Tallahassee, FL – Jesse Jackson Hits Back At Fla. Gov Says No Apology For Comments

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    FILE - Sybrina Fulton (L) mother of Trayvon Martin, speaks to Reverend Jesse Jackson following a news conference at the National Bar Association annual convention in Miami Beach, Florida July 29, 2013. Speakers called for a change in 'stand your ground laws' starting in Florida.  REUTERS/Joe SkipperTallahassee, FL – Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson isn’t backing down from comments he made comparing Florida’s struggle with the Trayvon Martin case to the civil rights clashes with police during the 1960s in Selma, Ala.

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    Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Wednesday demanded that Jackson apologize for his comments calling the state the “Selma of our time.” He also said Florida has been an “apartheid” state.

    But Jackson, in an interview with The Associated Press, defended his remarks. He cited the state’s voter laws and incarceration rates of blacks versus the general population as examples of “apartheid like conditions.”

    Jackson made his original remarks while taking part in a protest at the Florida Capitol. He joined a group upset that George Zimmerman was acquitted in the shooting death of Martin.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Wednesday demanded an apology from longtime civil rights activist Jesse Jackson for comparing the state’s struggle with the Trayvon Martin case to the civil rights clashes with police during the 1960s in Selma, Ala.

    Jackson spent the night with protesters upset that George Zimmerman was found not guilty of second-degree murder in the shooting death of Martin. They’ve refused to leave the Capitol until Scott calls a special session to have legislators overhaul the state’s self-defense laws.

    Jackson called Florida the “Selma of our time” and even compared Scott to former Alabama Gov. George Wallace. While he was governor, Wallace famously stood in the door at the University of Alabama to try to block the entry of two black students.

    Scott so far has refused the request and the protest has dragged on for more than two weeks. The protesters have gotten national media attention and won support from celebrities such as entertainer Harry Belafonte and others who have urged people to boycott Florida.

    Scott in a release blasted Jackson’s comments as “reckless” and “divisive” and said that he should apologize to residents.

    “It is unfortunate that he would come to Florida to insult Floridians and divide our state at a time when we are striving for unity and healing,” Scott said.

    But Bishop Tavis Grant, national field director for the Rainbow PUSH coalition started by Jackson, said there was no need for an apology.

    “The governor has a deafening ear to the cries of those asking him to take a moral stand, not a political stand,” Grant said.

    Jackson left Tallahassee earlier Wednesday and wasn’t immediately made available to comment.

    Grant, though, said Jackson made his comments not only in response to the Zimmerman verdict but because of the case of Marissa Alexander.

    Alexander, who is from Jacksonville, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for firing a bullet at a wall to scare off her husband when she felt he was threatening her. A judge refused to let her use a “stand your ground” defense.

    Grant said that thousands of Floridians support Jackson and agree that the state’s “stand your ground” law is egregious.

    But that view isn’t shared by Scott or other Republican leaders in the Florida Legislature. Senate President Don Gaetz earlier this week that while he understands that some people are “frustrated” with the verdict that doesn’t mean the law should be changed.

    “In our system, a verdict is not then referred to a referendum of the people who are interested in the issue or who are passionate about the issue,” Gaetz said. “A verdict is a verdict.”

    The protesters, many of whom belong to a group called the Dream Defenders, want the special session to consider changing state laws to repeal Florida’s “stand your ground” law and to end racial profiling and zero-tolerance policies in public schools.

    Protesters this week started their own mock session in the Old Capitol. They also are trying to urge 32 legislators to ask for a special session. Under Florida law, if 32 legislators make that demand, then the Department of State must poll the Legislature. If three-fifths of lawmakers agree, then a special session must be called.


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    9 Comments
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    Facts1
    Facts1
    10 years ago

    Dont like the Jury verdict, lets abolish that last function of freedom too.

    I_Am_Me
    I_Am_Me
    10 years ago

    It’s nothing like Selma, Selma was about racism. This, on the other hand, is about a law that’s wrong, BUT it’s for all races

    goodnatured
    goodnatured
    10 years ago

    jackson is simply stupid

    JACKY
    JACKY
    10 years ago

    Jackson is and has always been a rabble rouser of the worst kind he has no merit or worth and strives on raising crowds and attacking decent people and democracy if it does not suit his non existent political aspirations.

    honestbroker
    honestbroker
    10 years ago

    Jesse Jackson is a race hustling jack… , who’s made a bloody fortune race baiting. Without cases like Zimmerman/Martin, he’d actually have to work for a living. Perhaps someone ought to inform him that the “stand your ground” law was not even used in Zimmerman’s defense. He waived his right in a pre-trial hearing!

    10 years ago

    Low life jesse why doesn’t he clean up his own house first. His son is in Illinois prison for stealing campaign funds. Difference between father and son is the father is a little more slick; he ought to do something useful in Chicago but that does not get him money and the center of attention. I dislike like him before and despise him even more now. jesse you low life go to work

    from-here_to-there
    from-here_to-there
    10 years ago

    hey jessie, I thought Hymiestate (If NYC is Hymietown…) is the new Selma. after all here in NY we preceded Florida (aka South Hymiestate) in having a Jury clear a person for shooting an unarmed teenager. jess you do know who Roderick Scott is and who Christopher Cervini was, don’t you? of course not! Roderick is Black and Christopher was white.

    10 years ago

    JJ is simply an articulate buffoon. He has contributed nothing but incitement to this country, and he has sought historically to cater to the criminal elements of society, not even the wonderful, decent members of his own race. He deserves to be marginalized and ignored.