Researching and writing an authorized biography of Florida Governor Walkin' Lawton Chiles (1930-1998).
November 10, 2007
Chiles and His Florida: Holmes County
November 9, 2007
Tax Committee Turkeys
It's happened again. A Democratic governor submits a budget plan with serious investments in a fairer, more equitable tax code. And then when the Democratic tax and budget committee and their lobbyists are done with it, it's nothing but turkeys.
The industries with lobbyists and the ear of their delegate or state senator go home with a juicy Thanksgiving turkey. The rest get higher taxes on their products or services.
It's the same in Maryland, Florida, or an island protectorate--anything with a state legislature.
Maybe turkey-hunting isn't the best analogy.
Seems to me it's more like musical chairs. When the special session stops, somebody is gonna be left with nowhere to go.
What's that favorite Florida expression? "Don't tax you, don't tax me. Tax the guy behind the tree."
November 8, 2007
Alfred Maclay's Coonties
Chiles and His Florida: Lake Hall
In the fall, the park's camellias bloom. I didn't get to that part of the garden, but my camera found some other treasures. I read there was sailing on Lake Hall. No boats the day I visited except a lone fisherman in a light blue skiff, but the fresh breeze blowin' could have sent a Sunfish across the river in a skinny minute.
I looked around for poison ivy, then got way down in the brush lining the lake for some close-ups of autumn in Tallahassee. This season, every shaver packing more than a water gun is under the pines hunting for that Thanksgiving turkey. But there is plenty of sport on Lake Hall if you've got rod and reel. If catfish stew is on your menu, all you need is a couple greasy chicken nuggets from a fast food joint on Apalachee. Mudcats have been known to strike a balled up piece of white bread, too.
November 7, 2007
"Bush Dog Democrats"
From Yellow Dogs to Blue Dogs to "Bush Dog Democrats." That's a new one I came across at Crooks and Liars.
Chap's Walkathon

From February 10th to Election Day, Peterson personally door-knocked every precinct in Virginia's 34th State Senate District. He won forty precincts out of forty-five.
Thanks to James Martin and Mary Lee Cerillo at Raising Kaine blog for the photo and posting of Petersen's note.
Wakulla Springs
"Meat and Three"
It's a staple of Southern diners--one that Lawton Chiles enjoyed on many occasions in North Florida. As he hiked through Crestview, DeFuniak Springs, Quincy and the rest of the "hog and hominy" trail, it seems every other day friends new and old surprised him with a picnic lunch. Or strangers invited him over for supper, or took him hunting.
His menu was often meat and four or five vegetables, plus dessert. Fried chicken and veggies: black-eyed peas, collard greens, french fries, rice, gravy, turnip greens and cornbread. All washed down with iced tea. Then add angel food cake, chocolate cake, apple turnovers, or another piece of chicken and you've got an idea of the Lawton Chiles Trail Mix in 1970.
If the Panhandle trail had treated him to his favorite dessert--icebox cookies--he probably never would have made it to the Keys.
He gained back every pound he lost on the Walk until he got off US 90.
November 5, 2007
Chiles-MacKay Country, 67 County Strategy
Nowadays, we hear a lot about the DNC Chairman Howard Dean and his 50-state strategy for bringing Democrats to bat from Dixie to the Rockies to Alaska. Each of Lawton Chiles' five campaigns for statewide office was a proving ground for this principle that every county, every city, and every vote matters. Each campaign took on an opponent with different strengths, but the basic tenet of mobilizing all 67 jurisdictions never changed a bit.
Even in 1994, at the crest of the Gingrich Revolution, when the Democrats lost the House of Representatives for the first time since the days of Eisenhower, big-state Democrats took a beating from California to Texas to New York, and the Clinton White House went into shock, the Chiles-MacKay campaign for re-election muscled one last statewide victory. Though the margin totaled little more than 60,000--enough to keep the campaign staff and supporters up late awaiting returns--the winning coalition boasted a cultural and geographic diversity to make any 50-state strategist envious:
Tallahassee metro area: Gadsden, Leon, Jefferson
North Florida: Hamilton, Madison
The Panhandle: Franklin, Wakulla, Calhoun, Gulf
The Big Bend: Dixie, Levy
I-4 Corridor: Volusia, Pinellas
Treasure Coast: St. Lucie
Gold Coast: Miami-Dade, Palm Beach, Broward
The Keys: Monroe
Governor Chiles tapped into the reservoir of goodwill, trust, and relationships built since walking the state to achieve a victory in 1994 that stretched the length of the state. Strategists and pundits may point to this TV ad or that debate question to explain the Chiles-MacKay upset over Jeb Bush, but what explanation other than a 67-county strategy and the legacy of The Walk could explain a Democratic coalition combining Dixie County and Dade County, Wakulla County and Palm Beach County?
Since 1994, Democrats in statewide and presidential elections have struggled to get votes outside the usual strongholds: Palm Beach, Broward, Miami-Dade, Gainesville, and Tallahassee. The 2004 Bush-Kerry showdown saw a Democratic retreat:
Gubernatorial hopefuls are doing even worse. Sure, a Democrat can carry Florida with a map that looks like this, but is that a mandate for doing anything more than changing the light bulbs ? Here are the bare bones of a Democratic victory--the less-celebrated "7-county strategy":
November 4, 2007
Chiles and His Florida: Taylor County
The Daytona-Cocoa-Clearwater crowd is missing out. The salty breeze blowing over the "Nature Coast" marshes is refreshing after a week in the city.


Battle of Natural Bridge
The jewel of the Civil War trail in Florida is probably the Battle of Olustee site. The battle, the largest in the state, is re-enacted every February.