St. Petersburg mayor’s race, as depicted in TV commercials (video)

A quick roundup of all the ads airing in the St. Pete mayor’s race. First, Bill Foster’s ad:

Next, Scott Wagman’s from last week:
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St. Petersburg mayor’s race: Deveron Gibbons releases second TV ad

Mayoral morass: What’s wrong with the St. Petersburg mayor’s race

This week’s column from the print edition of Creative Loafing:

About 500-600 people are voting for a new mayor of St. Petersburg every day now, part of what has become a vote-by-mail system of absentee voting in Florida. Nearly 60,000 city residents have requested an absentee ballot, almost 40 percent of the registered voters.

That’s a big number. So why do I hear so many complaints about the 2009 race to succeed Mayor Rick Baker being a real snoozer? Polling earlier in the month showed that 61 percent of the voters didn’t have a preference among the 10 candidates running. And although nearly 7,000 people had voted by the end of last week, there is very little visible to any of the campaigns, beyond the ubiquitous yard signs. It’s impossible to time the peak of your political campaign when Election Day lasts 45 days, and no candidate has enough money to run a full-bore mass media campaign for that long.

Take the latest mayoral forum, held by St. Pete Preservation last week in front of about 100 good folks at Studio@620. I popped in to shoot a few photos and perhaps hear their stump speeches, but after almost an hour the crowd had heard only from preservationists, who got five minutes apiece to school nine candidates on why historic preservation is important. Even the hometown St. Petersburg Times didn’t staff the preservation forum. When the candidates did begin to talk, there wasn’t much separation.

How can something be anticlimactic before it’s even over?

Here are the reasons why this year’s city election is having a hard time connecting with voters:

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Another police union endorses Bill Foster for St. Petersburg mayor

Bill Foster, the St. Pete mayoral candidate with the strongest “get-tough-on-crime” stance, has picked up his second police office union endorsement. The Fraternal Order of Police Pinellas Lodge 43 joins an earlier nod from the Sun Coast Police Benevolent Association.

In a statement, Foster said:

“Knowing full well that public safety is the number one issue of my fellow citizens, I am honored to have the support of our brave men and women in local law enforcement. These are the same people that we entrust our safety to, and I am grateful that they recognize my qualities and vision as the most sensible and effective candidate to reduce crime in our city.”

That makes a clean sweep of rank-and-file cops for Foster. As for the rest of the candidates, Deveron Gibbons recently was pictured with some top SPPD brass who are supporting him. Despite his sketchy driving record.

Deveron Gibbons releases first campaign TV commercial in St. Petersburg mayor’s race (video)

Just getting back into the office today after six days off and getting caught up with stuff like this TV commercial from St. Pete mayoral candidate Deveron GIbbons. Yes, of course Charlie Crist is in the ad. As are Deveron’s parents. And footage of Deveron chatting with two old white ladies, evidence for nervous white St. Pete voters that it is all right to support a black candidate.

See the full video after the jump:

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Gov. Charlie Crist endorses Deveron Gibbons in St. Petersburg mayor’s race

It is a only bit of a surprise (and far from “stunning,” as the campaign puts it), since Deveron Gibbons has long been a supporter of Charlie Crist and a beneficiary of the Gov’s appointments, but Crist has publicly endorsed Gibbons in the mayor’s race in St. Petersburg. Normally, politicians running in their own races have their hands full and stay out of other campaigns where they could make enemies. Nonethless, Crist is on board with Team Gibbons. Here is the news release, and DL the entire release after the jump:

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Political Whore Podcast #8: St. Petersburg mayoral candidate Deveron Gibbons on crime, cops and ‘gravitas’

In my continuing series of interviews with St. Petersburg mayoral candidates, Deveron Gibbons today stepped into the plush West Tampa studios of Creative Loafing to cut a half-hour podcast interview with me. With his political consultant Adam Goodman listening in, Gibbons talked about how he feels about the St. Pete Police Department (historically, it has made great strides, he said) and the impression by skeptics that he doesn’t have the gravitas to be mayor.

Get the full podcast after the jump:

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Video: Deveron Gibbons recalls crime, murder in his neighborhood

From today’s St. Petersburg mayoral forum comes this video snippet of candidate Deveron Gibbons responding to a question about the most recent killing in Bartlett Park, in which a young girl was killed in a gang-shooting. GIbbons recalls his own days in that neighborhood and the deaths he witnessed.

St. Petersburg’s Election 2009: Mayoral Madness

By Peter Schorsch
PoHo contributor

Bracketology for Mayoral Madness

Bracketology for Mayoral Madness

It’s a month earlier than college basketball’s March Madness, but with both Rick Kriseman and Ken Welch deciding this week not to run for mayor of St. Petersburg, political observers are now left with a much clearer “playoff picture.” The race is still in the first round, but the paths to victory for some candidates are now better defined.

In my analysis, I thought only either Deveron Gibbons or Ken Welch could move forward by consolidating the African-American vote. Although it may be passe to view the black vote in such monolithic terms, Gibbons is now the default leader of an entire voting bloc.

The other big winner this week was Jamie Bennett (disclosure: I am a volunteer on Jamie’s campaign). With Kriseman’s withdrawl, Bennett was ceded a huge swath of political geography in the south and west districts of St. Petersburg. More importantly, he is now the standard-bearer for the city’s Democrat and progressive voters. And don’t discount the fact that he is also the only candidates still in office. Read the rest of this entry »

St. Pete mayor candidate Deveron Gibbons releases big-hitter list

Deveron Gibbons, an AMSCOT veep and Republican civic appointee running in this year’s St. Petersburg mayoral race, has released his list of big-name supporters and finance chairmen, and it is top heavy with a congressman, Florida legislators and other well known politicians.

Read the full announcement after the jump or you can download a .pdf of it:

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