Loyalty to Donald Trump key issue in GOP state committee races in SWFL

GOPelephant
Roger Stone and Corey Lewandowski both became involved in these hyper-local contests.

Races to serve on the Republican Party of Florida’s state committee remain the type of inside baseball ignored by traditional newspapers. But races for these party positions attracted big names to compete in Lee and Collier counties.

In Lee County, state committeeman Chris Crowley faces a challenge from Matt Caldwell, who two years ago won the statewide GOP nomination for Agriculture Commissioner.

Meanwhile, both Collier County state committeeman Douglas Rankin and committeewoman Jan Face-Glassman must contend with respective challenges by Alfie Oakes and JoAnn DeBartolo, who each brought a level of star power to the races.

In all of the races, loyalty to President Donald Trump has loomed large. To hear the candidates tell it, the very soul of the Grand Old Party is up for grabs. It’s a region where Republicans boast a presence as strong as nearly anywhere else in Florida.

“It’s the Republican RINO swamp down here, and we have got to drain the swamp, the same way the President is draining the swamp in Washington, D.C.,” DeBartolo said.

Trump confidante Roger Stone swung through the Naples area last week to boost DeBartolo’s candidacy while stopping by Oakes’ Seed to Table grocery.

The business has become a bit of an epicenter for Collier County politics in the last few months. Oakes earned some cachet out of seemingly swaying Collier County Commissioners against a local lockdown order. He’s since become a mascot for those opposed to mask mandates.

Through the public debates, he’s become a regular subject of local news reports and built a following on social media. His grocery sees regular political events attracting major-name politicians running for everything from local office up to Congress.

He’s also courted controversy. He caught flak in media for a Facebook post labeling George Floyd, a Black man killed after a Minneapolis policeman kneeled on his neck for more than eight minutes, as a “drug abusing thug” who “continued to resist the  officers’ orders.” But at the same time, that’s fueled his local celebrity status among a loyal right anxious for a political fight.

It leaves many feeling it’s likely Oakes will unseat Rankin.

A look through both men’s social media shows a fondness for red-meat political issues, with Rankin taking swipes at the Defund The Police movement and teachers’ unions. But that contest hasn’t been the nastiest committee fight in the region.

There’s been plenty of swipes at Face-Glassman coming from the DeBartolo side. The controversial blog Central Florida Post, which is tied to Stone, has accused her of being closely tied to Palestinian Liberation Organization “terrorists.”

Face-Glassman’s Facebook profile can’t be viewed publicly, but she’s spoken out against the tone in the race.

I live by Ronald Reagan’s 11th commandment to do no harm to a fellow Republican; and have a 50-year record of supporting Primary candidates and getting actively behind the winner in the General Election, as shown by my strong support of President Trump as the 2016 nominee and for his re-election,” she wrote in a letter published by the Coastal Breeze News.

DeBartolo, though, said the Collier County GOP for too long has been out of step with the party of Trump. The tone of the race is simply a reflection of the disruption.

“Between me and Alfie teaming up together, we will win pretty big,” she said. “We’re a force to take on the establishment, just like the President is non-establishment.”

Up in Lee County, it’s the incumbent committeeman claiming superiority on the Trump front while attacking Caldwell as a Never Trumper. Crowley routinely shares excerpts of a 2016 editorial by Caldwell in which he wrote he would not cast a vote for Trump if he won the nomination.

“Being a Never Trumper is a political death mark,” Crowley said. “Being a Never Trumper has become political suicide because the enthusiasm is so high; 60 or 70% of Republicans in Southwest Florida are enthusiastically supporting the President.”

For Caldwell’s part, he says he’s never been an establishment Republican, and was among the first ready to buck Gov. Charlie Crist for Marco Rubio in a notorious 2010 Senate race.

He sees little point engaging in a battle of who likes Trump more, and won’t field questions on whether he voted for Trump in 2016. He strongly backs the President now, praising pro-life positions by the administration.

“You start answering questions like this, it’s like asking if you still beat your wife,” he told Florida Politics. “The people who have known me for years know I have not been shy about elections any time in the last two decades.”

In recent days, Crowley unrolled a new endorsement from Corey Lewandowski, a former Trump campaign manager. That came with a radio ad in which Lewandowksi slammed Caldwell.

“Never Trumper Matt Caldwell even partnered with the fake news media to publicly declare that he would not vote for Donald Trump in November of 2016,” Lewandowski says in the ad.

That has prompted negative response ads from Caldwell, with local endorsements from figures like Rep. Spencer Roach noting complaints filed against Crowley with the Florida Bar. The complaints stem from statements Crowley made about now-State Attorney Amira Fox while the two Republicans campaigned for that position in 2018. Crowley notes he remains in good standing with the Bar.

It’s been part of an exceptional concentration of deeply negative elections happening concurrently in the Lee-Collier area. Not every race has been so publicly negative; a contest between Lee state committeewoman Nancy McGovern and challenger Adele Amico certainly hasn’t drawn such attention.

But the contests for the Republican positions, with the players also stressing their loyalty to the President even as he trails in national polls, shows the degree Trump loyalty matters in these most partisan of contests.

Jacob Ogles

Jacob Ogles has covered politics in Florida since 2000 for regional outlets including SRQ Magazine in Sarasota, The News-Press in Fort Myers and The Daily Commercial in Leesburg. His work has appeared nationally in The Advocate, Wired and other publications. Events like SRQ’s Where The Votes Are workshops made Ogles one of Southwest Florida’s most respected political analysts, and outlets like WWSB ABC 7 and WSRQ Sarasota have featured his insights. He can be reached at [email protected].


One comment

  • The Swampfox

    August 22, 2020 at 10:58 am

    The election for state committeewoman& committeeman is partially about Trump loyalty. However, the real agenda is to get rid of the RINOS in Fla. For years we’ve been infested with not only democrats from the north but moderate so- Republicans, public employees leaving their dying cities, taking their pensions, here along with bringing their failed political agenda and weaving themselves into our political system. The state committee positions, along with more key level positions will be part of the Renaissance of keeping Florida red. Quite frankly, the GOP agenda here is too vanilla. The political rules of engagement changed and the local leadership failed to make those changes. Ushering in the DeBartolo, Oakes change of state committeewoman & committeeman is the first step of a new leadership that the president will be proud of!!

Comments are closed.


#FlaPol

Florida Politics is a statewide, new media platform covering campaigns, elections, government, policy, and lobbying in Florida. This platform and all of its content are owned by Extensive Enterprises Media.

Publisher: Peter Schorsch @PeterSchorschFL

Contributors & reporters: Phil Ammann, Drew Dixon, Roseanne Dunkelberger, A.G. Gancarski, Anne Geggis, Ryan Nicol, Jacob Ogles, Cole Pepper, Gray Rohrer, Jesse Scheckner, Christine Sexton, Drew Wilson, and Mike Wright.

Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @PeterSchorschFL
Phone: (727) 642-3162
Address: 204 37th Avenue North #182
St. Petersburg, Florida 33704




Sign up for Sunburn


Categories