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Jacksonville Bold for 12.17.25: Nixon’s next move

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People living in House District 13 probably weren’t expecting Rep. Angie Nixon to bring home the bacon in what likely is her last year in the Florida Legislature in 2026.

Nixon has spent the last few months considering her next move, which could be a run for the U.S. Senate, and she’s been traveling the state recently on a listening tour to gauge whether she’d have enough support to make a run against former Brevard County School Board member Jennifer Jenkins viable.

She recently was in St. Petersburg auditioning her pitch around a “spanking (sic) new vision, where all families have stability, all workers have dignity, and all children have the opportunity to actually reach the American dream that we have been taught about in schools.”

“But we have to make sure that we get involved, right? And we have to make sure that we elect people who care more about working families than they care about padding their pockets. As I’ve been traveling the state, talking to people and listening to folks, we need fighters who are willing to be on the front lines. And that’s why I’m excited to let you know that I am really strongly considering running for the United States Senate.”

If this sounds familiar, it should.

Nixon has been considering a Senate run for months.

As far back as July, Nixon asked one current state Senator for an endorsement. And a Democratic consultant said then that Nixon was “going to be announcing for Senate extremely soon,” which “put a lot of pressure on former and current contenders on whether they would stay in the race or not.”

The Smiths posed the musical question “How soon is now?” They probably couldn’t have anticipated that five months after “extremely soon,” Nixon would still be on the same listening tour she promoted in September, as if in a “failure to launch” contest against slow-developing gubernatorial candidate, current LG Jay Collins.

And indeed, her tour brings her close to home this week, with a fundraiser Thursday at 6 p.m. at Mocama Fernandina with a suggested minimum donation of $50.

Angie Nixon weighs a Senate run during a statewide listening tour as Florida Democrats await decisions on the campaign.

Expect that her message won’t deviate from what she’s been saying in recent months and that she will continue to maintain she’s “the biggest pain in Ron DeSantis’ ass” in the Legislature.

Ultimately, she’ll have to win the Primary if she runs for Senate. And if that’s the case, she and Suzanne Jenkins and other candidates will have to start throwing elbows at each other ahead of a challenge against one of the best statewide candidates in the game right now, incumbent Republican Ashley Moody, who won twice statewide in her races for Attorney General and who has the advantage going into her first election for Senate.

Tweet, tweet

You’ve got mail

Months after first teasing a run for Governor, Lt. Gov. Collins hasn’t launched a campaign.

Despite his indecision, advertising continues to promote him as if he has already made it official.

Mail from the Florida Fighter group, including to Jacksonville Republicans, is circulating, promoting the former state Senator from Tampa as a “wounded warrior, proven conservative” who has “delivered conservative wins” and is “standing with” Gov. Ron DeSantis.

The group’s documented television buys are approaching $3 million as of last check, and that’s without knowing who or what is buying the ads. That question will never be answered, given that the political committee is classified as a “social welfare” organization.

Jay Collins delays gubernatorial launch as third-party ads flood mailboxes and polls show limited support.

The mail urges recipients to call Collins and “thank” him. The call is answered by an automated voice: “The Lieutenant Governor is not answering. This mailbox is full.”

Collins has praised the third-party effort on his behalf.

“I’m very grateful for whatever group that was that put those out there. … We are in this short, final part of wrapping up our decision, and I’m very grateful for that group. It’s very encouraging to see people believe in our message and our approach,” he said at a news conference last month.

Collins especially appreciates the air cover since he sees himself as an alternative to “politicians who pat themselves on the back and put their ego first,” a seeming allusion to U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who had more than $31 million banked as of the end of September.

Collins has struggled in public polls of the still-nascent Republican field to succeed DeSantis.

Collins is at 1% in a poll from Victory Insights and at 4% in a survey from St. Pete Polls.

Citizens’ chance

Jacksonville’s branch of the Federal Bureau of Investigation is looking for people like you for its Citizens Academy next year.

“If you would like to nominate a community, business, academic, or religious leader or nominate yourself for the 2026 Citizens Academy, please visit the FBI Jacksonville Community Outreach page and complete the online nomination form for each nominee,” the FBI implores.

FBI Jacksonville seeks community leaders for 2026 Citizens Academy, applications due Jan. 15 next year.

The deadline to apply is Jan. 15.

“Nominations of business, community, academic and religious leaders are essential to developing an ambassador group to represent the FBI in the communities we serve and live in. We ask that you think strategically about whom you nominate for the Citizens Academy and how their participation would benefit the FBI Academy’s mission and the greater community, ranging from their participation in this program to their contribution to the Alumni Association and beyond. Candidates may be nominated by FBI employees, former Citizens Academy graduates, community leaders and may also self-nominate.”

One less Board

Nassau County’s government is about to become a bit more streamlined, as an appointed Board that has been dormant since 2002 may be eliminated.

Rep. Dean Black’s legislation (HB 4017) would terminate Nassau County Recreation & Water Conservation & Control Districts on the books since the 1960s, when the Legislature created them by a special act.

There is one such district in ordinance.

Dean Black backs bill to eliminate the dormant Nassau County district and transfer its responsibilities to County Commission oversight.

Though the Board hasn’t done anything in 23 years, removing it from the books purportedly would reduce administrative costs and would transfer all assets and liabilities of the district to the Nassau County Board of County Commissioners, and protect taxpayers.

“The county has established a municipal service benefit unit, or MSBU, to address drainage issues subsequently. Therefore, the district is no longer functioning or necessary. In a word, it is now obsolete,” Black said.

“The district does not own any land; the district does not have any assets. The district does not currently levy any taxes. It has been inactive since 2002. The repeal of this district would prevent a future Board of County Commissioners from levying millage rates for what is now a defunct and unnecessary district against the taxpayers of Nassau County.”

The State Affairs Committee is the final Committee stop before the House floor.

Movin’ on up

A Clay County judge (and friend of the newsletter) is celebrating a promotion at the end of the year.

Green Cove Springs’ Kristina Mobley will move from her position as a county court judge for Clay County to a judge for the entire 4th Circuit, where she was a Judicial Staff Attorney before becoming a judge. Legislation passed this year expanded judgeships across the state, allowing Mobley to advance.

Clay County Judge Kristina Mobley was promoted to the 4th Judicial Circuit following the legislative expansion of judgeships.

Mobley’s husband, Joe, is also well known to our readers as the Managing Partner of The Florida Group, directing the firm’s Jacksonville and Tallahassee practices.

Poll position

A new poll reveals what messaging could be used as Jacksonville Mayor Donna Deegan prepares to run for four more years in office.

But the pollster purports to be far away from Duval.

JacksonvilleStudies.com lists its address at a strip mall with a UPS store in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of northwest Washington, D.C., blocks from Malcolm X Park.

Questionable poll tests Donna Deegan’s messaging as Jacksonville’s Mayor quietly prepares for a potential re-election campaign.

Its phone number doesn’t accept inbound calls, and Deegan herself isn’t talking about the survey. So, we don’t know if her “Duval for Allpolitical committee is paying for the effort, or if the money is coming from elsewhere.

No disclaimer language was on the text message soliciting responses or the poll itself. We called “John,” whose phone is in Astor, Florida, who sent out the text message. But he didn’t answer, and we were routed to a “campaign voicemail.” Our call hasn’t been returned yet.

The poll tests Deegan head-to-head against various potential Republican candidates, including House Speaker Pro Tempore Wyman Duggan, Duval County Elections Supervisor Jerry Holland and Jacksonville City Council member Rory Diamond.

None has formally declared a run, though we have seen polling conducted on Holland’s behalf.

While it’s unclear who will run against Deegan in 2027, it is clear that those candidates will have to counter various positive messages, including some that were auditioned in this phone poll.

People responding to the poll are asked if they think the Jacksonville Journey Forward initiative is keeping them safer and improving lives, as well as whether Deegan is keeping promises, making things easier for small businesses, supporting first responders, and using her “negotiating skills” in completing negotiations with the NFL Jaguars for stadium improvements.

Additionally, they are asked whether they know Jacksonville has the lowest property taxes of any major city in the state, whether she has improved downtown, whether she has made progress on “affordable housing” and health insurance coverage, and whether she is “approachable.”

The poll does not ask about a hologram of Deegan at the Jacksonville International Airport, a much-criticized airport greeting device that critics say shows her ego and self-promotion, suggesting the surveyors don’t believe this issue matters to voters despite Republican tub-thumping.

The apparently pro-Deegan poll comes after the Tyson Group’s survey earlier this year showed that Jacksonville voters would prefer a generic Republican to a generic Democrat in a ballot test stripped of meaningful markers such as name recognition and the power of incumbency.

No serious candidate has filed to run against Deegan, and she has not yet opened a campaign account.

But this poll shows that even this sleepy campaign cycle is about to stop hitting the snooze button and get going at last.

Reducing ride rates

The Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA) Board of Directors approved a fare modification pilot program that will begin Feb. 1.

The fare cuts for bus rides will be on a trial basis and will last six months initially. Fixed-route fares will drop from $1.75 to $1, and connection paratransit fares will drop from $2 to $1.

JTA approves a six-month fare-cut pilot, lowering bus and paratransit fares and expanding public outreach meetings.

“This fare decrease pilot reflects our commitment to putting our community first,” said Nat Ford, JTA CEO. “By lowering fares, we’re removing barriers to mobility and making it easier for people across Jacksonville to access jobs, education, health care and opportunity.”

JTA officials also announced this month that the service will seek more public input on the operations of the organization with public meetings that will review new fleet vehicles, route enhancements, updates on current services and other elements of the service. There will be six public meetings held in January alone, with more details to be announced by JTA officials.

Buyers doing better

Single-family home sales and prices declined notably in November, according to the latest report from the Northeast Florida Association of Realtors (NEFAR).

The six-county First Coast region saw a definite drop in housing sales last month. The NEFAR report showed not only a decline in home sales compared with October, but also a year-over-year decline.

Northeast Florida home sales edge downward in November.

There were 1,374 closed single-family houses sold across the First Coast region in November. That’s down by 6.9% from the 1,476 homes sold in November 2024. It’s also a steep 20.4% drop from the 1,726 homes sold in Northeast Florida in October 2025.

The housing market on the First Coast is leaning toward buyers in another way: home prices. The median sales price in the region for November was $375,000. That’s a 4.1% decline from November 2024, when the median price tag for a home was $390,992. The figure also fell from October’s price, dropping 2.1% from $380,020.

Active inventory of homes for sale in North Florida, which had been climbing for much of the past year, declined. There were 7,286 homes for sale in the six-county market. That’s down 3.9% from November 2024’s figure of 7,585 and a 4.4% drop from October’s 7,623.

In the individual county breakout, Duval County, the most populous in the North Florida region, showed similar trends to the regional figures.

There were 709 homes sold in the county, which is home to Jacksonville. That’s a 2.1% drop in the year-over-year comparison, when there were 724 homes sold. It’s also a whopping 22.9% decline from October’s figure of 919 homes sold. Duval’s median sales price did pick up, though, coming in at $330,000. That’s a 1.2% jump from a year ago and a 1.5% uptick from October.

St. Johns County, one of Florida’s fastest-growing counties and the largest suburb to Jacksonville, saw sales and prices tumble last month. There were 354 closed home sales in November. That’s a 10.6% drop from November 2024’s 396 home sales and a 13.7% drop from October’s figure of 410 homes sold. The median sales price in St. Johns was $508,993. That marks a 3% decline from a year ago and a 9.5% drop from October.

Manufacturers making money

First Coast manufacturers put the brakes on contraction for the first time in months in November, though the general industrial picture was flat.

The University of North Florida (UNF) Jacksonville Economic Monitoring Survey (JEMS) shows several manufacturing sectors expanded in November, the most upbeat turnaround on the First Coast in several months. Seven of the 12 elements of the UNF survey showed that the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) expanded last month. That’s a significant change from October, when only two sectors showed expansion.

First Coast manufacturing stabilizes in November as UNF survey shows expansion despite flat overall activity.

“Jacksonville’s headline PMI of 50 in November indicates that local manufacturing activity was essentially flat. This stands in contrast to the national PMI of 48.2, which shows that U.S. manufacturing continued to contract at a faster pace,” said Albert Loh, Interim Dean of the UNF Coggin College of Business, who oversees the JEMS survey.

“Still, a flat PMI is relatively positive when compared with deeper national declines and highlights Jacksonville’s resilience heading toward 2026.”

UNF researchers from the JEMS project contact First Coast manufacturing companies each month to assess their production and other factors.

One of the key factors showing expansion for North Florida manufacturers in October was output, which jumped from 49 in October to 53 in November.

“A reading of 53 suggests a modest but meaningful pickup in business activity in the region. While not signaling a boom, it reflects resilience and indicates that local firms are navigating cost pressures, supply chain adjustments, and mixed demand with cautious optimism,” the JEMS report concluded.

New orders, another high-profile manufacturing indicator, also showed a substantial uptick, rising from 49 in October to 52 in November.

Playoff dreams

On Sunday, the Jaguars answered a big question. Yes, they are a playoff-caliber team.

The dismantling of a struggling New York Jets team, 48-20, was exactly what a good team should do. And the Jaguars have dominated bottom-feeders twice this season. The first performance came in Nashville against the Titans as part of the current five-game winning streak.

Quarterback Trevor Lawrence enjoyed his best game of the season, completing 20 of 32 passes for 330 yards and a career-high five touchdowns. He also ran for a score.

Jaguars dominate Jets as Trevor Lawrence throws five touchdowns, strengthening Jacksonville’s hopes of an AFC playoff push.

When you consider the other dominating win, a 35-6 victory over a playoff-hopeful Los Angeles Chargers team, the Jaguars’ recent trend is among the most impressive in the NFL.

During the five-game winning streak, the Jaguars outscored opponents by an average of 34-14. In the NFL, that’s dominance.

So, what comes next?

This week, the Jaguars, 10-4, will have a different kind of test. On Sunday, the Jaguars are scheduled to face one of the top teams in the AFC, the Broncos, in Denver.

Denver comes in at 12-2 after a 34-26 win over the Green Bay Packers. They sit in the top spot in the AFC standings and have won 11 straight games and can clinch the top spot in the AFC playoffs and home-field advantage in the playoffs with a win over the Jaguars and losses by the Chargers, Patriots and Bills. It’s a game with significant stakes for the Broncos. And for the Jaguars.

The Jaguars can clinch a playoff spot with a win and either a loss or tie by the Indianapolis Colts or a loss or tie by the Texans. That we are discussing playoff clinching scenarios before Christmas says a lot about the turnaround the Jaguars are experiencing.

Heading into the weekend, the Jaguars hold the third spot in the AFC playoffs. The Houston Texans sit a game behind the Jaguars in the AFC South.

If the Jaguars upset the Broncos in Denver, they would have a good shot at the second seed in the AFC. And maybe, even the top seed. That would be a remarkable turnaround from last season.

Last week’s victory over the Colts all but assured the Jaguars of a playoff spot. Sunday’s win over the Jets showed that the Jaguars are playing the kind of football that playoff teams must play in December. With three games remaining in the regular season, the Jaguars have hit their stride. That could lead to an exciting postseason.

This could be a season with a surprise AFC champion. And what could be more surprising than the Jaguars in the Super Bowl?



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Miami Beach Commission censures Fabián Basabe, prompting heated exchange at City Hall

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After months of public criticism by Rep. Fabián Basabe that culminated in the approval of a state audit of Miami Beach’s government operations, the City Commission has formally censured the lawmaker.

The seven-member panel unanimously approved a resolution denouncing Basabe’s allegations of corruption, mismanagement, favoritism, unethical behavior, improper contracting and cronyism — claims that city officials say are unsupported by evidence.

“Unsubstantiated allegations made by public officials undermine public trust, harm the City’s reputation, disparage City employees and elected officials, and create unnecessary doubt in the integrity of municipal governance,” the resolution states.

The item passed Wednesday as part of the Commission’s consent agenda, but not before a heated exchange during public comment between Basabe and Mayor Steven Meiner, who at one point threatened to have the lawmaker removed from the chamber.

Basabe used his remarks to reiterate criticism of the city’s homelessness ordinance, which he has argued is weaker than state law. City officials dispute that claim, citing census data from the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust and noting that Miami Beach’s ordinance prohibits public camping at all times, while state law bans it only overnight.

Basabe also claimed several people had privately told him Miami Beach needs to be audited, including “the Mayor’s most trusted adviser.” While the city already has an independent Inspector General, Basabe has argued internal oversight mechanisms are compromised by local influence.

Meiner said he welcomes the state audit and any corrective findings it may produce, but argued Basabe’s broader accusations go far beyond legitimate oversight.

“The reason why this item is on the agenda is because you move from issue to issue, saying things that are completely fabricated, untrue and have no basis in any evidence whatsoever,” Meiner said. “That is intolerable.”

Meiner accused Basabe of seeking headlines to distract from what he characterized as a weak legislative record. “You’re a failed legislator,” the Mayor said.

Of 36 bills Basabe has been the prime sponsor of since winning office in 2022, he has passed 10, nine of which passed in the 2025 Session. He has also brought millions in state appropriations back to his district.

Asked to provide evidence of poor fiscal or operational oversight, Basabe cited a 2021 city contract with FPI Security Services, alleging the company was not in good standing at the time. City Attorney Richard Dopico later said city and state records show that assertion is incorrect.

A brief shouting match followed, during which Basabe challenged Meiner to a public debate. Commissioner Alex Fernandez dismissed the idea as a “waste of time.”

“I spent two hours trying to find peace with the Representative, extending yet another olive branch,” Fernandez said. “It’s not about the public. It’s all about him and elevating himself.”

Fernandez said that during their meeting, Basabe airdropped him an endorsement from an elected official from another municipality and asked for a similar one from him. Fernandez said he refused.

“Two weeks later, we’re getting audited,” he said. “Let that sink in.”

Basabe denied ever seeking Fernandez’s endorsement. “I would never take it unless you give the city an apology,” he said.

Commissioner Tanya Bhatt — a co-sponsor of the resolution along with Meiner, Fernandez and Commissioner Laura Dominguez, whom Basabe has also accused of impropriety — said she rarely responds to comments Basabe makes in public and online because they are “so fallacious.”

“It’s really disappointing to see an elected Representative who’s supposed to represent all of us attacking the city, its leadership and its residents,” Bhatt said, adding that while she welcomes the audit, she takes exception with what she called “one-sided and vitriolic on our policies, the truth (and) individuals with no backup. It’s exhausting.”

Commissioner Joseph Magazine said he remains open to dialogue with Basabe, but objected to the lawmaker blaming the City Commission for a pair of attacks by homeless people on Miami Beach residents in the past two years.

“These were people (who) were arrested … and released numerous times, people that had no business whatsoever being on our streets, and I don’t mean in a homeless fashion; I mean outside the prison system,” he said. “If we want to make our region better, let’s work with our partners at the state, at all levels, to try and fix that broken criminal justice system.”

Basabe has accused the resolution’s sponsors of turning a routine oversight issue into a political fight and criticized placing the item on the consent agenda.

“This alone tells you how uncomfortable they are with transparency,” he said.

Several residents spoke in Basabe’s defense. Larry Shafer urged Commissioners to defer the resolution until after the audit, while Sharon Weiss said the state review could produce constructive reforms rather than punishment.

Hotelier Mitch Novick questioned consent agenda items approving large incentives — including $800,000 over four years for Playboy — and utility rate increases, noting the city’s budget has more than doubled in 12 years.

Wayne Roberts raised concerns about city spending, citing a Fire Department contract he claimed boosted average annual salaries to “$350,000 with benefits.”

City Manager Eric Carpenter disputed that figure, saying the average firefighter salary is roughly half that amount.

___

Editor’s note: This report was updated to include information about Basabe’s legislative record.



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Paul Renner launches Flagler County Leadership Committee

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Gubernatorial candidate Paul Renner became House Speaker while representing people in Flagler County. Now, he’s emphasizing those local connections with his newly launched Flagler County Leadership Committee.

The coalition of elected officials, faith leaders and members of the business community will help with grassroots outreach as Renner pursues the Republican nomination.

“Flagler County is my home. It is a growing and vibrant community, and I’m incredibly grateful and honored for the leadership, trust, and support of these men and women,” Renner said “This committee represents the best of Flagler County.”

Renner added that these locals “are hardworking Floridians who understand the values that make our state strong — faith, freedom, economic opportunity, and safe communities.”

The committee launches with these members:

James Gardner Jr., Flagler County Property Appraiser

Greg Hansen, Flagler County Board of County Commissioners, District 2

Christy Chong, Flagler County School Board Chair

Donald O’Brien, former Chair of Flagler County Board of County Commissioners

David Ayres, civic leader and radio personality

Michael Chiumento, lawyer and Flagler County business leader

Sharon Demers, Republican grassroots leader

Ed Fuller, civic leader and Flagler Tiger Bay Board member

Patrick Juliano, first responder union leader

Samuel Royer, U.S. Marine Corps veteran and community advocate

Lacy Martin, marketing strategist and community advocate

Greg Peters, co-founder and lead pastor at Parkview Church

Denise Peters, co-founder of Parkview Church

Randy Stapleford, retired U.S. Navy Captain and civic leader



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Senator Geraldine F. Thompson Way to be unveiled Friday in Orlando

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Officials are scheduled Friday to officially recognize Senator Geraldine F. Thompson Way — a renamed portion of South Street in downtown Orlando honoring the late Senator who died this year.

Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis and Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer are expected to attend the 10:30 a.m. ceremony to unveil the new road sign.

Bracy Davis, who won a Special Election to finish the remainder of Thompson’s term, said on social media that the event is paying tribute to Thompson to “honor her decades of leadership, her dedication to preserving African American history, and her unwavering service to the people of Florida.”

Thompson died at age 76 in February from knee replacement surgery complications.

Thompson was the Director of the Wells’Built Museum of American-American History in Orlando’s Parramore district. Fittingly, Senator Geraldine F. Thompson Way will be renamed on West South Street between South Division Avenue and U.S. 441, which passes by the museum.

“Sen. Geraldine Thompson was a force — a trailblazer, a historian, a fierce advocate, and a devoted mother and grandmother who worked every day to uplift all Floridians, ensuring that no one was left behind,” U.S. Rep. Maxwell Frost said in a statement at the time of her death.

Other lawmakers, both Republicans and Democrats, put out statements of support and tributes after her death.

Thompson, a Democrat, had represented Orlando in the Legislature for two decades. At one point, the Orlando Sentinel described her as the “epicenter of Black history in Orlando.”

She took people on bus tours of the city’s Black history, wrote a book on Orlando’s African American community, hosted Juneteenth events and helped launch Orlando’s early celebrations to honor Martin Luther King Jr. 

Last month, officials gathered to open Harris Rosen Way, the honorary roadway on International Drive between State Road 528 and Sand Lake Road.

Rosen, the CEO of the largest independent hotel chain in Florida, died at age 85 in 2024.



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