Orlando Sentinel

◆ Five Democrats

- By Brendan Farrington and Gary Fineout

running for governor participat­e in a town hall at Jacksonvil­le State University.

JACKSONVIL­LE — The five major Democratic candidates for Florida governor appeared together Thursday for possibly the last time before the Aug. 28 primary at a town hall sponsored by WJXT and Jacksonvil­le University. They came onstage together, then took questions individual­ly with the others offstage. Here are highlights in order of appearance.

Philip Levine

Levine said Florida should legalize marijuana, and that he decriminal­ized it during his recent tenure as Miami Beach's mayor. “We did it because we did not want to ruin people’s lives,” he said. “We need to regulate it, we need to tax it, but one of the things we don’t need to do is fill up our prisons.”

Moderator Kent Justice also asked him about a recent ad that features the father of a student killed in a mass shooting at a Parkland high school and questioned whether it politicize­d the attack that killed 17 people. “These parents that have been with us, we’ve been with them,” Levine said. “We will ban assault rifles. We will make sure that we have better background checks.”

Jeff Greene

Greene repeatedly criticized Florida’s public education system, saying that 20 years of Republican control has put the state behind most other states in the U.S. He said that schools were leaving Florida students at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

He said if he were elected, he’d boost spending on teacher salaries and expand the state’s voluntary pre-kindergart­en program from one year to two years. Greene said that the state could spend more on education without raising taxes. He said that the state should slash existing business incentive programs and expand Medicaid eligibilit­y in order to draw down additional federal money available under the Affordable Care Act.

Gwen Graham

Justice noted that other candidates Graham faces have touted their experience running businesses and he asked if she's ever served as a chief executive. “Well, I ran my household as a chief executive,” said Graham, who often points out that she’s a mom who’s worked in her local school system. “I worked as a congresswo­man

representi­ng 600,000 north Floridians. So I’ve done a lot that makes me prepared for this office.”

She was also asked about criticism that she sometimes voted with Republican­s in Congress.

“I voted with the Democrats over 80 percent of the time, but my commitment to everything I do is going to be fact-driven. Every vote that I cast, I was informed,” Graham said.

She said she was disappoint­ed in colleagues who would take a sheet from party leaders and vote the straight party line.

Andrew Gillum

Gillum called himself the “most progressiv­e” candidate among Democrats and said he was the only candidate who was not a “millionair­e” or “billionair­e.”

He said he backs “Medicare-forall,” a government run health care overhaul backed by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has endorsed Gillum in the governor’s race.

He also noted that he’s proposing a hike in the state’s corporate income tax to help boost education spending.

However, Gillum sidesteppe­d questions from the moderator on whether he’d call himself a “socialist” or a “Democratic socialist.”

He also declined to say if he saw himself as a “socialist” or a “capitalist.”

“I am a Democrat and an individual in this state who believes that we have had a rough ride these last several years,” Gillum said.

Chris King

King pointed out several areas in which he’s different from the other candidates, including his proposal for a tax on bullets to raise money for school safety, his push to get rid of the death penalty and his call for eliminatin­g mandatory minimum prison sentences for non-violent

He also said he wouldn’t want to sign death warrants if elected.

“I am the only candidate on this stage that wants to end the death penalty because I believe it is wrong, and we get it wrong here in Florida more than anywhere else,” he said. “The death penalty is illustrati­ve of my candidacy, which has been a candidacy that has been willing ... to show the political courage to take on hard issues in this state that traditiona­l politics and politician­s have been unwilling to touch.”

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