Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

S. Floridian chosen as envoy to Costa Rica

- By Anthony Man Staff writer

Costa Rica and Florida are already close. The Central American nation is a popular tourist destinatio­n for Floridians — nonstop flights to San Jose are faster than flights to New York City. And the country is one of Florida’s largest internatio­nal trading partners.

The Central American nation is about to get something else from the Sunshine State: a new U.S. ambassador.

Sharon Day of Fort Lauderdale, a business executive turned Republican Party activist, is President Donald Trump’s nominee as the American envoy.

Day isn’t a household name in South Florida. But political allies who’ve worked with her for years in the Republican

Party said the appointmen­t makes perfect sense.

Until January, Day spent four years as the No. 2 official at the Republican National Committee, traveling across the country in her role as party co-chairwoman. During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, she was a tireless and prominent public advocate for Trump, often serving as one of the warm-up speakers at campaign rallies.

After Trump won, some kind of presidenti­al appointmen­t was widely expected.

Presidents have long awarded political supporters and campaign contributo­rs with ambassador­ial gigs in European capitals and exotic locations. The American Foreign Service Associatio­n, which represents career foreign service officers, reports that about 30 percent of ambassador­s traditiona­lly have been political.

Former President Barack Obama’s ambassador­s included Mark Gilbert, a prominent Democratic Party fundraiser from Boca Raton, who was U.S. envoy to New Zealand and Samoa, and Kirk Wagar of Miami, Obama’s Florida finance chairman in 2008 and 2008, who was ambassador to Singapore.

Day’s nomination, announced June 14, is among the Trump administra­tion’s earliest ambassador­ial picks. The American Foreign Service Associatio­n website shows he’s nominated 23 of 188 ambassador­ial posts. Of the 23, seven are career diplomats and 16 political nomination­s.

Day, 66, who speaks some Spanish and is taking lessons, has visited Costa Rica in the past. She wasn’t available for comment about the nomination. Under longstandi­ng rules imposed by both parties, presidenti­al nominees for jobs that require Senate confirmati­on aren’t allowed to speak to the news media.

“She is absolutely Republican with a capital ‘R,’ ” said Bob Wolfe, founding president of the Lauderdale Beach Republican Club, who added that descriptio­n didn’t go far enough. “Capital ‘R’ Republican with 18 exclamatio­n points behind it with bold lettering. I can take the word Republican and Sharon Day and superimpos­e them.”

Just how Republican is Day?

Her dog, a black-andwhite cockapoo that died in February at age 16, was named “Reagan,” after former President Ronald Reagan.

At the movies, she explained in a 2012 Sun Sentinel interview, she won’t put money into the pockets of people she calls “bigmouthed Hollywood Democrats.” When she wants to see one of their films she’ll instead pay at the box office for another movie by or starring a Republican so her money benefits them — then slip in to watch the liberals’ picture. If there’s no Republican­leaning ticket-buying opportunit­y, she’ll stay home from the multiplex.

For years, she paid to have her car shrinkwrap­ped, like some city buses, during election seasons to tout the Republican candidate at the top of the ticket: President George W. Bush for re-election in 2004, Charlie Crist for governor in 2006, John McCain for president in 2008, Marco Rubio for U.S. Senate in 2010 — even though in overwhelmi­ngly Democratic Broward it sometimes prompted unfriendly gestures from other drivers.

Day is loath to violate Reagan’s “11th Commandmen­t” that “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” There were a couple of exceptions: In her home base at the Broward Republican Party, she’d criticize those who spent time bickering with one another about ideologica­l purity instead of working to elect the party’s candidates. And she’d also criticize party members who preferred socializin­g than doing nitty-gritty campaign work.

In a party that has seen the ebbs and flows of influence by ideologica­l conservati­ves, who care most about social issues, and more moderate members who care more about economic issues — and more recently populism embodied by Trump, Day wasn’t an overarchin­g ideologica­l player. She argued for inclusiven­ess and broadening the Republican Party, sometimes in ways that the social conservati­ves didn’t like.

Jack Majeske, a Republican committeem­an and past president of the Broward Log Cabin Republican­s, an LGBT political club, said Day was helpful to his organizati­on. He said she’s been tireless in advancing woman and minorities and lauded her “welcoming personalit­y and obvious caring.”

But she could also make her views known — forcefully, if necessary, said Ed Pozzuoli, chairman of the Tripp Scott law firm in Fort Lauderdale. He and Day overlapped in the Broward Republican Party leadership when he was party chairman from 1996 to 2000.

“Sharon is very straightfo­rward,” Pozzuoli said. “There was no equivocati­on as to where she was. You would get the straight scoop as to what she thought, and that usually came in a very passionate way.”

Pozzuoli said the two of them would argue like brother and sister. “Whether you agree or disagree with her on a particular political point, she’s such a positive person about how to impact our community,” Pozzuoli said. “And she’s not shy about working hard. She’s one of those people who could go be an ambassador, with all those trappings, but also stuff envelopes and get on the phone and work with volunteers and knock on doors and all of those things.”

As much as Day was exuberant about all things Republican, she was acerbic about Democrats.

She lacerated Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton at last year’s Republican National Convention.

“As first lady, you viciously attacked the character of women who were sexually abused at the hands of your husband,” Day said. “Now, don’t get me wrong, I want to see a woman be president one day. I want my granddaugh­ters to see a woman as president one day. But [as] I stand before you, not that woman, not Hillary Clinton.”

When the crowd at a Trump rally in Miami in September stated chanting, “Lock her up,” about Clinton, Day said “That would be a good start.”

Ambassador­s are supposed to leave politics back at home.

Ambassador­s have broad responsibi­lity to manage the government’s activities in the countries to which they’re assigned. They are responsibl­e for keeping their host countries informed about U.S. policy and objectives and vice versa, reporting local informatio­n and analysis back to Washington. Ambassador­s are in charge of U.S. government employees in the country, except for service members under military command.

Day and her husband, Larry, who died in 2012, built an insurance and reinsuranc­e business from three employees to 156 in Indianapol­is. They supported Republican candidates financiall­y, but working 60 to 80 hours a week left no time to do anything more. She has two children and five grandchild­ren.

After selling the business and retiring early to South Florida in the 1990s, the Days stumbled into activism. When they walked into a Republican Party office to register to vote as new Broward residents, the Days were recruited to get involved.

She became a precinct committeew­oman in 1994, the state Republican committeew­oman representi­ng Broward in 1996, the national committeew­oman representi­ng Florida in 2004, national party secretary in 2009, and national party co-chairwoman in 2011. Along the way, she’s defeated candidates who had more seniority, were favored by party power-brokers, or were incumbents holding the office she sought.

Hera Becker challenged Day in the August 2016 Republican primary for job of state Republican committeew­oman from Broward. Day won 77 percent of the vote.

Becker said she ran for the job because Day wasn’t as active locally once the national party became her focus. “I think she did a good job at the RNC. They obviously did a great job in Florida getting Trump elected,” Becker said. “I think she’ll be good as an ambassador.”

Bob Sutton, chairman of the Broward Republican Party, said Day would legally remain a resident of Broward and does not have to resign as a party leader. He referred questions about her intentions to Day, who isn’t able to respond to media inquiries.

Day would replace S. Fitzgerald Haney, who was a businessma­n before President Barack Obama named him an ambassador. The timing is uncertain. The position requires Senate confirmati­on, and the Senate is scheduled to be in session for just three weeks before Labor Day.

She has an advantage in the Senate: U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., is a member of the Foreign Relations Committee. In his book, “An American Son,” Rubio said Day blocked a move by Crist, then the state’s Republican governor, from turning the state party into an arm of Crist’s campaign for U.S. Senate.

Rubio wrote that Day “was my last hope,” explaining that if she had caved to the pressure, “my campaign almost certainly would have collapsed.”

Through a spokeswoma­n, Rubio praised Day as “an outstandin­g choice to serve as U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica. Sharon has an impressive business record and has shown great commitment to each of her endeavors. I look forward to supporting her nomination and I wholeheart­edly encourage my colleagues to do the same.”

 ?? MARIA LORENZINO/STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Sharon Day, former co-chairman of the Republican National Committee, speaks at a rally in October.
MARIA LORENZINO/STAFF FILE PHOTO Sharon Day, former co-chairman of the Republican National Committee, speaks at a rally in October.
 ?? LIGHT PRODUCTION­S INC /COURTESY ?? During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Sharon Day, 66, of Fort Lauderdale, was a tireless and prominent public advocate for Donald Trump.
LIGHT PRODUCTION­S INC /COURTESY During the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Sharon Day, 66, of Fort Lauderdale, was a tireless and prominent public advocate for Donald Trump.

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