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Harry Cohen raises another $129K, ends Q3 with $267K on hand

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Hillsborough County Commissioner Harry Cohen raised $129,000 in the third quarter of 2025 between his campaign account and affiliated political committee, Hillsborough Together.

Of his total haul, he raised $24,000 through his campaign account, with $105,000 going to his PC.

“Voters know I’m focused on solving problems and delivering results for Hillsborough County families and neighborhoods,” said Cohen, who is so far unopposed in his 2026 re-election. “I work every day to bring people together and move our community forward — that’s what this job is about.”

The Q3 data accounts for all financial activity from July through September. The numbers come ahead of Cohen’s official campaign kickoff Oct. 21, which will almost certainly provide another campaign cash infusion.

Between both accounts, Cohen entered October with more than $267,000 on hand. Most of that is held by his PC, which enjoyed a major boost via a $100,000 contribution from FDC Capital Group — a firm run by Cohen’s father, Gary Cohen.

Cohen’s PC spent just $6,100 in the third quarter, most to benefit other campaigns. The committee contributed $1,000 each to colleague Gwen Myers’ re-election campaign and David Jolly’s campaign for Governor. It also contributed $500 to Brian Nathan’s Senate campaign.

Cohen’s campaign collected 32 total contributions, most for the maximum $1,000, including four maximum contributions from family members and their businesses.

Other notable contributors include the local plumbers and pipefitters union, a host of real estate development firms and interests, Tampa City Council member Bill Carlson and former Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink.

“As we look ahead to another year of growth and opportunity, I remain deeply committed to the people of this district and the progress we’ve made together,” Cohen said.

Cohen represents District 1 on the County Commission and is one of only two Democrats on the seven-member board, the other being Myers.

While he doesn’t face opposition yet, that’s likely to change. District 1 has a Republican voter registration advantage, with just over 70,000 voters registered to the GOP compared to just shy of 63,000 Democrats. Nearly 51,000 voters in the district are not registered to a major political party.

Cohen only narrowly won re-election in 2022, the same year Republicans flipped the Commission red by unseating two of Cohen’s Democratic former colleagues: Kimberly Overman and Mariella Smith. Cohen defeated Republican Scott Levinson with just 50.34% of the vote.

Cohen was first elected to the Commission in 2020, replacing former Commissioner Sandy Murman, a Republican. Prior to his service on the Commission, Cohen served two terms on the Tampa City Council. He ran for Tampa Mayor in 2019, finishing third before now-Mayor Jane Castor went on to defeat the late David Straz overwhelmingly in a runoff election.



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Florida Republicans rally around Susie Wiles after controversial Vanity Fair profile

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Florida Republicans are rallying around White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles after an attention-grabbing profile in Vanity Fair.

After Wiles called the article a “hit piece,” many longtime associates said she still deserves the confidence of President Donald Trump.

“Susie Wiles has been a close friend of mine for years. I’ve been proud to fight alongside her in support of President Trump since we started serving as Florida co-chairs of his campaign back in 2015,” posted Republican National Committee Chair Joe Gruters, who served in 2016 as co-Chair of the Florida arm of Trump’s campaign.

“Nothing can derail the great work President Trump and his team, led by Susie, have done to get America back on track. It’s not going to work. Anyone who knows Susie knows that she is a patriot, tough, and brilliant. She is the best White House Chief of Staff I’ve ever seen.”

Gruters, a Sarasota Republican, was among multiple party operatives who went to a meeting at the White House shortly after the Vanity Fair piece was published. That piece quotes Wiles through a series of on-the-record conversations, including remarks that Trump had an “alcoholic’s personality.” Wiles said many of the remarks were taken out of context.

Donald Trump Jr., the President’s son and a Jupiter resident, offered full-throated support of Wiles after the piece ran.

“When Susie took over my father’s political operation after J6, people forget how many ‘Republicans’ were treating him like a pariah. Countless operatives, consultants and elected Republicans thought my dad’s political career was over and wanted nothing to do with him. They attacked him ruthlessly and predicted that he would lose if he ran for office in 2024,” the younger Trump said.

“Not Susie. She was a loyal fighter for him from the moment she came on board. When things were tough and other supposed friends left my dad like a bunch of rats, Susie stood by his side and worked her ass off everyday to rebuild his political operation and ensure that his comeback in 2024 would be successful. When others cowered, she stood strong.”

Another source close to the White House suggested there is no rattled confidence in Wiles’ leadership.

“Susie has stood shoulder-to-shoulder with President Trump through weaponized lawfare, assassination attempts, and smear campaigns,” the source said. “She is private and doesn’t speak to the press — so the public may not understand her leadership and her relentless pursuit to deliver for President Trump and his America First Agenda.”

Meanwhile, Republican allies on the Hill rushed to her defense as well.

“Susie is a fantastic chief of staff, and she is doing a great job helping President Trump accomplish his agenda. She is smart, fearless and loyal. It’s disheartening to see the press come after her, but frankly, not surprising,” U.S. Sen. Rick Scott posted. “Vanity Fair is the same publication that writes puff pieces on antisemite Hasan Piker, who told his followers to kill me. Susie Wiles is crushing it!”

Wiles notably ran Scott’s first campaign for Governor in 2010.

Other Republicans boasting strong support in Trump circles also rushed to the Chief of Staff’s defense. U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna called herself part of “Team Susie.” Luna’s 2020 campaign for Congress was managed by James Blair, now Wiles’ Deputy White House Chief of Staff.

And U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, a Naples Republican who Trump endorsed for Florida Governor in 2026, also defended Wiles.

“Susie Wiles is a legend, a trailblazer and I’m honored to call her a friend,” he posted. “Last November, she engineered the greatest political comeback in US history and as White House Chief of Staff, she’s delivering

President Trump’s America First Agenda. Thank you for your consummate leadership.”

Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Cory Mills, a New Smyrna Republican weathering his own scandals, also put in his support.

“Susie Wiles has done more for conservatives and American politics than anyone,” Mills posted. “She supported the greatest American comeback and has stood by President Trump through all odds. These attacks against her are a testament to her successes.”



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Ashley Moody says more Americans have died from fentanyl than have died in wars

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As President Donald Trump backs an executive order declaring fentanyl to be a weapon of mass destruction, U.S. Sen. Ashley Moody says the drug’s casualty rate exceeds that of military conflicts.

That underscores the seriousness of the national battle against traffickers, Moody said.

“Remember, we are losing more people to fentanyl than we’ve lost in wars. And this is a coordinated effort by these organizations that have more resources, more manpower, more coordination, than many nation-states,” the Plant City Republican said on “Fox & Friends First.”

More than 48,000 Americans died because of fentanyl overdoses last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While that’s far fewer than the 698,000 Civil War casualties, it is more in one year than died in many conflicts.

Trump’s executive order links “illicit fentanyl” with national subversion.

“The two cartels that are predominantly responsible for the distribution of fentanyl in the United States engage in armed conflict over territory and to protect their operations, resulting in large-scale violence and death that go beyond the immediate threat of fentanyl itself,” the order reads.

“Further, the potential for fentanyl to be weaponized for concentrated, large-scale terror attacks by organized adversaries is a serious threat to the United States.”

Indeed, Moody depicted how the drug apparently has been used to nefarious effects in this state.

“In Florida, for example, you would have law enforcement roll up on a gas station, and you would have … 10 people splayed out on the ground at a gas station because they were exposed to fentanyl,”  Moody said.

While we weren’t able to find a news story about 10 people on the ground due to exposure, in 2018, three people overdosed at a gas station in Seminole County.

Moody said she has “seen studies done where if you can get this airborne, it can be incredibly dangerous.”

“I’ve been given information about the possibility of this being stockpiled, and remember, only the amount of only two grains of sand,” Moody said. “Compare that to fentanyl. That’s lethal. That’s lethal. And so it’s incredibly lethal, incredibly dangerous, the likes of which we have not experienced before in terms of the death toll in our country.”



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Marco Rubio defends strikes on Venezuelan boats in briefings to Congress

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio briefed lawmakers on increasing tensions with Venezuela.

Conducting business alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Rubio characterized the sinking of Venezuelan ships in the Caribbean as a “counter-drug mission.”

Between Senate and House briefings, Rubio said that mission remains “focused on dismantling the infrastructure of these terrorist organizations that are operating in our hemisphere, undermining the security of Americans, threatening and killing Americans, poisoning Americans.”

The nation’s top diplomat returned to the Hill less than a year out from representing Florida — the state with the highest concentration of Venezuelans in America — in the Senate for 16 years. Rubio served as the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee before President Donald Trump appointed him as Secretary of State.

He also had acute knowledge of the flight of Venezuelans from the regime of Nicolás Maduro, and of the impacts of the opioid crisis on the Sunshine State. A day after Trump reclassified fentanyl as a “weapon of mass destruction,” Rubio defended the force used to destroy and kill traffickers of the substance into the U.S.

“This has been a highly successful mission that’s ongoing and continued,” Rubio said. “We’re pleased to be here today to update Congress on how that’s developing and how that’s moving forward. As I said, I believe it’s our 22nd, 23rd such engagement, certainly, but at least the fourth or fifth that I’ve been involved in, and those will remain.”

While briefings were bipartisan with all members of the House and Senate, reactions differed in terms of the information received.

U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks, a New York Democrat and ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has filed a resolution to block further strikes. He told press after the briefing that he considered the strikes an unauthorized escalation of war and questioned if fighting drugs was the ultimate goal.

“If this is about regime change, it seems to me that the administration should say that’s what it is and should come to Congress to ask for that authorization, which has not taken place,” Meeks said.

Notably, Rubio for years as Florida’s senior Senate called for Maduro to step aside. Rubio visited the Columbia-Venezuela border in 2019, after Trump in his first term announced he would not recognize Maduro as the legitimate leader of the country. During that push to isolate the regime, Rubio encouraged the Venezuelan military to defy orders and allow humanitarian trucks to reach the nation’s people.

The strikes on Venezuelan boats mark a substantial increase in pressure during Trump’s second term, and Rubio has defended the legality even as Hegseth faces increasing pressure over whether war crimes have been committed with multiple strikes.

But Florida Republicans have effusively praised the policies surrounding Venezuela.

“Dictator Nicolas Maduro’s narcoterrorist Cartel de los Soles will now have a very hard time smuggling lethal drugs, oil and illegal mining out of Venezuela,” posted U.S. Rep. Carlos Giménez, a Miami-Dade Republican. “All narcoterrorist Cartel de los Soles ships will be subject to seizure and/or destruction. The end is near.”

GOP leadership in the House also left briefings feeling confident the administration’s approach was both appropriate and grounded in law.

“As the Commander in Chief, President Trump has both the authority and the obligation to defend our homeland, and I think that’s beyond dispute,” said Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican.



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