
House Democrats showed support Monday for a Jacksonville activist arrested for unauthorized attendance of a Gov. Ron DeSantis press conference last week.
Ben Frazier, a former journalist and president of the Northside Coalition civil rights group, was one of the honored guests as Democrats vowed to stand in opposition to the Governorโs agenda in the 2022 Legislative Session.
Frazier became internationally known for literally standing up to the Governor last week. The incident went viral when the Jacksonville Sheriffโs Office walked him out of the room in handcuffs after staffers for both the Governor and the Duval County office of the Florida Department of Health failed to persuade Frazier and those with him to leave.
Rep. Angie Nixon introduced Frazier as โarrested for trying to get answersโ from the Governor, noting that Frazier consistently rallies against injustice in Jacksonville.
โThis Governor should stop playing politics with the pandemic,โ Frazier said, sounding the same themes he did last week after his arrest.
โSo many of us are living, in the words of Stevie Wonder, just enough for the city,โ Frazier said.
Calling himself โthe voice of the people,โ Frazier said he and his allies โwill rally โฆ will march โฆ will assemble โฆ will protestโ until the people are heard.
โAinโt no power like the power of the people, because the power of the people donโt stop,โ Frazier said.
The Zoom meeting then joined in a group chant of that phrase, with each participant picking a different meter. The group then tried a different chant, โUnited, the people will never be defeated.โ
While the chanting didnโt quite sync up, Democrats on the call offered a spirited message vowing to resist the Republican agenda over the next 60 Days starting Tuesday.
Rep. Tracie Davis addressed the topic of โprotecting democracy,โ saying that Gov. DeSantisโ stabs at election reform are really just a way of ensuring Floridians canโt vote. Davis, running for the Senate this year, said that DeSantisโ call for โelection investigatorsโ on the state level is intended to intimidate Democratic voters.
Rep. Anna V. Eskamani discussed reproductive issues, noting that affected women do not seek the counsel of Republican lawmakers nor Gov. DeSantis. Eskamani warned of her expectations of a Republican-backed 15-week abortion ban modeled after Mississippiโs, and said that โthose who are trying to make 15 weeks look moderate are complete trash.โ
Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith spoke to the housing crisis, saying โFlorida has become unaffordableโ for many citizens, a trend made worse during 23 years of Republican domination in Tallahassee.
โFloridians canโt take it anymore,โ Smith said, noting that itโs not just housing prices going up, but also utility costs from โregulated monopoliesโ such as Florida Power and Light.
โWe know this is an emergency for the people of Florida,โ Smith said, urging โpeople-centered policiesโ and โpeople over politicsโ as the ways forward for Democrats.
Rep. Marie Woodson of Pembroke Pines stressed her origins as a Haitian immigrant in her remarks, vowing to fight for immigrants, including the undocumented.
โOur Governor has located $8 million to relocate immigrants out of South Florida,โ Woodson said, regarding a DeSantis budget proposal to move undocumented immigrants out of state. The money would be better spent for priorities like affordable housing, Woodson said.
โWe have to save our democracy,โ Woodson asserted.
Nixon, wrapping up the call, stressed the need to โpush back against bad legislationโ and work toward โpassing people-centered policies.โ
Democrats face long odds in getting their agenda through, but as is always the case ahead of the Legislative Session, they are vowing to fight through until the Sine Die hankie drops.
This article appears in Jan 6-12, 2022.
