Mitch Perry Report for 9.1.15 – The meaning of Jim Norman’s return

Mitch Perry

Jim Norman, who has been meeting with all types of folks in the community the past few weeks and months in preparation for a return to local politics, makes it official Tuesday. He’s running for a seat on the Hillsborough County Commission.

Actually, he made it official Monday by making pilgrimages to the editorial board of The Tampa Tribune and sitting down with Tampa Bay Times columnist Sue Carlton.

Norman thinks he’s going to win this race, outright. He thinks the Democrats in the race (Pat Kemp, Brian Willis and his friend and former colleague Tom Scott) are all nice folks whom he respects, but that they don’t have the name recognition, nor the goodwill in many parts of the community, that he has after being on the political scene for 20 years.

Can he do it? Will he get through a Republican primary?

Today he would. Tom Aviano is the lone Republican to have entered the District 6 to date. When we spoke with Aviano last month, he admitted he knew nothing about Norman’s past. That doesn’t auger well if you’re a Republican who doesn’t want Norman back in office.

Tim Schock, who ran a respectable race against Al Higginbotham for the District 7 Republican County Commission seat last summer, appears poised to challenge Norman. Whether he can raise the resources to compete with Norman remains questionable.

Depending how you feel about money in politics (and Norman) it may affect your opinions to hear that he’s poised to collect $100,000 in campaign donations now that he’s officially in the race,  as a statement about his viability.

In one of the Monday interviews, Norman confirmed what he told Florida Politics this past month on one of the hottest issues of the 2016 campaign: He opposes any sales tax to pay for transportation projects, and doesn’t believe any such tax will pay anyone. Instead he offers the idea of getting the Legislature to work on a deal to have revenue from the Seminole Tribe’s Hard Rock casinos funneled back into counties like Hillsborough to help pay for such improvements.

Then again, we’re not 100 percent certain of what type of transportation tax will even be on the ballot next year in Hillsborough. This will be a big issue over the next few months.

The county’s got a lot of issues. If Norman can convince voters that he’s the best candidate for the future, he might have a chance. Or will he be perceived as a part of a past that voters don’t want to revisit? Stay tuned.

In other news …

On Thursday, Tampa City Council Chairman Frank Reddick will offer a proposal to give the council more appointees to the just announced police Civilian Review Board.

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Meanwhile, Tampa City Attorney Julia Mandell explains why the City Charter does not allow for the review board to have subpoena power.

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Scott Walker is in a ditch, so the Wisconsin Governor decided yesterday to bash Jeb Bush for not saying that he’d reverse the possible U.S.-Iran nuclear deal on his first day in office. Not sure that makes any sense, but hey …

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U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor agrees with some of the Florida GOP Senate candidates who bash on Washington Republicans.

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Sister Anne Dougherty will be Castor’s date for Pope Francis‘ speech to Congress next month.

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And here are our five takeaways from this past weekend’s Republican Party of Florida summer quarterly meeting.

Mitch Perry

Mitch Perry has been a reporter with Extensive Enterprises since November of 2014. Previously, he served five years as political editor of the alternative newsweekly Creative Loafing. Mitch also was assistant news director with WMNF 88.5 FM in Tampa from 2000-2009, and currently hosts MidPoint, a weekly talk show, on WMNF on Thursday afternoons. He began his reporting career at KPFA radio in Berkeley and is a San Francisco native who has lived in Tampa since 2000. Mitch can be reached at [email protected].



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