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PRESORTED STANDARD MAIL U.S. POSTAGE PAID DAYTONA BEACH, FL PERMIT #189
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Taggert becomes first Black FSU football coach See page B1
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DECEMBER 8 – DECEMBER 14, 2017
VOLUME 25 NO. 49
NO-SHOWS AT THE POLLS The Democratic Party can’t dethrone Donald Trump and the GOP without Black college-age voters who walked away from the party. What’s the plan to get them back? Certainly, the lower turnout reflected the absence of President Barack Obama from the Democratic ticket in 2016, a lack of enthusiasm for the new standard-bearer, Hillary Clinton, and a weakening of the longtime allegiance between the party and African-American youth. But the worst may be yet to come.
BY TONY PUGH MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU / TNS
WASHINGTON – Once prized fighters in the battle for voting rights, students at America’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) dropped their guard in the 2016 elections. Voter turnout among the estimated 300,000 students at HBCUs fell nearly 11 percent from 2012 to 2016, according to a national survey by the Institute for Democracy & Higher Education at Tufts University. The decline, while consistent with a fall off among Black voters of all ages in 2016, was a sharp departure.
Serious drop If historic trends hold, Democrats could see Black voter turnout drop 30 percent in 2018, resulting in 5.2 million fewer African-American voters, according to a report by the nonpartisan Voter Participation Center
FLORIDA COURIER FILES
Bethune-Cookman University students marched to the polls to vote during the 2010 statewide elections. A recent survey says the rate of Black college student voting has dropped. and Democratic pollster Celinda Lake. Turnout among millennials, ages 18 to 34, could fall 35 percent next year, for a loss of 25.4 million voters, the report found. Declines of this magnitude
among overlapping groups who largely support Democrats could dash the party’s hopes of re-taking Congress in next year’s midterm elections when turnout typically falters and Republicans usually vote in higher numbers.
‘Wake-up call’ “It’s a big warning” for Democrats, said Lake. “It’s a big wakeup call. I think people have no idea the volume we’re talking See POLLS, Page A2
Bitter ends SIGN OF THE SEASON
A ‘Princess’ goes home
Misty Copeland, the first Black woman promoted to principal dancer in the 75year history of the American Ballet Theatre, will return to her Southern California home this holiday season to dance the role of Clara/Princess in a production of “The Nutcracker.” Copeland has appeared as a guest judge on “So You Think You Can Dance,” toured with musical artist Prince, and is the face of Estee Lauder’s Modern Muse fragrance.
Brown sentenced, Conyers driven out COMPILED FROM WIRE REPORTS
The long political careers of two former members of the Congressional Black Caucus – one a founder of the organization – probably ended during a two-day period this week. Here in Florida on Monday, a federal judge sentenced former U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown to five years in prison for her role in a scam that involved using charitable contributions for personal expenses and events. On Tuesday in Detroit, U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., retired from the seat he had held for more than five decades. Conyers faced a growing number of sexual harassment claims and a rising chorus of voices demanding he resign.
Brown’s ‘criminal enterprise’ Brown’s prison sentence, imposed by U.S. District Judge Timothy Corrigan, came after she was convicted in May on 18 felony counts. Corrigan also sentenced to prison Brown’s longtime chief of staff, Ronnie Simmons, to four Corrine years in prison and a Brown woman who started the purported charity, Carla Wiley, to 21 months. In a 25-page sentencing order, Corrigan said the One Door for Education charity, which was originally established to help children, was “operated as a criminal enterprise” by Brown, Simmons and Wiley. He detailed how the charity raised hundreds of thousands of dollars, which forensic accountants said was siphoned off in cash withdraw-
ROSALIE O’CONNOR
See BITTER, Page A2
SNAPSHOTS FLORIDA | A3
SPORTS | B1
Hurricane evacuation suggestions
Edward Waters coach resigns
NATION | A6
FOOD | B4
Citizenship applications increase
Recipes for Christmas cookie party
ALSO INSIDE
Slavery memorial gets boost in state Senate BY LLOYD DUNKELBERGER THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
TALLAHASSEE – A bill that would lead to the creation of a slavery memorial at the Florida Capitol began moving Tuesday in the state Senate. The Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee unanimously approved the bill (SB 286), sponsored by Sen. Dar-
ryl Rouson, a St. Petersburg Democrat who said the memorial would recognize “the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality and inhumanity of slavery” in Florida and rest of the nation. He said the memorial would “honor the nameless and forgotten men and women and children who have gone unrecognized for their undeniable and weighty contributions to this
state and country.”
Previously ignored The vote was significant because the House voted 118-0 during the 2017 legislative session to authorize a slavery memorial, but the proposal never received a hearing in the Senate. The bill approved by the committee Tuesday is filed for the 2018 session, which
Sen. Darryl Rouson
Dennis Baxley
starts Jan. 9. Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Chairman Dennis See MEMORIAL, Page A2
COMMENTARY: CHARLENE CROWELL: PAYDAY LENDERS CONTINUE ATTACK ON CONSUMERS | A4 GUEST COMMENTARY: BRANDON TERRELL: WHAT NO ONE TOLD ME ABOUT BEING ‘FIRST’ TO COLLEGE | A5