The Palm Beach Post

GOP primary for Fla. attorney general off to nasty start

Candidates spar over affiliatio­n, experience.

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — Expect the animosity to grow in Florida’s four-way Republican primary for attorney general.

Rancor between candidates was on full display Saturday during a forum held by The Federalist Society, one of the nation’s most influentia­l organizati­ons involving conservati­ve and libertaria­n legal minds, at Disney’s Yacht and Beach Club Resort.

Ashley Moody, a former Hillsborou­gh County judge who has been endorsed by term-limited Attorney General Pam Bondi, called out Rep. Jay Fant, R-Jacksonvil­le, for political-committee mailers painting her a “liberal,” which she called “misleading,” “unjustifie­d” and “unworthy of the office.”

Fant — one of four members of the Florida House running for the state Cabinet office — replied to Moody that “issues matter, and just because the issues make you feel uncomforta­ble doesn’t mean you’re being attacked.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Ross Spano, a Dover Republican, showed Saturday he’s going to make courtroom experience a way to distinguis­h himself from two of the four Republican­s running for the office: Fant and Rep. Frank White, R-Pensacola.

Span, in a question to Fant, noted that he’s litigated “well over 500 cases.”

Fant and White both pointed to their executive leadership positions.

“This is the attorney general position, not the solicitor position,” replied Fant, an attorney who works for his family-owned financial-service companies. Fant added that the statewide office requires executive and policy experience.

White, when asked by Moody if he’s ever served as a lead counsel who’s brought a case to verdict, replied there are “many paths to be an effective attorney general.”

White, an attorney who serves as general counsel and chief financial officer for the chain of Sandy Sansing auto dealership­s, pointed out that Scott Pruitt, the administra­tor of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, previously served as attorney general in Oklahoma.

Pruitt, who was a speaker before The Federalist Society on Friday night, included in his pre-election background the state Legislatur­e and co-ownership of a minor league baseball team.

Pruitt “took that skill set and zealously advocated for the rights of Oklahomans and also set standards and, along with General Bondi, to lead nationally in fighting the Obama administra­tion,” White said.

White, whose political committee United Conservati­ves has sent a mailer calling Moody a “liberal judge” for having once registered as a Democrat, questioned her stance on Second Amendment rights involving private property, including college campuses.

Moody, who abandoned her Democratic affiliatio­n by 1999 when she was appointed a student representa­tive on the Florida university system Board of Regents, replied that “people have a natural right to defend themselves,” while not directly addressing private property.

The Republican­s will battle in an Aug. 28 primary, with the winner moving on to the Nov. 6 general election. Two Democrats — state Rep. Sean Shaw of Tampa and Hillsborou­gh County attorney Ryan Torrens — are running.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States