block for them, allow them to “run up the middle and score a touchdown.”

Did he have any doubts in the game plan?

“I knew it was an uphill battle; I never once doubted that we would win. We got great engagement from local leaders,” Swensen said, such as John Rutherford and Richard Clark, who were “very helpful.”

“I’ve always been an advocate for this style of a campaign,” Swensen added, saying that both the RNC and the RPOF are “committed to this new model.”

It is hard to speak of the RPOF without speaking about Chairman Ingoglia, who was typically emphatic in victory.

“We had a lot invested in Lenny Curry. It came down to the right candidate at the right time with the right message.”

As well, it came down to a “more passionate GOTV effort” and the “ground game,” which wins close elections like this.

Ingoglia is a big-picture thinker. He saw how the loss of city hall in 2011 helped contribute to the re-election of Barack Obama in 2012, and he thinks Curry’s win is “crucial” for 2016.

“This shows we’re on the right track. This election is a proxy fight for 2016,” Ingoglia said. “It showed we can win.”

While the national strategy is certainly meaningful, part of the problem Brown faced in his re-election effort was a disconnect in terms of relationship building, according to Republican Councilman Bill Gulliford, who represents the Beaches and is widely considered to be the conscience of the city council.

“The Beaches came out strong for Lenny. Look at Alvin Brown; compare last time to this time” in terms of Brown’s performance in the Beaches communities, which Gulliford described as riddled with “missteps,” showing that Brown “wasn’t all in for the community.”

Another issue that Brown had was a fractious relationship with city council,  Gulliford said.

“Alvin always thought that council was inferior to the mayor; council is the mayor’s equal,” he said. A mayor has to “make friends with the council.”

Brown didn’t do that.

Curry has proved to be a quick study, as one would expect from a man who created every break he’s ever gotten. Florida Politics spoke to him very briefly, as it was hard to tear him away from fervent supporters, who wanted handshakes and selfies and a chance to acknowledge the accountant, the undersized football player who became mayor of Jacksonville.

He said that it’s time to move past the campaign. Indeed, it is. He and Michael Munz both said that the inner circle starts thinking about the transition on Wednesday morning. While it’s got to be satisfying for him to know that he proved the doubters wrong, the real work starts immediately.

If history is any guide, Lenny Curry is up to that task.

A.G. Gancarski

A.G. Gancarski has been the Northeast Florida correspondent for Florida Politics since 2014. He writes for the New York Post and National Review also, with previous work in the American Conservative and Washington Times and a 15+ year run as a columnist in Folio Weekly. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter: @AGGancarski



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