Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Besieged Brown fights for her future

- By Gary Fineout

TALLAHASSE­E — U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, who more than two decades ago became one of the first black people elected to Congress from Florida since Reconstruc­tion, is battling to stay in office amid a criminal indictment and a revamped district that includes thousands of new voters.

Brown’s fate will likely be decided during Tuesday’s primary when she squares off against two other Democrats, one of whom is a veteran state legislator who spent decades representi­ng some of the voters in the reshaped district that no longer includes parts of Orlando.

Republican Glo Smith will run against the winner in November, but the district is solidly Democratic.

The outspoken incumbent is counting on years of using her political clout to bring federal dollars back to her district to help her remain in office.

“The fact is my work speaks for itself,” said Brown, 69, during a recent debate in Jacksonvil­le, adding that voters “want a member that knows how to get things done.”

But in early July, Brown and her chief of staff pleaded not guilty to multiple fraud charges and other federal offenses accusing them of participat­ing in a scheme to use a phony charity as a personal slush fund. She has contended that the investigat­ion is a “witch hunt.”

Brown’s fight comes as she tries to introduce herself in a dramatical­ly different district. Brown’s district for years had stretched from Jacksonvil­le to Orlando and included various minority neighborho­ods in between. But after a lengthy legal battle, the Florida Supreme Court late last year approved new congressio­nal districts that shifted her district westward from Duval County all the way to Gadsden County west of Tallahasse­e.

Brown tried to get a federal court to throw out the revamped district, but after losing her legal battle she filed for re-election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States