Miami Herald

‘Vote you out.’ Sharief attacks Book in Broward battle over abortion bill

- BY BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO bpadro@miamiheral­d.com Times/Herald Tallahasse­e Bureau Staff Writer Kirby Wilson contribute­d to this report. Bianca Padró Ocasio: 305-376-2649, @BiancaJoan­ie

South Florida’s closelywat­ched Democratic state Senate primary in Broward County is heating up — and getting personal.

Former Broward Commission­er Barbara Sharief slammed her primary opponent — the Democrats’ top senator, Lauren Book — over what Sharief said was deficient leadership and a failure to hold Republican­s accountabl­e on abortion rights.

Kicking off a war of words in what is likely to be a competitiv­e Democratic primary in the newly-redrawn Senate District 35, Sharief — who ran unsuccessf­ully for Congress last year in a crowded race for Florida’s District 20 — attacked Book over her decision not to force a roll-call vote while the state Senate debated including exemptions for rape, incest and human-traffickin­g victims in the 15-week abortion ban during this past legislativ­e session. The bill, officially called the Reducing Fetal and Infant Mortality Act, passed the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e and was signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis last month at a Kissimmee church.

“I don’t think that we need Democrats in there that are going to bow down so that they can get small wins,” Sharief said Thursday during a press conference in Miramar, where she unveiled her social-justice and immigratio­n platforms. “We need Democrats in there that are going to say, ‘If you don’t help me to represent my people, I’m going to make sure that they go to the polls and vote you out.’ And that’s the message here, that’s the movement that we need to start.”

Speaking about Book directly, Sharief slammed the minority leader’s decision not to press her Democratic colleagues to force Republican­s to record their position on exemptions for rape, incest and human-traffickin­g victims.

“We’re not going to raise hands on this amendment. We’re going to do a voice vote,” Book said while the Senate debated the amendment in March.

Under Senate rules, bill amendments are voted on by a voice vote, the result of which is determined by the senator presiding over the chamber. If the voice vote is in doubt, and five senators challenge the result by raising a hand, lawmakers must record their votes.

During the Senate’s debate on the abortion bill as Book pleaded with Republican leadership to amend the bill to exempt rape victims, she revealed a stunning personal story of being drugged and raped by several men as a child.

Book’s communicat­ions director, Claire VanSustere­n, defended Book and shot back at Sharief’s comments in a statement, saying they were “lies and offensive remarks” on her record with sexual-assault survivors, women and child protection.

“For Barbara Sharief to host a press conference attacking a victim of sexual assault who has dedicated her life to keeping children and sexual assault survivors safe shows that Barbara Sharief is clearly on an ego-driven power trip and not a mission to serve,” the statement read, citing Book’s own advocacy and support for legislatio­n to protect survivors of child sexual abuse and assault. “In the State of Florida, there is no greater champion for survivors of sexual assault and no one who works harder to keep children safe than Lauren Book — she’s got the track record to prove it.”

NEW DISTRICT, FAMILIAR TERRITORY FOR SHARIEF

The new Senate district includes a highly diverse part of Broward County, including Miramar, Pembroke Pines, Southwest Ranches, Cooper City, Weston and parts of Davie and Hollywood.

In Miramar, Sharief rolled out a $100,000 TV, radio and digital ad buy promoting her social-justice platform, which includes overturnin­g the controvers­ial 2021 protest law HB 1, supporting legislatio­n to prevent future governors from interferin­g with the redistrict­ing process and other bills to prevent law enforcemen­t from targeting Black and brown residents.

Sharief also said she supported more government services, including access to healthcare and food stamps, for undocument­ed immigrants.

When asked to respond to criticism in her party about running against the Democratic leader in the Senate, Sharief pointed out that it wasn’t her decision to run against Book but the other way around and said Book is new to the district.

“I didn’t decide to run against Lauren Book, Lauren Book decided to come down here and run against me. This is a district that I’ve lived in for 21 years, and that I represente­d the people for 13 years,” Sharief said. She also said it was important for a Democratic Black woman to represent her district at a time when DeSantis reduced Blackacces­s seats in the newlydrawn congressio­nal map.

Sharief also accused Book of voting in favor of the 2021 education bill that included a provision that targeted trans athletes. Sharief said she got strong support from the LGBTQ community in her failed bid for Congress.

Christian Ulvert, Book’s senior adviser, said he was “disgusted” by what he said were Sharief’s attempts to “weaponize the LGBT community against Lauren Book.”

While Book voted in favor of the first version of the education bill, it was amended to revive the “Fairness in Women’s Sports Act.” Book voted against that version of the bill.

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