Broward

In My Opinion

In legislative races, who’s playing the ethnic card in ECO war?

 

mmarquez@MiamiHerald.com

What do a dentist and an attorney from Vero Beach, a landscaping company out of Troy, Mich., and a Pennsylvania treasurer have in common? They’re linked to Conservatives United, one of those stealth “independent” electioneering communication organizations, or ECO, that drop nasty mailers twisting the facts to attack legislative candidates, freeing the opponents from any responsibility for the dirty tricks.

In this case, the attacks are aimed at state Rep. Ana Rivas Logan, who’s in a bitter Republican primary duke-out with Rep. Jose Feliz Diaz for District 116, where legislative redistricting now pits the two freshman incumbents.

One flier sent to voters accuses Rivas Logan of raising property taxes “by billions” when she was a member of the Miami-Dade School Board in 2005. Who knew? In fact, the Herald story for that budget meeting noted that “the board actually reduced the tax rate, but not enough to compensate for skyrocketing real estate values.” Rivas Logan was among the school board majority that expected to have that money go toward teachers’ salaries — a worthy goal, as teachers are poorly compensated.

But the attacks that really upset Rivas Logan, an educator who was a high school assistant principal when she was first elected to the school board, are robocalls and fliers by Tell the Public the Facts, Inc., another ECO. This one has with a Miami address, with Roberto Novoa as chairman and money coming from various interests, including pari-mutuels. One flier makes it seem as if she embraced the controversial Vamos a Cuba children’s book, with a menacing-looking Rudy Crew staring in the background. In fact, she let the process of book selection by a committee of volunteers play out, but when they didn’t see anything wrong with a book that was pure propaganda about the Cuban dictatorship being paradise for the kiddies, she was among the school board members in 2006 who led the charge against the book (upheld in court) and eventually for Crew’s ouster.

Playing ethnic card

And don’t get her started about her “cubania.” During the heated debate to oust Crew, she challenged those of his supporters who referred to his detractors as a “Cuban mafia” — the same way Fidel Castro has long referred to exiles. So she made the point that she had supported many of Crew’s education initiatives, and that she was born in Nicaragua. Now the abuelitas and abuelitos, the so-called supervoters, are getting robocalls saying Rivas Logan isn’t Cuban, which is partly true and false. She was born in Nicaragua because her pregnant mother fled Cuba to that Central American country with Rivas’ father and sister, later moving to the U.S.

To be sure, playing the ethnicity, race or religious card is a delicate thing that divides or unites by counting on group pride, but it’s used all the time and not just by Cuban-American candidates.

The Anti-Defamation League recently asked state House candidate Sheldon Lisbon to retract an email he wrote with the subject line, “A vote for Shelly Lisbon is a vote for the Jewish Community.” Lisbon, an Orthodox Jew, is running for District 100 in the Democratic primary against state Rep. Joe Gibbons, who is African American. The newly drawn district is, in fact, heavily Jewish. But the Florida ADL, which is on the frontlines of fighting hate speech of any kind, noted to Lisbon in its letter that “a candidate’s religious beliefs — or lack thereof — should never be used as a test for public office or as a shorthand summary of a candidate’s qualifications.”

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