24 February 2012 ~ 1 Comment

Flagler County’s Republicans erupt in battle to control the GOP Executive Committee

Special to the Phoenix Network from FlaglerLive

Not quite Boston Harbor: a group of Republicans, many of them tea party activists, gathered in the parking lot of the Flagler County Courthouse Wednesday afternoon before filing suit against the Flagler Republican Executive Committee and the state Republican Party. Among those pictured: Bob Hamby (dark glasses), George Cominsky (scratching his head), Linda Hansen (in red) and husband Greg (striped shirt). (© FlaglerLive)

Late Wednesday afternoon, a group of Republicans who’d been rejected from the Flagler County Republican Executive Committee gathered in the county courthouse parking lot and waited. Their attorney, William Bosch, eventually showed up—and filed suit in Flagler County Circuit Court against Nancy Prizer and the executive committee she chairs. The suit disputes Prizer’s credentials as chairman and claims she heavy-handedly and illegally screens new members to the committee. Local Republicans at the receiving end of those tactics complained to the state Republican Party, to no avail. So Glenn and Deborah Laury, two Republicans Prizer’s vetting committee rejected, filed a class-action suit seeking Prizer’s removal as chairman of the executive committee—and the admission of 20 or so individuals denied membership in the committee.

Internecine warfare between party members and would-be members is nothing new: political party structures by nature generate some friction between various wings. The difference in this case is an ideological battle that has created a rift within and across Republican circles, a consequence of the party’s own identity crisis since the emergence of the more aggressive, less compromising tea party forces, whose insurgencies have upset traditional Republican Party structures across the country. In short, traditional Republicans are at war with tea party Republicans.

Republicans’ battles in Flagler are merely the latest ripples. But the rifts can have spill-over consequences on elections, including—and especially—local elections, since the official Republican Party controls pots of money and endorsements that are doled out to candidates.

The gathering in the parking lot included Bob Hamby, president of the Flagler chapter of the Ronald Reagan Republican Assemblies of Florida (an exclusively Florida-based group of Republicans who share most of the political DNA of tea party), Ray Stevens, one of the candidates for sheriff, Trey Corbett, one of the candidates for supervisor of elections, Charlie Ericksen, one of the candidates for county commission, Linda and Greg Hansen and John Ruffalo.

Prizer, reached at her home, did not return calls for comment.

The heart of the lawsuit makes two contentions. First, that Prizer and her associates are illegally vetting candidates to the Republican Executive Committee. Some vetting is allowed. But according to state law and party rules, the vetting may not go beyond asking whether the prospective member is properly registered (a candidate must be a registered Republican for at least one year) and a resident of the particular precinct he or she wants to represent. No subjective criteria are allowed.

Prizer, according to some of those who were interviewed by her vetting committee, was asked about their work history, their education and their voting history. Voting for a Democrat, or having been a Democrat in the past, for example, would be a strike against that candidate (which would have kept Ronald Reagan from being a member of the executive committee, since he, too, was once a Democrat).

Second, that on Oct. 12, when several prospective new members were to be admitted to the executive committee, Prizer and her vice chairman, Pat Sullivan, attempted to thwart the induction by leaving the meeting before that business could be conducted. Linda Obsorne and Frank Meeker (the Palm Coast City Council member) also walked out.

At that meeting, Bill McGuire, a member of the committee (and another Palm Coast City Council member) moved to induct Glenn and Debbie Laury. There was quite a bit of noise. Sullivan was still chairing the meeting at that point, but walked out, returned, then, according to meeting minutes, “launched an attack on the Tea Party that included personal invectives against the Laurys and the Tea Party movement in Flagler County.” Sullivan then left for good, along with Meeker, and Debbie Baril, the committee secretary, took up the gavel. The Laurys were inducted. The Gail Wadsworth, the clerk of court and president of the Flagler County Republican Club, moved to accept seven additional members who’d been previously barred—Nick Bereda, Hamby, Linda Hansen, Joe Kubasky and Ruffalo. That motion passed unanimously. So was a third motion to accept 29 other members who’d been previously barred.

On Oct. 28, Baril sent a letter to Prizer, by certified mail, to inform her that she would be removed from office at the Nov. 9 meeting. “It is with great sadness that two-thirds of the members in good standing are forced to take this action because of the violations of your oath of office and your long standing disregard” for state law and party rules, Baril wrote Prizer.

To read the full article from Flagler Live, click here.

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One Response to “Flagler County’s Republicans erupt in battle to control the GOP Executive Committee”

  1. Linda Hansen 3 March 2012 at 9:52 pm Permalink

    The Ronald Reagan Assembly is a Republican Organization. It is conservative, but it differs from the Tea Party in that it endorses candidates. What exactly is Tea Party DNA? Did it ever occur to you that the Tea Party wouldn’t exist if both the Republican and Democrat parties were doing their jobs, as well as our elected officials? Isn’t that our right as citizens to protest?

    Several of those listed were former members of the Republican Executive Committee of Flagler County. All are members of the Flagler County Republican Party. I’m not sure you’d call this warfare. Several grievances have been filed with the RPOF re Ms. Prizer and her tactics. No response has ever been received from the RPOF, not even so much as an acknowledgement of receipt. Our job is to recruit and elect good Republican candidates, not hold on to power in the state party infrastructure.

    Our only option was to take her to court.


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