Miami Herald

Amid reports of ties to dark-money donor in 2020 scheme, Florida House Democrats’ adviser quits

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS sgross@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau reporter Ana Ceballos contribute­d to this report. Samantha J. Gross: @samanthajg­ross

A top consultant and fundraiser resigned as an adviser to the Florida House Democrats’ campaign arm days after court documents and reports revealed his ties to an alleged sham-candidate scheme.

Dan Newman, a longtime senior adviser to House Victory, had communicat­ed with consultant­s who helped orchestrat­e a scheme to siphon votes from Democrat candidates in key Senate races in 2020, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Newman told the Miami Herald in a text message that he broke the news to House Democratic Leaderdesi­gnate Ramon Alexander on Thursday.

“It would be best to resign as senior adviser to avoid becoming a displan traction,” Newman wrote. “I reiterated to him that I am committed to the success of House Victory and always will be.”

Documents leaked to the Sentinel show Newman, who previously lobbied for Florida Power & Light, received a $1.25 million check from FPL to his consulting firm in September 2020. He shared it with consultant­s working on the election scheme.

“The eagle has landed,” Newman wrote to two consultant­s from an Alabama-based political- and communicat­ions-consulting firm. The firm, Matrix, helped set up dark-money group Grow United, which is a focus in the MiamiDade County state attorney’s months-long investigat­ion into an alleged vote-siphoning scheme in Senate District 37.

Alexander, who declined to comment on Newman’s ties to the scheme, said his moving forward is “controllin­g what we can control.”

“My focus is on our members and our program,” Alexander, a Tallahasse­e Democrat, said in an interview. “We are excited about where we are going, and our collective decisions will be based off of what is in the best interest of the caucus.”

GROW UNITED CONTRIBUTI­ONS FROM ALL SIDES

According to records that are part of the investigat­ion, Newman had also advised Josh Weierbach, the executive director of the progressiv­e nonprofit Florida Watch Inc., to give $115,000 to Grow United.

Weierbach told the Herald last month that he believed the money would be used to help flip one state Senate seat in Central Florida and defend one in Miami-Dade. But Grow United was also being used by Republican­s to support an effort designed to hurt the very same candidates progressiv­es wanted to support.

The consultant­s Newman was in contact with were part of a Republican cause that involved tens of thousands of mailers paid for by Grow United being sent to voters in three key Senate races in an attempt to siphon votes from three Democratic candidates: José Javier Rodríguez in Senate District 37, Javier Fernandez in Senate District 39 and Patricia Sigman in Senate District 9.

Fernandez and Sigman both lost their races. Miami Republican Ileana Garcia, a first-time candidate, beat Rodriguez after a three-day recount by just 32 votes out of more than 215,000 cast. Alex Rodriguez, who is former state Sen. Frank Artiles’ longtime acquaintan­ce and shared a surname with the incumbent, received 6,382 votes as a no-party candidate in the election.

Investigat­ors allege Artiles paid Alex

Rodriguez nearly $45,000 with the understand­ing that he would change his party affiliatio­n from Republican to no party to qualify as a candidate in the race. Both men turned themselves in to authoritie­s in March and pleaded not guilty, though Rodriguez is now cooperatin­g with investigat­ors as part of a plea deal.

Newman told the Herald last month that “in hindsight, it is clear that the money was being used at cross-purposes.”

When asked if he knew Grow United was also helping the Republican effort, Newman said: “Absolutely not,” noting that he only learned about it after the election.

Newman told the Herald last month that he does not know and has not asked which other groups have given money to Grow United and said the darkmoney group was suggested to him by Jeff Pitts, an Alabama-based publicaffa­irs consultant with Canopy Partners, after Newman told him he wanted to find an organizati­on “willing to support some Democratic Party projects.”

The Matrix employees Newman had been in communicat­ion with now work for Canopy Partners, and the two groups are tied up in a lawsuit concerning whether the ex-Matrix staffers conspired with a client to reroute fees.

Before he joined House Victory, Newman helped run the judicial-retention campaigns of Florida Supreme Court Justices R. Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and Peggy A.

Quince and served as statewide political director for Alex Sink’s unsuccessf­ul campaign for governor in 2010.

Alexander said Newman’s departure will help with the transition of leadership in the caucus.

“We have been working over the last several months to complete our full transition with me serving as House Democratic Leader-designate,” Alexander said. “Mr. Newman has been a consummate profession­al in regards to the transition process. we are excited about where we are and the momentum that we are getting.”

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