Politics
Ron DeSantis says DOGE went too far firing probationary employees, cutting weather forecasters
Published
6 days agoon
By
May Greene
Gov. Ron DeSantis likes the Department of Governmental Efficiency (DOGE) so much he ripped it off for his own policy proposals this year, starting a DOGE Task Force of his own. But he’s voicing some criticisms of how the federal effort is operating.
During a talk in Idaho, DeSantis cited what he called a “dustup about the National Weather Service,” referring to cuts there and at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that some worry will hamper federal forecast capabilities during storm season.
“You know, the President understands. He’s dealt with these hurricanes like we do in Florida. He understood. So he’s like, no, no, no, we need that,” DeSantis explained.
“I think it’ll all work out, because I know President Trump’s view is government’s doing a lot of things it shouldn’t do, and those are things that we should focus on. But some of the things that are core functions, well, we should do.”
The Governor said he and President Donald Trump have talked about this issue. And despite the issues, DeSantis continues to say DOGE “has a lot of promise.”
DeSantis argued that some of DOGE’s problems were due to bad framing by unfriendly media and that everything would work out well in the end.
“Some of the stuff, I know there’s a blip here, blip there. Some of the stuff, I think quite frankly, is not presented accurately by some of the outlets. But that being said, I do think I think it’ll land in a really good spot,” he said.
One of the problems DeSantis cited was the firing of probationary employees as Elon Musk’s lieutenants cut a swath of federal workers based on their job status.
He called it a “kind of weird situation where probationary employees, even if they’re really good, they can be laid off. But someone who’s been there, who has tenure or whatever the protections, even if they’re not good employees, so much harder to get rid of them.”
“I don’t think that that makes sense, but I think they’re working through a lot of this stuff in the courts. And I think you’re going to end up seeing this land and in a very, very good spot,” DeSantis said.
DeSantis said DOGE “started broad” earlier this month. And clearly, even as he doesn’t want to cross Musk, DeSantis isn’t willing to sign on to unconditional endorsement of some of what the group is doing in the nation’s capital.
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Politics
Here’s Brunch, a pop-up, weekend email about the 2025 Legislative Session — 3.30.25
Published
35 minutes agoon
March 30, 2025By
May Greene
Good Sunday morning and welcome back to “Brunch,” a pop-up newsletter about the 2025 Legislative Session.
Even this Nole had to cheer as the Gators rallied from nine points down late to beat Texas Tech 84-79 in the NCAA Tournament’s West Region final last night. Congrats to UF on its sixth Final Four appearance.
Speaking of winners, please check out our choices for the Winner and Loser of the Week in Florida Politics by clicking here.
Happy birthday to former U.S. Rep. Patrick Murphy, state Rep. Fabián Basabe and Trent Phillips.
Now, please enjoy Brunch.
– Hometown launch –
The official kickoff for U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds’ campaign for Governor drew crowds to the Sugarshack Downtown in Bonita Springs. He laid out his agenda, but it was also a time to gather with supporters who knew him the longest.
– Tea Party memories: Donalds and wife Erika Donalds recalled the Congressman’s entry into the political field not so long ago, at a Tea Party rally at Pine Ridge Road and U.S. 41.

– Sharing the stage: Political figures spoke at the event, including U.S. Reps. Kat Cammack and Cory Mills and state Rep. Lauren Melo. But Donalds interrupted his own speech to bring on Dianne Harris, a Naples activist who shared how Donalds calmed her nerves at that first Tea Party rally, advising that she speak from her heart.
– Messages from afar: Not every celebrity endorser made the event. Conservative commentators Benny Johnson and Donald Trump Jr. sent recorded videos to hype the crowd.
– Life story: Erika Donalds recalled moving to Collier County to be closer to her parents when Byron Donalds still worked at Cracker Barrel. “Many of you, I see you in the crowd,” Erika said, “and I’m so grateful. You knew us before politics.”
– Toastmasters in the House: The subject frequently came up that Donalds, a finance professional before he was a legislator, honed his public speaking at Toastmasters events in Naples.
– Key message: Donalds’ closing message: “Florida will continue to be the best state in America and show the other 49 how to get the job done.”
– What’s that sound? In one sign of the times, Donalds showed up onstage to the sounds of a hip-hop track. The choice of song? Wrestler John Cena’s “The Time is Now.”
– It’ll be Fine –
Democrat Josh Weil grabbed national attention for outraising Republican Randy Fine 10-to-1. Now, Election Day is just two days away.
– Landing Sanders: The Democrat picked up support from progressive champion U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders. “Josh Weil is a working-class father of two and a middle school teacher who knows what it’s like to live paycheck to paycheck,” Sanders said. “Unlike his opponent, he does not have any billionaire-backed Super PACs supporting him.”

– DNC boost: New Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin came to Northeast Florida to campaign for Weil with Florida Democratic Chair Nikki Fried. Additionally, the Human Rights Campaign PAC endorsed Weil after Fine slammed the Democrat for being a “bisexual Muslim.”
– Is everything Fine? But Fine has Trump World turning up the heat. In addition to a tele-rally with President Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr. posted a video urging voters to support Fine on Tuesday. “Democrats are pouring millions into this race to stop our America First agenda,” Trump Jr. said. “We can’t let them win.”
– On the attack: Fine also has backed up his reputation for being pugnacious. Fine said the Sanders endorsement shows “socialist Josh Weil will do anything to grind President Trump’s agenda to a halt.“ On Facebook, he attacked Weil as a “drug addicted, bisexual, Muslim,” citing social media videos, including one where Weil shows a sobriety coin.
– Panhandlers to the polls –
The race in the redder Panhandle has earned less attention, but Democrat Gay Valimont has outraised Republican Jimmy Patronis 3-to-1.
– Gentler message or not: Florida’s Chief Financial Officer hasn’t been as personally provocative a Republican candidate as Fine. But he has put out ads slamming Valimont for involvement with the pro-gun control group Moms for Action and stoking resentment by saying liberals “hate us.”

– Off the chain: Valimont, meanwhile, has brought in some big names of her own, like rapper 2 Chainz, who held a free concert in Pensacola to attract Democrats to polls on the last day of early voting on Saturday.
– To the polls –
Three Miami-Dade County municipalities hold elections Tuesday; two are guaranteed to shake up government leadership.
– Miami Springs: Voters will pick new occupants for a trio of seats at City Hall, including Mayor, with Bob Best and Walter Fajet vying to succeed Maria Puente Mitchell as Miami Springs’ top official. Joseph Dion, Irma Matos and MaryJo Mejia-Ramos compete for the Council’s Group 2 seat. Tom Hutchings is again running for the Group 4 seat, with Fabián Perez-Crespo standing in his way.

– Bay Harbor Islands: Two seats on the Town Council are up for grabs in Bay Harbor Islands, but three people are running for them. Will voters again choose incumbents Stephanie Bruder and Molly Diallo in the at-large contest, or will they oust one in favor of political newcomer Dan Sanchez?
— Surfside: In a Special Election, voters will decide whether to amend the Town Charter to limit the floor area ratio for new detached single-family homes in the H30A and H30B districts to 0.05, or roughly half the size of the lot area. If approved, exceptions to that limit would require approval by the Town Commission and 60% of voters.
– Who will show up? Turnout varies for these local races, based on Miami-Dade Elections Department data. In March 2023, just 21% of the Miami Springs voters and 24% of voters in Bay Harbor Islands cast ballots, while 39% of Surfside voters did so in the town’s General and Special Elections the year prior.
Don’t tune out yet. On the Tuesday after April 8, Coral Gables and Miami Shores will hold elections, too.
– Miami spice –
The release of a video celebrating 30 years of Republican leadership in the House may have heated a simmering beef between Speaker Danny Perez and former Speaker José Oliva.
– Time lapse video: The video shared by Perez covers achievements in the three decades since Daniel Webster became Florida’s first GOP Speaker. The video includes sound bites from some of the more prominent Speakers like Marco Rubio in that period, but it doesn’t cover all 15 men to hold the gavel.

– Noticeable snub: Still, the video shouted out every other Speaker to preside over the chamber during the tenure of the current senior class in the House except one: Oliva. The Miami Republican served from 2018 to 2020, Perez’s first full term in the chamber.
– Rapid response: Oliva, in a comment on X, commented on the video by calling Perez a “wolf in sheep’s clothing.” “All you have done is support overriding spending cuts and obstruct the efforts of the country’s most conservative Governor,” Oliva wrote.
– Context clues: Oliva had disagreements with Ron DeSantis as Governor, particularly over E-Verify. But he never engaged in the feuding seen in Special Sessions this year between the Governor and Perez. Moreover, Oliva is widely considered a favorite whenever DeSantis names a new Lieutenant Governor.
– Senate side –
The Senate’s first proposed spending plan for Fiscal Year 2024-25 came in at $117.36 billion. That’s $1.3 billion below last year’s mark.
– Agriculture, environment and general government: Senate President Ben Albritton is focusing on a “Rural Renaissance” this Session. As for the budget aspect, the Senate is putting forward $10.4 billion to help the ag industry. The budget contains $3.5 billion for the Florida Department of Agriculture and Community Services, including $250 million for a Rural and Family Lands Protection Program and $37.7 million for the Department of Citrus.

– Transportation, tourism and economic development: Senate negotiators include $18 billion for transportation issues. A big bulk of that – $13 billion – would go to the transportation work program in the Florida Department of Transportation. FloridaCommerce secured $1.7 billion
– Higher ed: The state is spending $8.7 billion on higher education. That includes $4.25 billion for the State University System, $1.75 billion for the Florida College System, $1.07 billion for financial aid and just under $820 million in School District Workforce funds.
– House rules –
The overall House number came in even lower than the Senate’s, at just under $113 billion.
– Human services: The House is spending the most in this sphere, at nearly $47 billion. That includes $36.2 billion for the Agency for Health Care Administration, $4.75 billion for the Department of Children and Families and $4.03 billion for the Department of Health.
– Education: House appropriators are slotting $30.85 billion for education. Among those spending provisions are $19.48 billion for public schools, $4.55 billion for universities and $1.77 billion for colleges.
– Environment and transportation: This is the other significant spending pot, at $21.18 billion. The Department of Transportation would get $15.38 billion, with $2 billion going toward the Department of Environmental Protection.
– Vroom, vroom –
No-fault auto insurance is again nearing the chopping block in Tallahassee. Legislators on both sides of the political road voted in committee last week for a bill to replace Florida’s existing requirement for motorists to buy personal injury protection (PIP) with a fault-based arrangement that would increase their liability.
– Pay up: Under the proposed change, Florida would swap its existing mandate requiring drivers to carry PIP coverage of $10,000 per person and $20,000 per incident with one of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per incident. After an accident, the victim could sue the offending driver directly rather than their insurer.

– Disputed charges: Opponents of the legislation, including insurance lobbyists and representatives from the health care industry, contend that the bill (HB 1181) will increase costs and drive some motorists to forgo auto coverage altogether. Proponents, including Hillsborough Republican Rep. Danny Alvarez, the bill’s sponsor, say the change will bring about more parity and cut costs instead.
– Street legal: More than a hundred motorcyclists traveled to the Capitol on Thursday wearing shirts that read “Trump Bikers” and “Insurance Reform” to support Alvarez’s proposal. Joshua Lipton, a personal injury lawyer from the Tampa Bay area, noted that the current PIP law applies only to vehicles with four or more wheels, which excludes bikers and puts them at financial risk disproportionate to their car-driving counterparts.
– Dead end? The bill cleared its first of three committee stops 13-2, with Democrats joining Republicans in voting up the bill. But there may be a rocky road ahead; DeSantis vetoed a similar proposal lawmakers passed in 2021 and signaled he’s keen on doing it to this year’s bill if it reaches his desk.
– Final Four-bound Gators –
A furious second-half comeback on Saturday sent Florida to the Final Four for the first time in 11 years.
– Clayton stars: Trailing Texas Tech by as many as 10 points in the second half, Florida closed the game on an 18-4 run led by Walter Clayton Jr., who scored 30 points. Clayton, the first Gator to earn first-team All-American honors, did not score until the 8:47 mark of the first half.

– Final 4 for 6: The Gators (34-4) advanced to the Final Four for the sixth time in program history. The last time Florida earned a spot in the national semifinals, they were a No. 1 seed, as they are this year. This time, Florida knocked off the third-seeded Red Raiders to earn a spot in San Antonio. It is the first Final Four appearance for head coach Todd Golden.
– Who’s Next? The Gators will face the winner of Auburn and Michigan State. The top two seeds in the South Region face one another this evening at 5:05 p.m. ET in Atlanta. The Gators beat Auburn in SEC play, topping the Tigers 90-81 when Auburn was ranked No. 1 in the country. Florida has won 10 straight games overall.
If Florida wins two more games and clinches the program’s third national championship, it would be the 49th team national championship in school history. If the Gators cut down the nets, they would tie Villanova for eighth on the all-time list with three men’s basketball national titles.
– Heat, Magic in playoff run –
With weeks left until the postseason, the Orlando Magic and Miami Heat face very different paths to the playoffs.
– Orlando: The Magic trails the Milwaukee Bucks by five games for the final automatic spot in the playoffs. The Magic have six games remaining in the regular season, including Monday’s matchup with the Clippers at the Kia Center. If Orlando does not close the gap and finish as high as sixth, they will have to earn a spot in the playoffs in the play-in round. Orlando currently holds the seventh spot in the Eastern Conference.

– Miami: The Heat sit six games ahead of 11th place Toronto with nine games to play. They are most likely in the play-in round and could surpass the Chicago Bulls for ninth place. Miami is hitting its stride at just the right time. After losing 10 straight games between March 5-21, Miami has won four consecutive games, including Saturday night’s 118-95 victory at Philadelphia.
– Health a factor: Both teams are dealing with some health issues. Orlando lost both center Moritz Wagner and shooting guard Jalen Suggs for the year; point guard Cole Anthony has been sidelined with a toe injury. Miami played without forward Andrew Wiggins on Saturday, and the team does not expect him to play in road games in Washington and Boston this week.
The possibility exists that Miami and Orlando could meet in the play-in round, with only one of the Florida teams advancing to the main playoff bracket.
– Talk of the town –
The Filibuster, a members-only club in Tallahassee, is living up to its name by offering a new lunch menu that gives members plenty to discuss.
– Details: The special selection runs throughout Session from Tuesday through Thursday, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

– Grab a bite: The club, located in the old Andrew’s basement, is offering neo-Neapolitan pizzas named after Florida leaders, as well as Italian salads and tapas for those looking for a quick bite between committee hearings.
– That’s not all: While Session is still ending at a reasonable hour, you can head over to The Filibuster for evenings from Tuesday through Saturday when doors are open from 5 p.m. until someone invokes cloture.
– Brunching out –
Midtown & 3rd is an ambitious new restaurant and lounge just north of downtown Tallahassee. It offers food and beverage options on three levels: Sunday brunch, lunch, dinner, a lounge, nightlife, a full bar, and outdoor seating.
– Backstory: Eric McKinnon and Apryl Lynn officially opened Midtown & 3rd on Jan. 17. The last spot there was the Chinese restaurant, The Joy Luck Place. McKinnon and Lynn are betting they can turn this location into a popular gathering spot. McKinnon is already well-known in Tallahassee because of his long-standing Leola’s Crab Shack, which opened in 2007. McKinnon closed Leola’s restaurant but is still operating a food truck.

– Setting: The venue features tables and TVs on its outdoor decks, which vary in size to accommodate a group of friends or a larger event. There’s a more formal bar and lounge on the top level and a restaurant on the ground level.
– The Menu: Leola’s fans will find many of their favorites here – crab and seafood boils and platters with homey sides such as corn on the cob, fries and coleslaw. We ordered breakfast staples for a recent breakfast there, including eggs, cheesy grits, hash browns, bacon, sausage, biscuits and pancakes. It’s easy to feast. The menu adds lunch-type choices such as breaded and fried catfish or salmon bites. The full bar prepares signature cocktails such as a Midtown Margarita and Peach Porch Punch.
– Details: Midtown & 3rd is located at 1002 Monroe St.; 448-230-2590. Hours are 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday brunch.
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Politics
U.S. immigration officials look to expand social media data collection
Published
1 hour agoon
March 30, 2025By
May Greene
U.S. immigration officials are asking the public and federal agencies to comment on a proposal to collect social media handles from people applying for benefits such as green cards or citizenship, to comply with an executive order from President Donald Trump.
The March 5 notice raised alarms from immigration and free speech advocates because it appears to expand the government’s reach in social media surveillance to people already vetted and in the U.S. legally, such as asylum seekers, green card and citizenship applicants — and not just those applying to enter the country. That said, social media monitoring by immigration officials has been a practice for over a decade, since at least the second Obama administration and ramping up under Trump’s first term.
Below are some questions and answers on what the new proposal means and how it might expand social media surveillance.
The Department of Homeland Security issued a 60-day notice asking for public commentary on its plan to comply with Trump’s executive order titled “Protecting the United States from Foreign Terrorists and Other National Security and Public Safety Threats.” The plan calls for “uniform vetting standards” and screening people for grounds of inadmissibility to the U.S., as well as identify verification and “national security screening.” It seeks to collect social media handles and the names of platforms, although not passwords.
The policy seeks to require people to share their social media handles when applying for U.S. citizenship, green card, asylum and other immigration benefits. The proposal is open to feedback from the public until May 5.
“The basic requirements that are in place right now is that people who are applying for immigrant and non-immigrant visas have to provide their social media handles,” said Rachel Levinson-Waldman, managing director of the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program at New York University. “Where I could see this impacting is someone who came into the country before visa-related social media handle collection started, so they wouldn’t have provided it before and now they’re being required to. Or maybe they did before, but their social media use has changed.”
“This fairly widely expanded policy to collect them for everyone applying for any kind of immigration benefit, including people who have already been vetted quite extensively,” she added.
What this points to — along with other signals the administration is sending such as detaining people and revoking student visas for participating in campus protests that the government deems antisemitic and sympathetic to the militant Palestinian group Hamas — Levinson-Waldman added, is the increased use of social media to “make these very high-stakes determinations about people.”
In a statement, a spokesperson for the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service said the agency seeks to “strengthen fraud detection, prevent identity theft, and support the enforcement of rigorous screening and vetting measures to the fullest extent possible.”
“These efforts ensure that those seeking immigration benefits to live and work in the United States do not threaten public safety, undermine national security, or promote harmful anti-American ideologies,” the statement continued. USCIS estimates that the proposed policy change will affect about 3.6 million people.
The U.S. government began ramping up the use of social media for immigration vetting in 2014 under then-President Barack Obama, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. In late 2015, the Department of Homeland Security began both “manual and automatic screening of the social media accounts of a limited number of individuals applying to travel to the United States, through various non-public pilot programs,” the nonpartisan law and policy institute explains on its website.
In May 2017, the U.S. Department of State issued an emergency notice to increase the screening of visa applicants. Brennan, along with other civil and human rights groups, opposed the move, arguing that it is “excessively burdensome and vague, is apt to chill speech, is discriminatory against Muslims, and has no security benefit.”
Two years later, the State Department began collecting social media handles from “nearly all foreigners” applying for visas to travel to the U.S. — about 15 million people a year.
Artificial intelligence tools used to comb through potentially millions of social media accounts have evolved over the past decade, although experts caution that such tools have limits and can make mistakes.
Leon Rodriguez, who served as the director of USCIS from 2014 to 2017 and now practices as an immigration attorney, said while AI could be used as a first screening tool, he doesn’t think “we’re anywhere close to where AI will be able to exercise the judgment of a trained fraud detection and national security officer” or that of someone in an intelligence agency.
“It’s also possible that I will miss stuff,” he added. “Because AI is still very much driven by specific search criteria and it’s possible that the search criteria won’t hit actionable content.”
“Social media is just a stew, so much different information — some of it is reliable, some of it isn’t. Some of it can be clearly attributed to somebody, some of it can’t. And it can be very hard to interpret,” Levinson-Waldman said. “So I think as a baseline matter, just using social media to make high-stakes decisions is quite concerning.”
Then there’s the First Amendment.
“It’s by and large established that people in the U.S. have First Amendment rights,” she said. This includes people who are not citizens. “And obviously, there are complicated ways that that plays out. There is also fairly broad authority for the government to do something like revoking somebody’s visa, if you’re not a citizen, then there’s steps that the government can take — but by and large, with very narrow exceptions, that cannot be on the grounds of speech that would be protected (by the First Amendment).”
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Army Corps gets ready for $20M beach restoration project in Nassau County
Published
2 hours agoon
March 30, 2025By
May Greene
The Nassau County beach restoration comes after more than $100M was spent on similar projects to the south in 2024.
Nassau County will get a major beach makeover now that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District, has approved a $20-million contract for the work.
The Army Corps gave the go ahead this month to the work agreement with Marinex Construction Co. Inc., of Charleston, South Carolina. The “Nassau County Shore Protection Project” will begin May 25. The Army Corps will provide 100% of the funding for the project costs.
“When constructed, the project will provide a holistic defense against future storms, beach erosion and sea level rise. It will foster a more resilient coastline, allowing more efficient and less costly recovery in the wake of any future severe storm impacts, significantly increasing the protection of homes, businesses and infrastructure from coastal storms, while saving taxpayer money,” an Army Corps news release said.
The Nassau County beach restoration will run along much of the Fernandina Beach beachfront. The renourishment will start at Fernandina Beach and run south to the St. Mary entrance channel. It’s about a 4 -mile stretch of coast. Much of the sand used to for pumping onto the beach will be dredged from the South Channel Burrow area, just south of the St. Mary entrance channel about 3 miles off shore.
The project area will see equipment staged in the area of Dolphin Avenue and construction will run all hours of every day until it’s complete. It’s expected to be finished in November, according to Army Corps officials.
The Nassau County renourishment is the latest in beach restoration projects by the Army Corps that have run along the Northeast Florida coast. Similar beach renourishment projects were completed in 2024 in both Duval County to the immediate south of Nassau and in St. Johns County which borders Duval.
Some $32.4 million was spent on the beach renourishment project that ran along most of Duval County’s Atlantic Ocean beachfront last year.
Meanwhile, a combined $70 million was spent on beach restoration projects in St. Johns County in 2024. Much of that work was on the northern coastline of St. Johns covering most of the Ponte Vedra Beach area. The other project ran along Anastasia Island and into St. Augustine Beach.
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Here’s Brunch, a pop-up, weekend email about the 2025 Legislative Session — 3.30.25
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