The Columbus Dispatch

State senator who used racial slur resigns

- By Brendan Farrington

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — A Florida state senator who used a racial slur and vulgar language in a conversati­on with two African-American colleagues resigned Friday, saying the incident is causing a distractio­n to the legislativ­e process.

Republican Sen. Frank Artiles submitted a resignatio­n letter to Republican Senate President Joe Negron and issued a separate statement.

“I clearly made comments that were hurtful, unacceptab­le and inappropri­ate. The American people and Floridians want their leaders to be accountabl­e and responsibl­e, and by resigning my elected office I believe I am demonstrat­ing those qualities they desire and deserve,” Artiles said in the statement released by a publicist.

Negron said the resignatio­n was the right thing to do, and he dropped an investigat­ion into the incident.

“All of us are accountabl­e for our actions and our comments, so I think it’s an appropriat­e resignatio­n,” Negron said.

The Florida Legislativ­e Black Caucus filed a complaint about the incident on Wednesday and asked that Artiles be removed from office.

The matter began Monday night during a private conversati­on with Sens. Audrey Gibson and Perry Thurston at the Governors Club, a members-only establishm­ent near the Capitol. Artiles used vulgaritie­s in talking with Gibson, including one particular­ly offensive to women. Sen. Perry Thurston intervened and Artiles, a Cuban-American from the Miami area, used a variation of the “n-word” and used a vulgarity to describe Negron, according to the complaint filed Wednesday by Thurston.

Artiles apologized for the comments on the Senate floor on Wednesday, but Democrats said that wasn’t enough.

Democratic Senate Leader Oscar Braynon, who is African-American, issued a statement saying Artiles did the right thing by resigning.

“I take no pleasure in these unfortunat­e events. But I urge that we learn from them,” Braynon said. “In our communitie­s, our state, and our country, there should be a message of hope, of tolerance, of unity. We cannot afford the high cost words of divisivene­ss and cruelty leave in their wake.”

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