Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
First Shot
Session is almost here.
The House and Senate today released their full Opening Day schedules, with the Session set to kick off Session on Tuesday with floor proceedings at 9:30 a.m. The House will follow at 10 a.m.
An hour later, members of both chambers will assemble for a Joint Session in the House Chamber, during which Gov. Ron DeSantis is scheduled to deliver the State of the State address, formally outlining his priorities for the year ahead.
Legislative leaders are also scheduled to hold media availabilities later today. House Speaker Daniel Perez will field questions from reporters at 1:30 p.m., followed by Senate President Ben Albritton at 2:30 p.m.
Opening Day also coincides with the Florida Chamber of Commerce’s 2026 Legislative Fly-In, which runs Tuesday and Wednesday next week. The event brings together lawmakers, business leaders, and policy stakeholders as the Legislative Session gets underway.
The annual event typically serves as an early look at the political and economic issues likely to dominate the coming months, with sessions led by Chamber analysts, legislative leadership and members of the Florida Cabinet. It also brings the release of the Florida Chamber’s “Where We Stand” business agenda, an annual outline of the organization’s legislative and policy priorities.
The Florida Chamber this week added DeSantis to the list of confirmed Fly-In speakers. He is expected to “share insights on the key policy and economic priorities shaping Florida’s future.”
In addition to the Governor, the Fly-In will feature remarks from Albritton, Perez, Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, CFO Blaise Ingoglia and Attorney General James Uthmeier. Rep. Sam Garrison, a future House Speaker, is also scheduled to lead a session on mental health policy.
A full agenda and registration information are available on the Florida Chamber’s website. Registration closes at midnight on Wednesday.
Evening Reads
—”The 59 most bonkers lines from Donald Trump’s 2026 kickoff speech to House Republicans” via Chris Cillizza of So What?
—”Trump team puts a target on Cuba, with threats and oil blockade” via Karen DeYoung and David Ovalle of The Washington Post
—”Marco Rubio helped oust Nicolás Maduro. Running Venezuela may prove trickier.” via Edward Wong and Julian E. Barnes of The New York Times
—”The three keys to understanding Trump’s retro coup in Venezuela” via Garrett M. Graff of WIRED
—”What actually is the ‘Donroe Doctrine’?” via Joshua Keating of Vox
—”Trump tells Republicans to be ‘flexible’ on abortion restrictions to get a health care deal” via Bill Barrow of The Associated Press
—”Five Florida bills that could change how you drive” via Ana Goñi-Lessan of USA Today Network-Florida
—”Ron DeSantis sides with Trump in dispute with Miccosukee Tribe” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics
—”DeSantis backs Anna Paulina Luna’s trading ban, requirements for Florida candidates to disclose stock intentions” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics
—”On the last days for solar tax credits, a Tampa crew works down to the wire” via Emily L. Mahoney of the Tampa Bay Times
Quote of the Day
“I’m poorer for it. But you know what? You only live once, and I’d rather do what’s right and let the chips fall where they may.”
— Gov. Ron DeSantis, endorsing a congressional stock trading ban championed by U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna.
Put it on the Tab
Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.
Miami Beach Republican Rep. Fabián Basabe is getting The Director for sponsoring a bill that takes a new approach to reviving Florida’s long-lapsed film production incentives program.
Anheuser-Busch is pumping another $30 million into First Coast brewing operations, so if you’re in Northeast Florida, make the next pitcher a Bud.
Sen. Darryl Rouson wants School Districts to issue electronic alerts when students reach truancy thresholds — sorry, the bill doesn’t prescribe a Skippy on the side.

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In
Gators, Bulldogs meet on hardwood
The Florida-Georgia game usually means a lot in football. This season, there is some added substance to the basketball matchup. The No. 18 Bulldogs visit the defending national champions in Gainesville tonight (7 p.m. ET, SEC Network).
Georgia (13-1) opened SEC play with a 104-100 win over Auburn. The Bulldogs’ only loss came in a 97-94 loss to Clemson. Since then, they have won seven straight. Georgia leads the nation in scoring (99.4 points per game) and blocks per game (7.9), with center Somtochukwu Cyril averaging nearly three blocks per contest, tied for fourth nationally.
If Georgia can win on the road tonight, the schedule looks favorable for the next several weeks, with only one ranked team, Arkansas, to come in the next three weeks.
The Gators (9-5) have not continued the momentum from last season. Facing a grueling nonconference schedule, Florida lost games to three ranked opponents early in the season (Arizona, Duke, and UConn) before opening SEC play with a 76-74 loss at Missouri.
The loss knocked the Gators out of the Associated Press Top 25 this week. The road doesn’t get much easier after tonight’s game for Florida. The Gators host No. 21 Tennessee on Saturday before travelling to Oklahoma and 11th-ranked Vanderbilt next week.
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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.