Jump to content

Corrine Brown: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m added reference to her recent speech on the house floor, which is a matter of public record, and should not be supressed.
Line 27: Line 27:


Brown has enjoyed some of her strongest support from religious leaders.<ref name="lyonscheck"/> She also receives PAC money from organized labor and the sugar industry.<ref name="lyonscheck2">[http://www.sptimes.com/State/41498/Lawmaker_got_10_000_f.html "Lawmaker got $10,000 from Lyons fund"] St. Petersburg Times.</ref>
Brown has enjoyed some of her strongest support from religious leaders.<ref name="lyonscheck"/> She also receives PAC money from organized labor and the sugar industry.<ref name="lyonscheck2">[http://www.sptimes.com/State/41498/Lawmaker_got_10_000_f.html "Lawmaker got $10,000 from Lyons fund"] St. Petersburg Times.</ref>

On January 21, 2009, Brown made an appearance on the house floor, "Commending the National Champion University of Florida Gators." After the video of the speech became very popular on the internet, Brown has been widely criticized due to her surprisingly poor use of grammar, and dramatic mispronunciation of several words including "congratulate," as well as the names of Percy Harvin and Coach Urban Meyer. Although the transcript is inaccurate, the video is available as public record on the [[C-Span]] web site.<ref name="GatorGrats">[http://www.c-spanarchives.org/congress/?q=node/77531&id=8921355 "COMMENDING THE NATIONAL CHAMPION UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA GATORS"]</ref>


==Complaints and investigations==
==Complaints and investigations==

Revision as of 20:10, 30 April 2009

Corrine Brown
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 3rd district
Assumed office
January 3, 1993
Preceded byCharles Bennett
Personal details
Political partyDemocratic
Spousesingle
ResidenceJacksonville, Florida
Alma materFlorida A&M University, University of Florida
Occupationcollege professor

Corrine Brown (born November 11, 1946) is an American politician. She has been a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives since 1993, representing Florida's 3rd congressional district (map). Her district includes parts of Duval, Clay, Putnam, Alachua, Volusia, Marion, Lake, Seminole, and Orange Counties.

Biography

Born in Jacksonville, Florida, Brown attended Florida A&M University, from which she received a bachelor's in sociology and a master's degree in education[1], and the University of Florida, where she was awarded an educational specialist degree. She received a Honorary Doctor of Law degree from Edward Waters College in Jacksonville, and has been on the faculty at the latter two schools and at Florida Community College at Jacksonville. She served in the Florida House of Representatives for ten years before entering government at the national level, and she is currently a member of the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Progressive Caucus. In college she became a member of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, one of four African American Greek letter sororities in the United States.

Brown was elected to the Florida House of Representatives in 1982. She served five terms, gaining wide recognition in the Jacksonville area, and served as a delegate to the 1988 Democratic National Convention.[citation needed] After the 1990 census, the Florida legislature carved out a new Third Congressional District in the northern part of the state. This district was designed to enclose an African-American majority within its boundaries. A horseshoe-shaped district touching on predominantly African-American neighborhoods in Jacksonville, Gainesville, Orlando, and Ocala,[2] the Third District seemed likely to send Florida's first African-American to Congress since Reconstruction, and Brown decided to run.[3]

Brown faced several candidates in the 1992 Democratic primary, but the strongest opponent to emerge was a white talk radio host from Jacksonville named Andy Johnson. Johnson, according to the Almanac of American Politics, called himself "the blackest candidate in the race." Brown defeated Johnson in the primary and in a two-candidate runoff, and went on to win the general election in November 1992.[4] In 1995, the boundaries of the Third District were struck down by the Supreme Court[5] due to their irregular shape, and the percentage of African American residents of the district declined to about 47 percent. One of the main instigators of the lawsuit that led to the redistricting was Brown's old political rival, Andy Johnson. Brown railed against the change, complaining that "[t]he Bubba I beat [Johnson] couldn't win at the ballot box [so] he took it to court," as she was quoted as saying in the New Republic. Brown won in her new white majority district in 1996.[6]

Brown has enjoyed some of her strongest support from religious leaders.[2] She also receives PAC money from organized labor and the sugar industry.[7]

On January 21, 2009, Brown made an appearance on the house floor, "Commending the National Champion University of Florida Gators." After the video of the speech became very popular on the internet, Brown has been widely criticized due to her surprisingly poor use of grammar, and dramatic mispronunciation of several words including "congratulate," as well as the names of Percy Harvin and Coach Urban Meyer. Although the transcript is inaccurate, the video is available as public record on the C-Span web site.[8]

Complaints and investigations

Controversy has followed Brown since the start of her national political career, from her actions while a state legislator.[7] The Florida Ethics Commission fined Brown $5,000 for using legislative employees as dual employees of her travel business.[7]

A few weeks after becoming a member of the U.S. House in 1993, the Federal Elections Commission began investigating her. Her former campaign treasurer quit and said Brown had neglected to take action against an aide who had committed forgery, forging the treasurer's signature on her financial documents. The staffer alleged to have forged the treasurer's signature stayed with Brown and as of 1998 was her chief of staff.[7] In 1996, there was another investigation concerning charges that Brown improperly received and spent a $10,000 check from a secret account used for money laundering by National Baptist Convention leader Henry Lyons.[2] Brown admitted receiving the check but denied she had used the money improperly.[2] She was accused of not reporting the check or reporting who she received the money from. Brown said that she had taken the check and converted it into another check made out to Pameron Bus Tours to pay for transportation to a rally she organized in Tallahassee. She said that she didn't have to report the money because the rally was to protest the reorganization of her district lines, and she did not use it for herself.[2] If the $10,000 gift had been reported, it would have exceeded the $1,000 individual donation limit.[2]

Brown had had previous dealings with Lyons; in 1992, her campaign paid $5,000, allegedly for a computer, to a company owned by Lyons. The company had shut down six years earlier.[7] Her office once arranged for Lyons to buy several airline tickets at the government discount rate.[7] Under Congressional rules, only members of Congress and their staffers are allowed to take this rate.[7]

On February 25, 2004 Brown referred to the George W. Bush administration as a "racist" "bunch of white men" in a meeting with senior State Department officials and members of Congress.[9] Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega, a Mexican American, said that he deeply resented "being called a racist and branded a white man." Brown replied to Noriega and Cuban-American Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart that "you all look alike to me".[citation needed] Brown later apologized for her statements, but still contends that President Bush's involvement in the 2004 Haiti Rebellion was racist.[citation needed] On November 3, 2008, while attending a Barack Obama rally in Jacksonville, Brown was interviewed by two college journalists about her comments concerning George W. Bush, and whether he should be impeached. Brown had no comment about her previous statements and was quoted as saying, "it won't matter soon."[citation needed]

Ethics involving daughter

On June 9, 1998, the Congressional Accountability Project filed an ethics complaint against Brown. The Project called for the U.S. House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to investigate several violations of House Rule 10.[10] One of the complaints was that Brown's daughter Shantrel, a lawyer who worked for the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, had received a $50,000 Lexus LS 400 automobile as a gift from an agent of a Gambian millionaire named Foutanga Sissoko. Sissoko, a friend of Congresswoman Brown, had been imprisoned in Miami after pleading guilty to charges of bribing a customs officer. Brown had worked to secure his release, pressuring U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno to deport Sissoko back to his homeland as an alternative to continued incarceration. The Project held this violated the House gift rule, but Brown denied she had acted improperly. The congressional subcommittee investigating Brown found insufficient evidence to issue a Statement of Alleged Violation, but said she had acted with poor judgment in connection with Sissoko.[2][11]

In June 2007, Citizens for Ethics released a report reporting Brown's daughter Shantrel Brown-Fields as a congressional lobbyist; the organization maintains that Congressional relatives working as lobbyists for special interests are a conflict of interest for lawmakers. Brown-Fields is employed by Alcalde & Fayte, with clients including ITERA, Miami-Dade County Commission, and Edward Waters College. In 2006, Brown's campaign committee paid her daughter's husband, Tyree Fields, $5,500 for political consulting work. Rep. Brown has earmarked millions of dollars in federal funding for her daughter's client Edward Waters College.[12]

Controversy During Tropical Storm Faye

On Friday, August 22 2008, during the height of Tropical Storm Faye, which was pounding the North Florida area with heavy rain and winds, Ms. Brown called the City of Jacksonville to request pumps and sandbags be brought to her house along the Trout River because it was flooding. According to Brown, she made several phone calls to Jacksonville's Public Works Office, FEMA and the US Army Corps of Engineers, Home Depot to find free sandbags, before she finally reached Adam Hollingsworth, chief of staff for Jacksonville Mayor John Peyton, on Friday, . According to an article on the Florida Times-Union website[13] Hollingsworth once worked for Ms. Brown before this job with the city.

Eventually, city vehicles showed up with a crew of inmates, as the city uses low-risk inmates to do this sort of work, to sandbag the garage and front door after she was flooded with about a foot of water. Brown got angry with the reporter from Channel 4 doing the interview, demanding that the City of Jacksonville figure out how much it cost and she would "pay the bill" to silence any controversy. According to her neighbor, Joe Deloach, he asked for the same help from the crew of inmates sandbagging Ms. Brown's property, but was denied and laughed at by the crew working on the project. [14]

On November 3, 2008, while attending a Barack Obama rally in Jacksonville, Florida, Brown was momemtarily heckled concerning her sandbag controversy, but did not acknowledge her accusers.[citation needed]

Political activity

In her previous (2003–2005) term, Brown cosponsored legislation regarding civil rights and foreign relations. She has also participated in Michael Moore's "Slacker" college voter drive tour.

On the first day of early voting for the 2004 General Election, Brown, with several supporters, stood on the steps of the entrance of the Duval County Supervisor of Elections headquarters, an early voting site, and began passing out a "pseudo-ballot," directing people to vote for only Democratic candidates and Florida amendments that should pass. It was not until noon that Brown and her supporters moved to the mandatory fifty feet away from the entrance. Brown claimed her intention had been to increase awareness of early voting, and that she had not knowingly violated the fifty feet rule.[15]

In July 2004 Brown was censured by the House of Representatives after she referred to the disputed 2000 presidential election in Florida as a "coup d'état". This comment came during floor debate over HR-4818, which would have provided for international monitoring of the 2004 U.S. presidential election.[16]

Brown was one of the 31 representatives who voted against counting the electoral votes from Ohio in the United States presidential election, 2004.[17] In 2006, she voted "no" on the Child Custody Protection Act, Public Expression of Religion Act, Electronic Surveillance Modernization Act, Military Commissions Act, and Private Property Rights Implementation Act of 2006. She voted "yes" on the SAFE Port Act. On September 29, 2008, Brown voted for the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008.[18]

Committee assignments

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.washingtontimes.com/elections/candidate/65/
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Rep. Brown explains check from Lyons" (July 28, 1998). St. Petersburg Times.
  3. ^ "COMMENDING CONGRESSWOMAN CORRINE BROWN OF THE 3RD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FOR OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL ACHIEVEMENT." Alabama State Legislature.
  4. ^ "Concentrating Minority Voters Builds Liberal Strength in the South" (April 11, 2004) Stanford University.
  5. ^ "The shape of things to come: Cleo Fields is the first to fall as redistricting changes the political map — Blacks in Congress are threatened — Elections '96" (October 1996). Black Enterprise.
  6. ^ "Testimony of Professor David Canon " (June 21, 2006). Senate testimony.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Lawmaker got $10,000 from Lyons fund" St. Petersburg Times.
  8. ^ "COMMENDING THE NATIONAL CHAMPION UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA GATORS"
  9. ^ Associated Press. "Congresswoman Brown Calls Bush's Haiti Policy Racist".
  10. ^ Ethics complaint. Congressproject.org.
  11. ^ [http://www.house.gov/ethics/Press_Statement_CorrineBrownend.html "Statement of the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct in the Matter of Representative Corrine Brown"] (September 21, 2000). House.gov.
  12. ^ "Family Affair" (June 2007). Citizens for Ethics.
  13. ^ Jacksonville Times-Union (August 23rd, 2008). Sandbags stir charges of special treatment. Tia Mitchell/Jacksonville.com.
  14. ^ News4Jax.com (August 23rd, 2008). At Height Of Storm, City Crews Sandbag Congresswoman's Home. News4Jax.com
  15. ^ Meenan, Kyle (October 19, 2004). First Coast News Report. FirstCoastNews.com.
  16. ^ Firstcoastnews.com | Jacksonville, St. Augustine and Brunswick | Congresswoman Corrine Brown in Jacksonville after Censure
  17. ^ http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2005/roll007.xml
  18. ^ "Bailout Roll Call" (PDF). 2008-09-29. Retrieved on September 29, 2008

References

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Florida's 3rd congressional district

1993–Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

Template:Florida delegation to the 110th Congress