Reporter William March has covered state and national politics since 1994. Email
Reporter Mike Salinero has covered Hillsborough County government for The Tampa Tribune since 2007. Email
Reporter Lindsay Peterson has been a general assignment reporter at the Tampa Tribune since 2005, focusing on higher education since 2009. Email
Posted Oct 1, 2007 by William March
Updated Oct 1, 2007 at 12:28 AM
Barack Obama hinted during a Tampa fundraiser Sunday that if he’s the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, he’ll seat a Florida delegation at the party’s national convention, despite national party sanctions prohibiting it.
He didn’t say it outright, but came close, according to local Obama campaign leaders Frank Sanchez and Tom Scarritt, both involved in organizing the fundraiser.
Obama was asked during the event about making sure Floridians have a role in the nomination, despite the DNC sanctions and the pledge. He responded “do what’s right by Florida voters,” Scarritt said.
Obama also appeared to violate a pledge he and the other leading candidates took not to campaign in Florida before the primary.
How?
After the fundraiser at Scarritt’s Hyde Park home, Obama crossed the street to take half a dozen questions from reporters waiting there.
The pledge covers anything referred to in Democratic National Committee rules as “campaigning,” and those rules include “holding news conferences.”
Obama seemed unaware of that. Asked whether he was violating the pledge, he said, “I was just doing you guys a favor. … If that’s the case, then we won’t do it again.”
That was less than a day after the pledge took effect Saturday, and Obama is the first Democratic presidential candidate to visit Florida since then.
The leading Democrats have pledged not to campaign in Florida until the Jan. 29 primary, except for fundraising, at the demand of the four “early primary states—Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.
The DNC, meanwhile, has threatened to refuse to seat a Florida convention delegation because of the state’s too-early Jan. 29 primary. But if a candidate amasses enough delegates before the primary to ensure the nomination, that candidate would take control of the convention, including the power to seat a delegation.
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Reader Comments
Por (James Healy) on October 01, 2007 (Suggest removal)
Obama is telling people want they want to hear but remember he is of a religion that wants to destroy our way of life , there are no moderates in Islam
Suggest removalPor (Kurt Wadsworth) on October 01, 2007 (Suggest removal)
Well Barack Obama is Christian. A religion that wants to destroy us I never heard christians wanted to destroy America thats a first. That whole Muslim thing was propaganda if you know what that is. Also Fox,MSNBC,CNN all aplogized to the Obama campaign for doing that. There is nothing wrong with muslims. If you want to know more facts about Barack Obama the next President of The United States of America please visit www.barackobama.com
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