Connect with us

Politics

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 11.5.25

Published

on


Good Wednesday morning.

Best wishes to the Roger Sterling of Florida politics, the often funny and always wise David Johnson. Here’s hoping he enjoys a well-shaken martini (or two) for his birthday.

Congrats to David Johnson, celebrating another trip around the sun.

___

The future of transportation takes center stage next week as the Florida Autonomous Vehicle Summit returns to Orlando for its 13th year. Running Nov. 5-7 at the Omni Orlando Resort at Champions Gate, the three-day event will showcase cutting-edge innovation across air mobility, self-driving vehicles and connected infrastructure — from hands-on demos to in-depth discussions with industry and policy leaders.

This year’s lineup features live demonstrations from Waymo, Saferydr, beep, the Tesla Owners Club, DeCharge, Karsan and Glydways. Attendees can ride self-driving shuttles from Beep and Karsan, explore Glydways’ autonomous microtransit pods, test Tesla’s latest self-driving software and experience DeCharge’s next-generation electric vehicle charging system.

Florida’s Autonomous Vehicle Summit returns to Orlando, showcasing innovations in self-driving, electric and connected transportation systems statewide.

The event’s exhibit hall will feature Florida’s leading transportation authorities — including CFX, the Tampa Hillsborough Expressway Authority and the Jacksonville Transportation Authority — alongside innovators such as Cavnue, GM2 Inc., HNTB and HDR. The Summit is hosted in partnership with the ACES Mobility Coalition, uniting experts in autonomous, connected, electric and shared mobility.

Former Sen. Jeff Brandes and CFX Executive Director Michelle Maikisch will give opening remarks on Thursday. Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) Secretary Jared Perdue headlines the luncheon address, with sessions exploring air mobility, toll innovation, logistics and the global race toward more intelligent transportation. Registration remains open, with on-site options available.

___

Want more Florida Politics in your Google News feed? There’s a new tool for that.” — Google News has launched a new “preferred sources” feature, allowing users to customize their “Top Stories” feed to display content from their favorite publications prominently.

For followers of Florida’s political landscape, this tool is a game-changer, ensuring they receive timely, in-depth reporting on the Governor’s office, the Legislature and high-stakes campaigns.

Google News users can now make Florida Politics a preferred source for top stories on state government.

By selecting Florida Politics as a preferred source, readers can prioritize its indispensable coverage, ensuring they see the latest headlines on key issues, such as property insurance and the state budget, first. Here is a simple, step-by-step guide to enable the feature. Don’t forget about other ways to connect, such as through our breaking news text messages, following @Fla_Pol on X, and signing up for newsletters like Last Call, Takeaways from Tallahassee and The Delegation.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

@realDonaldTrump: The Democrats are far more likely to win the Midterms, and the next Presidential Election, if we don’t do the Termination of the Filibuster (The Nuclear Option!), because it will be impossible for Republicans to get Common Sense Policies done with these Crazed Democrat Lunatics being able to block everything by withholding their votes. FOR THREE YEARS, NOTHING WILL BE PASSED, AND REPUBLICANS WILL BE BLAMED. Elections, including the Midterms, will be rightfully brutal. If we do terminate the Filibuster, we will get EVERYTHING approved, like no Congress in History. We will have FAIR, FREE, and SAFE Elections, No Men in Women’s Sports or Transgender for Everybody, Strong Borders, Major Tax and Energy Cuts, and will secure our Second Amendment, which the Democrats will also terminate, IMMEDIATELY. If we don’t do it, they are far more likely to do well in the upcoming Elections, which would mean a PACKED Supreme Court, 2 more States and 4 more Democrat Senators (D.C. and Puerto Rico), and 8 more Electoral Votes. Remember, Republicans, they are going to end the Filibuster as soon as they get the chance We know this because they already tried, and the only two people who didn’t go along are now out of office. But they have much less chance of WINNING if we have Great Policy Wins after Wins after Wins. IN FACT, THEY WILL LOSE BIG, AND FOR A VERY LONG TIME. TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER NOW, END THE RIDICULOUS SHUTDOWN IMMEDIATELY, AND THEN, MOST IMPORTANTLY, PASS EVERY WONDERFUL REPUBLICAN POLICY THAT WE HAVE DREAMT OF, FOR YEARS, BUT NEVER GOTTEN. WE WILL BE THE PARTY THAT CANNOT BE BEATEN – THE SMART PARTY!!!

@RealDonaldTrump: The Unconstitutional Redistricting Vote in California is a GIANT SCAM in that the entire process, in particular the Voting itself, is RIGGED. All “Mail-In” Ballots, where the Republicans in that State are “Shut Out,” is under very serious legal and criminal review. STAY TUNED!

@RepRooney: Divorcing Congressional redistricting from the decade-based census will ultimately prejudice conservatives more than liberals. Modification or elimination of the filibuster in the Senate will most likely do the same. What goes around comes around — not good for the future.

@KySecofState: We’re getting calls about polls being closed. They are closed because we do not have elections today. Kentucky votes next year. You cannot vote today in Kentucky for the Mayor of New York City or the Governor of Virginia. Sorry.

@ijustbluemyself: Sauce Gardner is officially the first millionaire to leave Zohran’s (Mamdami) New York

@CesarFernandez: Nothing like @X during NFL trade deadline + election day.

@JeremyMBarr: Some news: McClatchy is shutting down their D.C. bureau and laying off some staffers, including a few reporters who cover Congress and the White House.

@StevenTDennis: Capitol news desert: ~Half the states have nobody in the press corps watching their state delegations and asking tough questions in the hallway. It would take ~$10M/year to hire 50 top reporters, one for each state, plus editors, etc., and restore state coverage.

@RyanMaue: Exciting to report that Florida will be the worst state impacted by the upcoming historic Arctic blast early next week. Miami into the 40s and Orlando/Tampa upper-30s = 25°F below normal for Nov 11th

— DAYS UNTIL —

Ted Cruz to keynote Miami-Dade GOP’s Lincoln Day Dinner — 6; ‘Landman’ season two premieres on Paramount+ — 11; ’Wicked: For Good’ premieres — 16; ’Stranger Things’ final season premieres — 21; Bears vs. Eagles on Black Friday — 23; Florida Transportation, Growth & Infrastructure Solution Summit — 28; Florida Chamber Annual Insurance Summit — 28; Special General Elections for SD 11 and HD 90 — 34; ‘Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery’ premieres — 37; ‘Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour | The End of an Era’ six-episode docuseries premieres on Disney+ — 37; Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Cabinet will meet — 42; ’Avatar: Fire and Ash’ premieres — 44; Broncos vs. Chiefs in Kansas City on Christmas Day — 50; Legislative Session begins — 69; Florida Chamber’s 2026 Legislative Fly-In — 69; The James Madison Institute’s 2026 Red, White & Bluegrass event — 70; ‘Game of Thrones’ prequel ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ premieres on HBO — 74; ‘Melania’ documentary premieres — 86; Florida TaxWatch State of the Taxpayer Dinner — 92; Milano Cortina Olympic & Paralympic Games begin — 93; last day of the Regular Session — 128; Yankees-Giants Opening Day matchup/Netflix’s first exclusive MLB stream — 140; MLB 14-game Opening Day slate — 141; Tampa Bay Rays will play their first game at the newly repaired Tropicana Field — 152; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting begins — 161; MLB Jackie Robinson Day — 161; First Qualifying Period for 2026 begins (Federal) — 166; Federal Qualifying Period ends — 170; F1 Miami begins — 177; ’Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu’ premieres — 198; MLB Lou Gehrig Day — 209; Second Qualifying Period for 2026 begins (State) — 215; State Qualifying Period ends — 219; FIFA World Cup begins — 218; Primary Election 2026: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to UOCAVA voters — 241; Primary Election 2026: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters — 246; 96th annual MLB All-Star Game — 251; Domestic Primary Election VBM Ballots Mailed deadline — 253; Primary Election 2026: Deadline to register to vote or change party affiliation — 257; Primary Election 2026: Deadline to request that ballot be mailed — 274; Primary Election 2026: Early voting period begins (mandatory period) — 276; Primary Election Day 2026 — 286; Yankees host the Mets to mark the 25th anniversary of 9/11 — 310; MLB Roberto Clemente Day — 314; General Election 2026: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to UOCAVA voters — 318; General Election 2026: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters — 323; Domestic General Election VBM Ballots Mailed deadline — 330; General Election 2026: Deadline to register to vote — 334; Early Voting General Election Mandatory period begins — 353; 2026 General Election — 363; ’Avengers: Doomsday’ premieres — 408; Another untitled ’Star Wars’ movie premieres — 408; Tampa Mayoral Election — 482; Jacksonville First Election — 503; Jacksonville General Election — 559; ‘Spider-Man: Beyond The Spider-Verse’ premieres — 577; ‘Bluey The Movie’ premieres — 639; ’The Batman 2’ premieres — 695; ’Avengers: Secret Wars’ premieres — 772; Los Angeles Olympics Opening Ceremony — 982; U.S. Presidential Election — 1098; ’Avatar 4’ premieres — 1498; ’Avatar 5’ premieres — 2229.

— TOP STORY —

Quarter of Florida residents ‘seriously’ contemplate leaving state because of high cost of living, survey says” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A new Florida Atlantic University survey found that one in four Floridians is seriously considering leaving the state due to the high cost of living. At the same time, half have given it some thought. Researchers called affordability Florida’s “pressure point,” with eight in 10 residents concerned about housing costs and half “very concerned.” Only 12% rated the U.S. economy as excellent and 29% as good, reflecting a broader sense of financial strain.

Local officials warn of an affordability crisis. State Rep. Christine Hunschofsky of Parkland said the state’s rising costs are driving young residents away. In contrast, Broward County Commissioner Robert McKinzie said, “It’s not affordable anymore for the regular person.” Real estate broker Desiree Grant added that wage earners feel the most significant stress, though few have acted on plans to leave.

Soaring prices could lead to an exodus from Florida.

Younger Floridians are most likely to consider moving — 72% of those aged 18 to 24 said they’re thinking about leaving, compared to just 27% of seniors. Many younger adults remain at home or move to other cities with higher-paying jobs, such as Chicago or Atlanta.

Politics also plays a role. Democrats are nearly twice as likely as Republicans to consider leaving because of affordability pressures, while Gov. DeSantis maintains that Florida’s conservative policies continue to attract new residents.

Despite these challenges, most Floridians remain hopeful. More than half believe the American Dream “still holds true,” though many acknowledge it’s becoming harder to achieve as the cost of living outpaces wages and economic optimism fades.

— STATEWIDE —

Amid 2026 campaign chatter, Jay Collins meets with Israel critic, anti-immigrant activist James Fishback” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Fishback, an anti-immigration activist and CEO of Azoria, said he will run for Governor if no other candidate acknowledges what he calls “the great replacement of American workers.” Fishback met recently in Tampa with Lt. Gov. Collins, who is also weighing a gubernatorial bid to continue DeSantis’ legacy. Fishback has drawn criticism for his attacks on legal immigration, H-1B visa programs, and U.S. support for Israel, prompting some to label him a far-right figure. He has praised DeSantis for seeking to end H-1B hiring at state universities and criticized front-runner Byron Donalds for being too moderate. His rhetoric has unsettled Republican leaders who fear his views could inflame tensions within the party ahead of 2026.

Jay Collins meets with activist James Fishback, whose anti-immigration rhetoric sparks controversy ahead of the 2026 campaign.

Collins doesn’t know when Gov. Ron DeSantis will roll out property tax plan” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis continues to delay unveiling his plan to eliminate property taxes on homestead properties, with Collins saying the Governor is “being diligent and dotting the I’s, crossing the T’s.” Collins told “Jenna Ellis in the Morning” that DeSantis will release the proposal when it’s ready and urged lawmakers to wait rather than advance competing measures. The House has already filed eight proposed constitutional amendments offering various forms of property tax relief, but DeSantis has dismissed them as “milquetoast.” Collins warned that only one proposal can appear on the 2026 ballot, comparing it to “The Highlander.” Tension between the Governor’s Office and House Speaker Daniel Perez is growing as the Legislative Session approaches.

James Uthmeier accuses Microsoft of ‘anti-life and anti-Christian biases’” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — Attorney General Uthmeier says software giant Microsoft is exhibiting bias against religious groups that primarily impacts Christians, representing potential violations of Florida’s Civil Rights Act. “Christian-based nonprofit organizations have been denied access to Microsoft’s nonprofit discount program. We expect Microsoft’s cooperation in fixing this problem, or there will be consequences,” Uthmeier said. The program explicitly names nonprofits and nongovernmental organizations, public libraries, public museums and various health care organizations as being eligible for discounts. But some groups, such as those who approach women’s health from a Christian standpoint, are excluded, Uthmeier wrote the company.

Florida health agency submits application for millions of federal rural health funding” via Kimberly Leonard of POLITICO — Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration has applied for millions in federal funding through Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which allocates $50 billion over five years to improve rural health care. Deputy Medicaid Secretary Brian Meyer told state lawmakers the proposal emphasizes workforce development, expanded access to primary, maternal, dental, and mental health services, and telehealth technology. The state also outlined plans to promote nutrition and physical activity. Lawmakers voiced frustration over the short Nov. 5 deadline. Still, Meyer said officials will collaborate with the Legislature once funds are awarded on Dec. 31. Grants will be distributed in two phases, with spending restrictions and federal monitoring to ensure Florida meets improvement benchmarks.

Brian Meyer outlines Florida’s bid for federal rural health grants, emphasizing workforce growth and expanded medical access.

Consumer sentiment in Florida slips for fourth straight month” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Sunshine State residents can’t seem to shake the slump in consumer confidence, as UF analysis measured consumer sentiment at 78.3 last month. That’s down from September’s revised reading of 79.3. The state aligns with the national consumer sentiment figure, which dropped by 1.5 points in October. “Consumer confidence among Floridians continues to decline, largely due to more pessimistic views about their personal finances and the national economic outlook,” said Hector H. Sandoval, director of the Economic Analysis Program at UF’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research.

— LEGISLATIVE —

Why this bill has been caught in the Florida abortion debate” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — For the third consecutive year, Sen. Erin Grall is advancing legislation allowing parents to sue for the wrongful death of an unborn child. The bill would amend Florida’s wrongful death statute to let parents seek damages for mental pain and suffering if another person caused a pregnancy loss. It defines an unborn child as a member of the species Homo sapiens “at any stage of development.” Though Grall insists the bill is unrelated to abortion, critics warn it could advance “fetal personhood” and threaten reproductive rights. The proposal shields mothers and lawful medical providers but remains controversial among abortion rights advocates and medical groups. The measure faces its first hearing today before the Senate Judiciary Committee, where debate is expected.

Erin Grall advances a bill on unborn child wrongful death, reigniting debate over abortion and fetal personhood.

Florida high school coaches seek long-awaited pay bump” via Andrew Atterbury of POLITICO — Lawmakers are considering an overhaul to how Florida pays high school coaches, who have been pressing for changes to a system they contend is undervaluing local athletic program leaders. Sunshine State coaches have long been paid through stipends that vary by county, offering rates officials claim aren’t commensurate with the hours they put toward sports and students. With the Session set to begin in January, coaches are pushing for the Legislature to take steps like establishing a minimum wage floor and allowing schools to use external funds, including boosters, to ramp up pay and compete with other states that are poaching Florida’s talent.

Appeals court rejects land-buying law challenge, says Chinese plaintiffs are unaffected” via Bruce Ritchie of POLITICO — A federal appeals court upheld Florida’s 2023 law restricting property ownership by Chinese citizens and other “countries of concern,” finding the plaintiffs lacked standing. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said none faced imminent harm because they already live in Florida and have no plans to buy more land. The ruling reverses a lower court’s finding of standing but still denies relief. Judges Barbara Lagoa and Robert Luck, both appointed by DeSantis and later by Trump, ordered the case dismissed. In dissent, Judge Charles Wilson warned that the decision revives discriminatory precedents. The law limits Chinese nationals to one parcel of land under 2 acres and requires registration of properties owned by residents of six nations.

Mockingbird may get the bird as lawmakers flock to flamingo, scrub-jay bills” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics — Florida lawmakers are chirping again over whether it’s time to give the state’s bird lineup a makeover, and this year’s proposal just might have wings. Two identical bills (SB 150, HB 11) would crown the American flamingo as Florida’s official state bird and the Florida scrub-jay as its official state songbird. That would knock the northern mockingbird off its perch after nearly 100 years in the spotlight. HB 11 landed first, filed Sept. 4 by Republican Reps. Jim Mooney of Islamorada and Chip LaMarca of Lighthouse Point. Sen. Ana María Rodriguez of Doral joined the flock when she filed the Senate companion bill Oct. 9. The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee began pecking at the proposal Tuesday and quickly gave the proposal a necessary nod of approval.

— D.C. MATTERS —

Donald Trump says SNAP will only get paid after shutdown” via Emily Peck of Axios — Trump said food benefits will only get paid once the shutdown ends, in a post on Truth Social Tuesday morning. The post appears to defy two federal courts that ruled last week that the White House must pay at least partial Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, even during a shutdown. Some 42 million Americans rely on SNAP to feed themselves, and a majority are children or adults over age 60. This is the first shutdown to disrupt SNAP payments, a critical anti-poverty program.

Donald Trump says SNAP benefits will pause until shutdown ends, defying court rulings ordering partial payments.

Administration hints furloughed workers may not be paid after shutdown” via Hannah Natanson, Jacob Bogage and Riley Beggin of The Washington Post — The Trump administration is sending notifications to federal staff suggesting that only those who are working during the government shutdown will be paid when it ends, despite a 2019 law that also guarantees pay to furloughed employees. “Once an appropriation or continuing resolution is enacted, excepted employees are entitled to receive payment,” read one message sent to some portions of the government and obtained by The Washington Post. That sentence — which leaves out furloughed workers — was not included in the first furlough notice issued last month.

Department of Transportation might be forced to shut down some airspace next week” via Ayesha Ali of ABC News — The Department of Transportation might be forced to shut down the airspace in certain parts of the country if the government shutdown continues into next week, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said. “So if, if you bring us to a week from today, Democrats, you will see mass chaos,” he said. “You will see mass flight delays. You’ll see mass cancellations, and you may see us close certain parts of the airspace, because we just cannot manage it, because we don’t have the air traffic controllers.”

China backs Venezuela, Trump hints Nicholas Maduro’s end is near as tensions escalate” via Antonio María Delgado of the Miami Herald — China defended its growing cooperation with Venezuela, saying that its engagement with leader Maduro’s government “constitutes normal cooperation between sovereign states” and is “not directed against any third party.” The comments, made by Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning, followed a report that Maduro had sought military assistance from Russia, China, and Iran to bolster Venezuela’s defenses amid escalating tensions with the United States. “China supports strengthened international cooperation to combat transnational crime and opposes the use or threat of force in international relations,” Mao said. She added that China “opposes any attempt to undermine peace and stability in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as unilateral coercive actions against foreign vessels that exceed reasonable and necessary limits.”

Trump advisers were paid over $1.6M by the Albanian opposition” via Kenneth P. Vogel of The New York Times — Consultants who worked on Trump’s presidential campaigns were paid more than $1.6 million to advise a conservative Albanian opposition party on its strategy for parliamentary elections in May, according to a finance report. In the report, submitted to the Albanian Election Commission, the Democratic Party of Albania revealed payments totaling the equivalent of more than $1.62 million to the consulting firm of Chris LaCivita, who helped manage Trump’s 2024 campaign, and nearly $65,000 for polling by the firm of Tony Fabrizio, who has advised the Trump political operation. The Democratic Party of Albania suffered a heavy defeat in the May elections.

Trump renominates Elon Musk ally Jared Isaacman to run NASA months after withdrawal” via Ari Levy of CNBC — Trump has renominated Isaacman to run NASA after pulling his prior nomination months ago due to what the President called a “thorough review of prior associations.” “Jared’s passion for Space, astronaut experience, and dedication to pushing the boundaries of exploration, unlocking the mysteries of the universe, and advancing the new Space economy make him ideally suited to lead NASA into a bold new Era,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Tuesday. Isaacman, who is friends with Tesla CEO Musk, was initially picked to lead NASA in December, before Trump had even taken office. Isaacman is a billionaire who founded payments company Shift4 and has led two private spaceflights.

Donald Trump renominates billionaire astronaut Jared Isaacman to lead NASA, citing his experience and vision for the space industry.

Laura Loomer is now credentialed to cover the Pentagon” via Scott Nover and Drew Harwell of The Washington Post — Loomer, the far-right political activist and former congressional candidate in Florida, has been credentialed to cover the Defense Department, according to one person familiar with the matter, joining a new cohort of right-wing media that have agreed to the Pentagon’s new press policy. Loomer, 32, has forged a close alliance with Trump, routinely meeting with the President in the Oval Office during his second term. She has frustrated some in the administration with her proximity to Trump and public criticisms of high-ranking defense and national security officials, whom she argues are disloyal to Trump — some of whom have been dismissed soon after her rebukes.

Despite recent turmoil at FDA, White House praises the agency’s leader” via David Lim and Lauren Gardner of POLITICO — The White House is rallying behind Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary after the abrupt ousting of one of his top deputies over the weekend, the latest tumult in an agency that’s seen plenty this year. A new top drug regulator will likely be installed on Wednesday to replace George Tidmarsh as director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “President Trump pledged to lower costs and Make America Healthy Again by cutting red tape and embracing innovation,” White House spokesperson Kush Desai wrote in an email.

Rick Scott, Byron Donalds slam investigators who subpoenaed GOP Senators’ phone records” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Investigators in a federal case against Trump obtained phone records and text messages belonging to U.S. Sen. Scott, Senate Republicans say. At a news conference at the U.S. Capitol, Scott decried the Arctic Frost investigation as a weaponization of the Justice Department against Republican elected officials. “Basically, they want to shut us all up,” the Naples Republican said. “They want to shut us up and put us in prison. That’s what they want to do.” U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Senator and close ally of Scott, informed Florida’s senior Senator last week that he believed Special Counsel Jack Smith had targeted Scott along with several other GOP Senators during President Joe Biden’s term.

Carlos Giménez urges U.S. to use trade negotiations to end Mexico’s Cuba ties” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Miami Republican U.S. Rep. Giménez urged the Trump administration to demand that Mexico cease oil shipments to Cuba and end contracts with doctors in Cuban medical missions as part of the upcoming renegotiation of a trade deal with the Mexican government. In a letter, Giménez, who chairs the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Transportation and Maritime Security, asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to ensure “Mexico ends its disturbing relationship with the murderous regime in Havana.” The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement is scheduled for review early next year. As the agreement’s framework is revised, Giménez asked the U.S. top officials to require Mexico “step up efforts in combating and eliminating narco-terrorist organizations… halt trafficking of medical professionals from Cuba, victims of modern-day slavery” and “demand Mexico end its oil shipments to the regime in Havana.”

Carlos Giménez urges U.S. negotiators to pressure Mexico to cut oil and medical ties with Cuba.

Jimmy Patronis criticizes ‘sniper’ speeding tickets after traffic stop off Three Mile Bridge” via Karris Harmon of Wear TV — Thousands of vehicles travel the Three Mile Bridge every day. Gulf Breeze Police say Patronis was going more than 20 miles per hour over the posted speed limit. Patronis acknowledged Tuesday that the officer who pulled him over was doing his job. But he says if law enforcement is issuing tickets, they need to be seen. Patronis claims the officer who stopped him on the bridge was out of sight. Gulf Breeze Police Chief Rick Hawthorne says the officer pulled Patronis over for going 68 mph in a 45-mph zone. “He was on the north side of the big hump, parked in the emergency lane with his lights out, and it was 6 o’clock at night,” Hawthorne said. “So, he wasn’t behind a bush or a tree and couldn’t be seen.”

— ELECTIONS —

It’s not over: Eileen Higgins, Emilio González to compete in runoff for Miami Mayor” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — The race for Mayor of Miami isn’t over yet. Commissioners Higgins and former City Manager González will face off in a runoff on Dec. 9 after neither secured a majority in the Nov. 4 election. Higgins, a current Miami-Dade County Commissioner, and González emerged from a crowded field of 13 candidates vying to succeed term-limited Mayor Francis Suarez. González, who successfully sued to block the city’s attempt to delay the election, casts himself as a reformer focused on fiscal discipline and government overhaul. Higgins emphasized affordability, anti-corruption and environmental resilience. The runoff will decide who will lead Miami through its next chapter.

Eileen Higgins and Emilio González advance to a December runoff to decide Miami’s next Mayor.

Christine King re-elected to Miami Commission as race for District 3 seat heads to runoff” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Miami Commissioner King easily won re-election Tuesday to represent District 5, securing another four-year term after first winning the seat in 2021. Her victory came as the city’s District 3 race heads to a runoff, with candidates Miguel Gabela and Damian Pardo advancing after neither reached a majority. King, who chairs the City Commission, ran on a record of expanding affordable housing, strengthening support for small businesses, and investing in parks and youth programs. Her challenger, Michael Hepburn, campaigned on ethics reform and greater government transparency but failed to gain traction. The District 3 runoff will determine who replaces Commissioner Joe Carollo, who was barred from seeking re-election due to term limits after years of controversy and legal battles.

Fort Myers Beach voters support recall of Karen Woodson, John King” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Voters in Fort Myers Beach approved the recall of Town Council member Woodson following a contentious campaign tied to a controversial high-rise development on the former Red Coconut RV Park site. Allegations against Woodson included violations of the Sunshine Law, improper staffing decisions and acceptance of unreported gifts from developers. Council member King faced a parallel recall but remained in office due to a court-ordered stay that paused the results pending appeal. Alongside the recall vote, residents also selected from three candidates — Tom Brady, Rebecca Link and Edward Rood — to fill any vacated seat. The election marks one of the first successful municipal recalls in Lee County in decades and signals heightened community scrutiny of local governance.

Gainesville votes to send GRU Authority packing a second time” via Drew Wilson of Florida Politics — Voters in Gainesville are headed to the polls on Nov. 4 for the second time in a year to decide whether to return control of Gainesville Regional Utilities (GRU) to the city’s elected Commission or let it remain under the Governor-appointed GRU Authority. Last year’s referendum, in which about 73% of voters supported returning oversight to the city, was invalidated by a judge due to misleading ballot wording. The current vote follows the 2023 state law that shifted GRU oversight to the Authority Board. Opponents argue the Authority removes local accountability, while supporters point to reduced debt and lower rates since the shift. The referendum’s outcome could settle a longstanding governance dispute over who runs the utility.

Hialeah voters pick Bryan Calvo as first new elected Mayor in five years” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Former Hialeah City Council member Calvo unseated Mayor Jackie Garcia-Roves, reclaiming the city’s top post just six months after she made history as Hialeah’s first woman Mayor. With most precincts reporting, Calvo led with 53% of the vote, followed by Jesús Tundidor with 21% and Garcia-Roves with 19%. The race unfolded amid rising concerns over living costs, infrastructure and fiscal management. Calvo criticized recent tax rebates as reckless and vowed to curb waste, cut taxes and fight corruption. Tundidor emphasized conservative fiscal discipline, while Garcia-Roves defended short-term rebates to provide relief. Calvo, 27, once the city’s youngest Council member, said his win represents a call for “real change” at City Hall.

Two elected to Hialeah Council as two other races head to runoffs” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Two candidates secured seats on the Hialeah City Council, while races in two other Districts are headed to runoffs. With 44 of 45 precincts reporting, Council member Melinda De La Vega won the Group 6 seat with about 60.5% of the vote; Council member Juan Junco secured re-election in the Group 4 contest with approximately 59%. Meanwhile, the Group 3 and Group 7 contests did not yield outright winners, sending top vote-getters to runoff elections. The outcomes reflect a divided electoral field, with some incumbents holding ground while other Districts remain unresolved. Voter concerns such as cost of living, city infrastructure and government transparency framed the campaigns across the city.

Melinda De La Vega and Juan Junco win Hialeah Council seats as two other races advance.

Holmes Beach voters re-elect Steve Oelfke, Terry Schaefer, but toss Carol Soustek in favor of Jessica Patel” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — In Holmes Beach, voters re-elected incumbents Oelfke and Schaefer to the City Commission — but removed Soustek in favor of newcomer Patel. The election for three at-large seats featured four candidates, with Oelfke and Schaefer retaining their roles and Patel joining the Commission. The change signals voter appetite for new voices, despite the continued presence of two familiar figures. Key campaign themes included hurricane recovery, stormwater management, neighborhood fiscal stability and resident engagement in budgeting decisions. The outcome underscores a mixed mandate: the electorate endorsed experience in two seats while opting for change in the third.

Kim Konsky unseats incumbent, Erica Ávila wins re-election in Homestead Council races” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Konsky defeated incumbent Tom Davis to win Seat 1 on the Homestead City Council, capturing 55.9 % of the vote while Davis fell to 44.1%. Meanwhile, incumbent Ávila held Seat 5 with 58.1 % of the vote, defeating challenger Sonia Castro. The elections reflect a mixed outcome: one seat flipped while the other remained in place. Voter turnout was low at roughly 10.7%. Major campaign themes included development control, transparency, infrastructure and public safety. Konsky, a Realtor, unseated Davis by promising fresh leadership, while Ávila leveraged her experience to secure re-election. The results signal some appetite for change in Homestead alongside continuity in other races.

Lake County elections: Michael Jaycox defeats Jim O’Neil, Mascotte incumbents hold on” via James Wilkins of the Orlando Sentinel — Voters in Lake County’s municipal elections threw out one veteran incumbent while reaffirming others. In Groveland, veteran O’Neil lost his District 4 seat to Jaycox by a wide margin — Jaycox captured 68.8% of the vote. Criminal charges and a civil lawsuit had shadowed O’Neil’s campaign. Meanwhile, in Mascotte, incumbents Robin Hughes and Randy Brasher held their seats, defeating challengers Barbara Krull and Sharee Hodge, respectively. Hughes edged out Krull 50.7% to 49.3%. The results highlight a divided electorate: growth and accountability concerns drove change in Groveland, while other towns opted for continuity. The mixed outcomes underscore local attention to leadership, trust, and the handling of municipal issues.

Sara Roberts McCarley wins open Lakeland Mayor race” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — Roberts McCarley won Lakeland’s open Mayor’s race — becoming the city’s first elected female Mayor in decades. She captured just over 50% of the vote in a four-way contest — avoiding a runoff and succeeding outgoing Mayor Bill Mutz. A City Commissioner since 2019, McCarley campaigned on transparency, public safety and continued community investment, promising to build on Mutz’s collaborative leadership style. Opponents Cedric Valrie, Kay Klymko and Kaitlin Kramer trailed far behind. Voter turnout was roughly 19%, reflecting steady engagement for a municipal election. McCarley’s victory marks a milestone for Lakeland politics — signaling voters’ preference for experienced, pragmatic leadership and reaffirming the city’s focus on managed growth, fiscal responsibility and neighborhood revitalization.

Marathon voters re-elect two City Council incumbents, add one new member” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — In the city of Marathon, all five precincts reported their results, and voters re-elected incumbents G. Lynn Landry and Robyn Still to the City Council. Both secured enough votes to win new three-year terms. A third new Council member also joined the panel after the at-large election for three seats. The results reflect continuity with the standing Council members while also introducing fresh representation. Candidates had campaigned on key issues including transparency, fiscal responsibility, growth management and citizen engagement. The outcome suggests residents preferred a blend of experienced leadership and new perspectives as the community continues addressing challenges related to tourism, infrastructure and quality of life in the Florida Keys.

Tom Keen wins Orlando City Council seat against better-funded incumbent” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — Former Rep. Keen pulled off the upset and knocked off a longtime incumbent with a bigger war chest in the Orlando City Council election Tuesday. Keen won nearly 54% of the vote in the race for District 1 to oust Commissioner Jim Gray, who captured 31% of the vote. The other two candidates in the race, Sunshine Linda-Marie Grund and Manny Acosta, received nearly 10% and 5% of the vote, respectively. Keen said he was “over the moon” and surprised he won outright since he was expecting to go to a runoff election because of the crowded field. His strategy had been knocking on doors, and he said he wore out three pairs of tennis shoes during his campaign. The election results were validation that Orlando is “really blue,” Keen said.

Roger Chapin and Mira Tanna are heading to a runoff for Orlando City Council,” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — In Orlando’s City Council District 3 race, Chapin and Tanna advanced to a runoff after neither candidate secured a majority on Election Day. Chapin led narrowly with approximately 34% of the vote versus Tanna’s roughly 33.8%. A crowded field of five contenders had vied to replace outgoing Commissioner Robert Stuart, who is stepping down after two decades. Chapin emphasized experience, economic development and safer streets, while Tanna, a city grants manager, focused on government trust and inclusive representation. District 3 covers neighborhoods such as Baldwin Park, Audubon Park, College Park and Rosemont, and the runoff is scheduled for Dec. 9.

Shan Rose beats Regina Hill to keep her Orlando City Council seat in ugly race” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — Rose retained her seat on the Orlando City Council in a contentious District 5 campaign, defeating former Commissioner Hill with around 52% of the vote. Hill, who served nine years on the Council, had sought to reclaim her position following suspension in March 2023 over allegations of elder exploitation. Rose, who filled the vacancy in a Special Election last year, pointed to achievements such as a 27 % drop in crime, new accessible sidewalks and increased programs for seniors and youth. She emphasized her focus on community safety and infrastructure improvements. Hill’s campaign was overshadowed by lingering legal issues, which likely weighed heavily on voters.

Shan Rose defeats Regina Hill in Orlando’s District 5 race, keeping her seat after a heated campaign.

Leslie Waters continues Seminole winning streak, defeats challenger Marcus Barber” via Jesse Mendoza and Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Longtime Seminole Mayor Waters has defeated challenger Barber in a race that pitted decades of government experience against a first-time candidate running on a message of community service and small-town pride. With unofficial results in, Waters secured a resounding win, with nearly 57% of the vote. Waters, a fixture in Seminole politics since 2009, will continue leading the city of roughly 19,000 residents in central Pinellas County. Before becoming Mayor in 2013, she served as a City Council member, Vice Mayor and interim Mayor. Before her time with the city, she spent eight years in the Florida House, where she rose to Speaker Pro Tempore and chaired key Committees on transportation and insurance.

— LOCAL: S. FL —

CNN’s Carlos Suarez named Miami-Dade Mayor’s Comms Director in media team shake-up” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Miami-Dade Mayor has appointed veteran journalist Suarez as her new Communications Director, part of a broader shake-up in the administration’s media team. Suarez, a Miami native and former CNN correspondent, brings years of experience covering major events, including the Parkland school shooting, Hurricane Irma, and the Surfside condo collapse. Levine Cava praised Suarez as “a true homegrown talent” with deep community ties and bilingual skills to help strengthen communication across Miami-Dade’s diverse population. Outgoing Communications Director Natalia Jaramillo will move to a new role within the county’s Communications, Innovation & Technology Department, focusing on digital engagement and coordination across agencies. Deputy Chief of Staff Rachel Johnson will remain as a senior communications adviser.

Daniella Levine Cava appoints veteran journalist Carlos Suarez as Miami-Dade Communications Director amid staff reorganization.

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos returning to Miami to speak at celebrity business forum” via Vinod Sreeharsha of the Miami Herald — Amazon founder Bezos, a Miami Palmetto Senior High alumnus, will headline the 2025 America Business Forum at downtown Miami’s Kaseya Center — the event’s first time in the United States since launching in Uruguay in 2016. The two-day conference, set for Nov. 5–6, will bring together leaders from business, politics, and culture to discuss innovation and leadership. Bezos will close the forum on Nov. 6 at 5:10 p.m., joining a lineup that includes Trump, Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Corina Machado, and soccer star Lionel Messi. Miami Mayor Suarez, who attended last year’s forum in Uruguay, helped recruit speakers. Organizers said Bezos’ participation underscores Miami’s growing status as a global hub for business and technology.

Man struck and killed by Brightline train in Pompano Beach, BSO says” via David Goodhue of the Miami Herald — A Brightline train struck and killed a man who was walking along the railroad tracks in Pompano Beach Monday night, the Broward Sheriff’s Office said. The man was hit around 6:30 p.m. in the area of 300 South Dixie Highway. Pompano Beach Fire Rescue paramedics declared the man dead.

— LOCAL: C. FL —

Orange County’s hotel tax draws $26M in September” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — Orange County’s hotel tax generated $26 million in September — the most revenue ever collected during the month. But officials warn that the big increases seen in the last few months are starting to level out. “After a strong, hot Summer, TDT collections cooled off in September with the start of the Fall season,” Orange County Comptroller Phil Diamond said in a press release about September, which includes Labor Day and then many students around the country returning to school. Acknowledging the record-breaking September, Diamond’s Office said the total amount of revenue for Fiscal Year 2024-25 reached nearly $385 million, marking the highest annual collections ever.

Phil Diamond reports Orange County’s hotel tax hit a record $26 million in September, topping expectations.

Osceola to provide $1 million for food pantries amid SNAP decrease” via Natalia Jaramillo of the Orlando Sentinel — Osceola Commissioners voted 4-1 to set aside $1 million to aid 38 food pantries, one week after county nonprofits said the decrease in SNAP funding will spark a “crisis.” “This made me lose sleep the whole weekend; these individuals who rely on SNAP benefits are possibly going hungry,” Commissioner Viviana Janer said. “It’s very unfortunate that we have to get to this point.” Roughly 24,000 households in Osceola County rely on Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program benefits, Rev. Mary Downey, CEO of the nonprofit Hope Partnership, told state legislators. Osceola will set aside $90,000 in Community Development Block Grant funds, or CDBG, and $910,000 in general revenue funds if needed in the event the federal government does not reopen in short order, spokesperson Tyler Winik said.

— LOCAL: TB —

USF grows research funding to $750M” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — The University of South Florida has reached a record $750 million in research funding in Fiscal Year 2025, an $11.6 million increase over last year and a 37% bump in funding since 2022. The increase in funding will expand USF’s ability to address critical challenges, discover scientific, technological and other academic breakthroughs, and create new opportunities to improve health care, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, the environment, hurricane response and more. “The University of South Florida is committed to solving real-world challenges, and our record research funding — bringing us closer to our goal of $1 billion in funding by 2030 — provides more opportunities for our faculty, staff and students to turn bold ideas into innovation and impact,” USF President Rhea Law said.

The University of South Florida reaches a record $750 million in research funding, advancing innovation statewide.

—“USF president-elect won’t be confirmed until 2026” via Breanne Williams of the Tampa Bay Business Journal

SunRunner bus lane removal may have violated state law created to make it harder to repurpose lanes” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A local transit supporter has filed a complaint against FDOT District 7 Secretary Justin Hall over the agency’s decision to remove dedicated Business Access and Transit (BAT) lanes along Pasadena Avenue used by the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority’s (PSTA) SunRunner route. The complaint, filed by local transit and pedestrian accessibility activist Garrett Marple, says Hall “likely made or authorized this decision … without the professional diligence, safety analysis, or ethical consideration required of a licensed professional Engineer under Florida law.” Legislation approved in 2024 (HB 1301) requires “any project that will repurpose one or more existing traffic lanes” to include “a traffic study to address any potential adverse impacts of the project” and hold at least one public meeting “before completing the design phase of the project.”

Polk County Commission delays vote on adding school tax increase to ballot” via Paul Nutcher of the Lakeland Ledger — Irritated by the optics of voting in favor of a proposed referendum for a school tax increase ― all while state lawmakers are considering property tax cuts ― Polk County Commissioners voted Nov. 4 to delay a decision on the referendum until January. And they want the Polk County School District to explain why the revenues are needed.

— LOCAL: N. FL —

Prominent figure in politics passes on offer to become FAMU president’s Chief of Staff” via Tarah Jean of the Tallahassee Democrat — A well-connected political figure was the top choice to be Florida A&M University’s Chief of Staff, but the two offers months apart were voided after he didn’t respond. At the same time, the prominent individual has been a volunteer helping hand and sounding board in FAMU President Marva Johnson’s inner circle. As Johnson works to solidify her senior leadership team, she extended a Chief of Staff job offer letter to Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Executive Director Vince Evans in July, as FAMU’s president-elect, ahead of her official start in August, and again on Oct. 6.

FAMU President Marva Johnson’s top choice for Chief of Staff, Vince Evans, declines repeated job offers.

— LOCAL: SW. FL —

Florida’s campus DOGE report questions spending at New College” via Lucy Marques of the Tampa Bay Times — New College of Florida’s finances could be a point of discussion at this week’s Board of Governors meeting, due to a new audit from the state’s Department of Government Efficiency. DeSantis had ordered the audit of Florida’s State University System to eliminate unnecessary spending and investigate diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The report does not include any analysis of those programs, but instead compares student success measures, such as graduation rates, with spending at each of the state’s public universities. While concerns over New College’s finances aren’t new, the report, which draws from publicly available data, highlights how the university diverges from others in the state.

A state audit questions New College of Florida’s spending patterns, highlighting disparities in student success and efficiency.

The Bradenton Times pushes radical left agenda while Manatee County faces $112 million overspending scandal” via Frank Kopylov of Florida’s Voice — What began as a small-town online outlet promising “independent journalism for Manatee County” has evolved into one of Florida’s loudest radical left echo chambers, and it’s happening as the county finds itself under state audit for massive financial mismanagement. While Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia investigates what he calls the worst local budget audit his office has ever encountered, revealing $112 million in overspending, The Bradenton Times has been devoting its energy to attacking conservatives, targeting Republican officials, and promoting talking points that many people say could have been lifted straight from a national partisan playbook.

Happening today — Florida gubernatorial candidate and former House Speaker Paul Renner will unveil his campaign Health Freedom Initiative, joined by Stand for Health Freedom Executive Director Leah Wilson and Parental Rights Florida State Coordinator Patti Sullivan to highlight health proposals that prioritize and defend Florida families’ health freedom, promote patient-centered care with transparency and innovation, and expand access to alternative and preventive treatments: 11 a.m. EST, Seed to Table Market, 4835 Immokalee Road, Naples. Media are invited to arrive at 10:30 a.m. RSVP for coverage to [email protected].

— TOP OPINION —

No politics is local” via David Graham of The Atlantic — The once-familiar saying that “all politics is local” no longer reflects America’s political reality. Across the country, races that were once about roads, schools, and budgets are now consumed by national debates and partisan identity. Local contests increasingly serve as referendums on national figures, especially Trump.

In Virginia and New Jersey, gubernatorial races are shaped less by local concerns than by the candidates’ alignment with or opposition to Trump. The same dynamic drives state legislative and congressional elections, where party loyalty now outweighs personal connection or community ties. Voters view their ballots through a national lens, not a local one.

The pattern holds in New York City, where the mayoral race is dominated by global issues such as the Israeli Palestinian conflict. Debates over policing or housing are overshadowed by how candidates position themselves on foreign affairs, further blurring the line between local and global politics.

Political scientists note how deeply this shift has taken root. Lee Drutman of New America found that 98% of House election results can be predicted by how districts voted for President, leaving little space for ticket-splitting or independent judgment.

In Virginia, the state’s traditional “Governor’s curse” — electing a leader from the opposite party of the sitting President — has faded as voters grow more partisan and nationally conditioned. New Jersey shows a similar realignment, with state politics bending to national narratives.

This nationalization of politics erodes local control and engagement, reducing communities to mere reflections of America’s broader divides.

— MORE OPINIONS —

America is hurting — Americans are too” via Christian Ulvert for Florida Politics — Public support for LGBTQ+ rights is slipping, and that reality weighs heavily after years of progress. A decade ago, same-sex marriage enjoyed overwhelming bipartisan approval. Today, barely half of Americans say it should remain legal. The rights once seen as settled are again under pressure as discrimination and fear resurface. From Miami to the halls of power, the call now is for visibility, vigilance, and courage — to speak early against anti-LGBTQ+ efforts, engage allies across divides, and live authentically despite risk. Equality isn’t self-sustaining; it requires constant defense. Love, representation, and truth must replace silence and fear. Progress matters, but the fight continues until every LGBTQ+ person can live safely, visibly, and fully as themselves.

Donalds is right — Florida needs real wastewater solutions like Eco World Water” via Steve Adelstein for Florida Politics — Florida’s wastewater crisis is reaching a breaking point as the state’s population surges and aging infrastructure falters. At the Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum, Rep. Donalds called attention to the need for modern solutions — and Eco World Water says it has one. The Florida-based company claims to convert raw wastewater into potable-grade water in just 10 minutes without using the power grid. Traditional systems can take days and often fail during storms, leaving communities vulnerable. Eco World Water argues its scalable technology can help municipalities, utilities, and emergency teams manage growth more efficiently. Donalds’ push for fiscal responsibility aligns with the company’s message: innovation, not bureaucracy, will keep Florida resilient and ready for the future

New screening options help Floridians beat colorectal cancer” via Ute Harshbarger for Florida Politics — Colorectal cancer remains one of the deadliest cancers when detected late, but early screening changes everything. When caught early, the disease has a 91% five-year survival rate, yet only 65.5% of eligible Floridians are up-to-date on screenings. Barriers like discomfort, fear, and lack of awareness keep many from getting tested, particularly among low-income adults. Traditional colonoscopies are effective but often dreaded, while stool-based tests can feel unpleasant. Now, blood-based screening options like the FDA-approved Shield test offer a simpler, non-invasive alternative that can be done during a routine doctor’s visit. Early detection saves lives — and makes it possible for Floridians to keep doing what they love for more years and more memories ahead.

— INSTAGRAM OF THE DAY —

— ALOE —

Star-eating black hole unleashes record-setting energetic flare” via Will Dunham of Reuters — Scientists are observing the most energetic flare ever seen emanating from a supermassive black hole, apparently caused when this celestial beast shredded and swallowed a massive star that strayed too close. The researchers said the flare at its peak was 10 trillion times brighter than the sun. It was unleashed by a black hole roughly 300 million times the mass of the sun residing inside a faraway galaxy, about 11 billion light-years from Earth. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles. Black holes are extraordinarily dense objects with gravitational pull so strong that not even light can escape. The researchers said the most likely explanation for the flare is a large star being pulled into the black hole.

A distant supermassive black hole devours a massive star, producing a flare 10 trillion times brighter than the sun.

Google plans to put data centers in space to meet demand for AI” via Robert Booth of The Guardian — Google is hatching plans to put artificial intelligence data centers into space, with its first trial equipment sent into orbit in early 2027. Its scientists and engineers believe tightly packed constellations of about 80 solar-powered satellites could be arranged in orbit about 400 miles above the Earth’s surface, equipped with the powerful processors required to meet rising demand for AI. Prices of space launches are falling so quickly that by the middle of the 2030s, the running costs of a space-based data center could be comparable to one on Earth. Using satellites could also minimize the impact on the land and water resources needed to cool existing data centers.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Celebrating today are U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, Britton Alexander, Emma Collum, former state Rep. Ken Robertson and Eric Robinson.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Daniel Dean, Ryan Nicol, Jacob Ogles, and Drew Wilson.





Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Nicole Gomez Goldmeier, Jackie Arboleda promoted at LSN Partners

Published

on


Two weeks after announcing its first round of 2026 promotions, LSN Partners is following up with a couple more as it continues expanding its local, state and federal practices.

Round 2 includes the elevation of Nicole Gomez Goldmeier to Chief Growth Officer and Jackie Arboleda to Chief Marketing and Community Relations Officer.

Gomez Goldmeier previously held the COO title at LSN Partners. In her new role, she will drive revenue growth and business development for the firm with a focus on strengthening long-standing client relationships, advancing expansion into key markets driven by client demand, and supporting strategic engagement.

She will remain actively involved in the firm’s Republican Governors and Mayors practice, reinforcing LSN’s position as a trusted bipartisan adviser.

“Nicole understands our clients and the public-sector landscape in a way that few people do,” said Alex Heckler, founder and Managing Partner of LSN Partners. “She has played a central role in how we build relationships, identify opportunities, and position the firm for long-term success. This role formalizes the work she has already been leading.”

Arboleda, meanwhile, will oversee the firm’s marketing, communications, brand positioning and community engagement, ensuring that LSN’s messaging, events and external presence reflect the firm’s strategic priorities and client-focused initiatives.

LSN said she will continue serving as a leader within the firm’s health care practice while working directly with clients as a project manager, adding that her dual focus on marketing leadership and project management strengthens the firm’s ability to deliver results to clients across markets nationwide.

“Jackie has helped shape how clients experience and engage with LSN and how the firm is perceived in the market,” Heckler said. “Her understanding of our clients, our culture, and our mission allows her to deliver results at the highest level, whether in our healthcare practice or driving the firm’s communications strategy.”



Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Florida’s signature industry shows up for Tourism Day at the Capitol

Published

on


Tourism spending produces an estimated $2K in tax savings per Florida family, VISIT FLORIDA says.

Florida tourism and hospitality heavyweights will show up in force Wednesday at the Capitol to highlight the Sunshine State’s signature industry and make the case for continued state investment.

Groups participating in Florida Tourism Day at the Capitol include the Florida Attractions Association, Florida Association of Museums, Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, Florida RV Park and Campground Association, Destinations Florida, and VISIT FLORIDA, the state’s tourism marketing arm.

The cohort will spend the day meeting with lawmakers to emphasize the industry’s role as one of Florida’s primary economic drivers, top employers and major state revenue generators.

“The success of Florida’s tourism industry, and the economic and jobs benefits our state reaps from it, are the direct result of statewide and local tourism promotion efforts,” said Destinations Florida Executive Director Robert Skrob.

Florida Attractions Association President and CEO Bill Lupfer added, “Tourism is a cornerstone of Florida’s economy, supporting jobs, communities, and public services statewide. No destination in the world matches Florida’s number, quality and diversity of guest experiences or the cutting-edge service delivered by our attractions, making continued investment in tourism essential to sustaining our global leadership.”

According to a recent VISIT FLORIDA study, travelers spent a record $134.9 billion in the state in 2024 — up 3% from the prior year — and nearly all of it remained in Florida’s economy, with 59 cents of each dollar going directly to worker salaries. Meanwhile, tourism-related tax revenue reached $33.6 billion, while tourism-supported employment grew to 1.8 million jobs statewide.

VISIT FLORIDA President and CEO Bryan Griffin said the topline numbers translate to an estimated $2,000 in tax savings per Florida family, adding that his agency “remains diligently focused on partnering with Florida’s tourism industry and serving Florida’s residents through our important work.”



Source link

Continue Reading

Politics

Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 1.21.25

Published

on


Good Wednesday morning.

Two weeks after announcing its first round of 2026 promotions, LSN Partners is following up with a couple more as it continues expanding its local, state and federal practices.

Round two includes elevating Nicole Gomez Goldmeier to Chief Growth Officer and Jackie Arboleda to Chief Marketing and Community Relations Officer.

Nicole Gomez Goldmeier and Jackie Arboleda were promoted as LSN Partners expands state practices nationwide.

Gomez Goldmeier previously served as COO at LSN Partners. In her new role, she will drive revenue growth and business development for the firm, focusing on strengthening long-standing client relationships, expanding into key markets driven by client demand and supporting strategic engagement.

“Nicole understands our clients and the public-sector landscape in a way that few people do,” said Alex Heckler, founder and Managing Partner of LSN Partners. “She has played a central role in how we build relationships, identify opportunities, and position the firm for long-term success. This role formalizes the work she has already been leading.”

Arboleda, meanwhile, will oversee the firm’s marketing, communications, brand positioning and community engagement, ensuring that LSN’s messaging, events, and external presence reflect the firm’s strategic priorities and client-focused initiatives.

“Jackie has helped shape how clients experience and engage with LSN and how the firm is perceived in the market,” Heckler said. “Her understanding of our clients, our culture, and our mission allows her to deliver results at the highest level, whether in our health care practice or driving the firm’s communications strategy.”

___

Florida tourism and hospitality heavyweights will show up in force today at the Capitol to highlight the Sunshine State’s signature industry and make the case for continued state investment.

Tourism leaders gather at the Capitol to press lawmakers on sustained investment in Florida’s economy.

Groups participating in Florida Tourism Day at the Capitol include the Florida Attractions Association, Florida Association of Museums, Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association, Florida RV Park and Campground Association, Destinations Florida, and VISIT FLORIDA, the state’s tourism marketing arm.

The cohort will spend the day meeting with lawmakers to emphasize the industry’s role as one of Florida’s primary economic drivers, top employers and major state revenue generators.

“The success of Florida’s tourism industry, and the economic and jobs benefits our state reaps from it, are the direct result of statewide and local tourism promotion efforts,” said Destinations Florida Executive Director Robert Skrob.

Florida Attractions Association President and CEO Bill Lupfer added, “Tourism is a cornerstone of Florida’s economy, supporting jobs, communities and public services statewide. No destination in the world matches Florida’s number, quality and diversity of guest experiences or the cutting-edge service delivered by our attractions, making continued investment in tourism essential to sustaining our global leadership.”

According to a recent VISIT FLORIDA study, travelers spent a record $134.9 billion in the state in 2024 — up 3% from the prior year — and nearly all of it remained in Florida’s economy, with 59 cents of each dollar going directly to worker salaries. Meanwhile, tourism-related tax revenue reached $33.6 billion, while tourism-supported employment grew to 1.8 million jobs statewide.

VISIT FLORIDA President and CEO Bryan Griffin said the topline numbers translate to an estimated $2,000 in tax savings per Florida family, adding that his agency “remains diligently focused on partnering with Florida’s tourism industry and serving Florida’s residents through our important work.”

___

If something isn’t broken, don’t fix it — especially not behind closed doors.

That’s the message coming through in a new poll by The Tyson Group gauging public sentiment on a proposed shared services agreement between the North and South Broward Hospital districts.

The survey, conducted Dec. 8-10, asked likely Broward County voters whether they approve or disapprove of the health care services currently available in the county. Nearly two-thirds (65%) said they approve, including 30% who strongly approve. Just 22% said they disapprove of Broward’s health services.

Hillary Cassel and Joe Gruters sponsor bills drawing scrutiny over Broward hospital’s shared services plan.

When asked whether the North and South Broward Hospital Districts should be allowed to change how they operate “without triggering the legal requirements, transparency, or voter approval normally required for a full merger,” nearly three-quarters of respondents (73%) said no, including 62% who said “definitely no.”

The polling comes after Rep. Hillary Cassel and Sen. Joe Gruters filed bills largely similar to 2025 legislation that critics warned would open a backdoor to a merger, allowing the districts to bypass public scrutiny, regulatory review and possibly a countywide referendum otherwise required under state law.

“Once voters understood that the shared services agreement would go into effect without public review or voter approval, it was impossible to generate support. Each message we tested reinforced the negative perception that the shared services agreement was a shady deal designed to circumvent quality control,” the polling memo reads.

By the end of the poll, just 21% supported a shared services agreement, with 63% opposed, including 47% who said they “strongly oppose” the deal.

— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —

Tweet, tweet:

Tweet, tweet:

@Sen_Hooper: Thank you, Sen. @NickDiCeglie for working to provide relief for our hurricane-ravished counties while protecting our greatest resources and land. Thank you for listening to our constituents who have diligently advocated on the issues addressed in SB 840.

Tweet, tweet:

Tweet, tweet:

Tweet, tweet:

Tweet, tweet:

— DAYS UNTIL —

Melania’ documentary premieres — 9; The Grammy Awards — 11; Florida TaxWatch State of the Taxpayer Dinner — 15; Milano Cortina Olympic & Paralympic Games begin — 16; ‘Paradise’ season two premieres on Hulu — 33; ‘Yellowstone’ spinoff ‘Y: Marshals’ premieres — 39; Boca Raton Mayoral referendums and City Council Elections — 48; last day of the Regular Session — 51; The Oscars — 53; ‘Peaky Blinders’ movie premieres on Netflix — 58; Special Election for SD 14, HD 87, HD 51 and HD 52 — 62; Yankees-Giants Opening Day matchup / Netflix’s first exclusive MLB stream — 63; MLB 14-game Opening Day slate — 64; new season of ‘Your Friends And Neighbors’ premieres on Apple+ — 72; Tampa Bay Rays first game at the newly repaired Tropicana Field — 75; Florida TaxWatch Spring Meeting begins — 84; MLB Jackie Robinson Day — 84; First Qualifying Period begins (Federal) — 89; Federal Qualifying Period ends — 93; F1 Miami begins — 100; ‘Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu’ premieres — 121; new mission for ‘Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run’ premieres at Disney World — 121; MLB Lou Gehrig Day — 132; Second Qualifying Period begins (State) — 138; South Africa in the FIFA World Cup opener in Mexico City — 141; Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’ premieres — 142; State Qualifying Period ends — 142; ‘Toy Story 5’ premieres in theaters — 149; Florida GOP’s statewide debates for the Primary in its ‘Sunshine State Showdown’ — 156; Mexico will face live-action ‘Moana’ premieres — 161; Primary Election: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to UOCAVA voters — 164; Primary Election: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters — 169; MLB All-Star Game — 174; Domestic Primary Election VBM Ballots Mailed deadline — 176; Primary Election: Deadline to register to vote or change party affiliation — 180; Primary Election: Deadline to request that ballot be mailed — 197; Primary Election: Early voting period begins (mandatory period) — 199; Primary Election Day — 209; Yankees host the Mets to mark the anniversary of 9/11 — 233; MLB Roberto Clemente Day — 237; General Election: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to UOCAVA voters — 241; General Election: Deadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters — 246; Domestic General Election VBM Ballots Mailed deadline — 253; General Election: Deadline to register to vote — 257; Early Voting General Election mandatory period begins — 276; 2026 General Election — 286; ‘Godzilla Minus Zero‘ premieres — 289; ‘Dune: Part 3’ premieres — 331; ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ premieres — 331; untitled ‘Star Wars’ movie premieres — 331; 2027 College Football Playoff national title game in Las Vegas — 369: Tampa Mayoral Election — 405; Jacksonville First Election — 426; Jacksonville General Election — 482; ‘Spider-Man: Beyond The Spider-Verse’ premieres — 500; ‘Bluey The Movie’ premieres — 562; ‘The Batman 2’ premieres — 618; ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ premieres — 695; 2028 College Football Playoff national title game in New Orleans — 733; Los Angeles Olympics Opening Ceremony — 905; U.S. Presidential Election — 1021; 2029 College Football Playoff national title game in Tampa — 1,097; ‘Avatar 4’ premieres — 1421; 2030 College Football Playoff national title games in Miami — 1,461; ‘Avatar 5’ premieres — 2152.

— TOP STORY —

Florida State Guard officers accuse leaders of fraud, waste and negligence” via Jeffrey Schweers of the Orlando Sentinel — Allegations of financial mismanagement, sexual harassment and retaliation inside the Florida State Guard have triggered a wave of resignations and forced departures, raising new questions about oversight of the mostly volunteer force revived by Gov. Ron DeSantis three years ago.

Current and former guard members accuse Executive Director Mark Thieme of misusing taxpayer funds, including racking up roughly $100,000 in flight time and related costs to obtain a personal private pilot’s license and approving millions of dollars in aircraft purchases and parts they say were unnecessary or incompatible with existing equipment.

Mark Thieme faces accusations of fraud, waste and negligence amid resignations within the Florida State Guard.

The turmoil comes as the guard’s budget has grown to more than $35 million annually and its mission expanded from disaster response and public safety to include immigration enforcement, prompting critics to label it the Governor’s private army.

The latest high-profile departure is Master Sergeant Major Michael Pintacura, a U.S. Army Special Forces veteran, who resigned Jan. 14, citing a loss of confidence in Thieme’s leadership and warning that poor planning and informal pressure were putting guard members at risk.

Pintacura’s exit follows the ouster of Lt. Col. Jordan Bowen and the resignation of several other officers and volunteers who say they faced retaliation after raising concerns about spending, mission authorization and accountability.

Guard member Jonathan Howard, a retired Air Force service member, said the organization is “imploding from the inside” and that repeated attempts to alert the Governor’s office, including meetings with Chief of Staff Jason Weida, went nowhere.

Neither Thieme nor the Governor’s office responded to requests for comment. Separately, a federal sexual harassment lawsuit filed by a female guard member over a 2024 border mission is pending trial later this year, adding to scrutiny of the agency’s leadership and culture.

— STATEWIDE —

James Fishback pushes White nationalism into Florida GOP’s race for Governor” via Claire Heddles and Garrett Shanley of the Miami Herald — By all traditional measures, Fishback’s campaign for Governor is a political dead end: he’s barely raised any money, has never run for office before and is plagued by scandals. A hedge fund employer successfully sued Fishback for more than $200,000, which Fishback told the court he’s unable to pay. Broward County Schools says it cut ties with his debate program over concerns about his “failure to follow district safeguards” with students. And he has been condemned by other Republicans for his promotion of White nationalist ideas and a near-constant firehose of inflammatory social media posts.

James Fishback faces criticism as gubernatorial bid draws scrutiny over fundraising, scandals and extremist rhetoric.

James Uthmeier releases new fraud claims tied to pot initiative just days before petition deadline” via Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO — Attorney General Uthmeier unveiled new claims in an ongoing fraud investigation by his office into a ballot initiative seeking to permit recreational pot use for adults. In a news release, Uthmeier alleged that at least 50 Smart & Safe Florida staffers were suspected of turning in thousands of fraudulent petitions on behalf of the campaign. In some cases, Uthmeier said, staffers allegedly continued to gather petitions signed by voters despite being part of several ongoing criminal investigations about the fraudulent petitions. These details marked what the Attorney General called a “major escalation” in the case, prompting Uthmeier’s statewide prosecutor, Brad McVay, to send a letter to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

Happening today — Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia will hold a news conference in Fernandina Beach, offering an opportunity for statewide officials to address issues under the CFO’s purview and signal priorities to local leaders and residents in Northeast Florida. The event is open to credentialed media and comes as financial oversight, insurance and fiscal policy remain active topics in Tallahassee: 2:30 p.m. Location and more details upon RSVP with Abigail Weeks at [email protected].

New forecasts paint grim picture for Florida’s state worker health insurance program” via Gary Fineout of POLITICO — Florida’s health insurance program for state workers is projected to face a deficit of more than $2 billion by 2031, according to new forecasts released this month, deepening concerns for lawmakers as they craft the state budget. Economists have already warned of a shortfall next fiscal year, but the latest estimates are larger than those issued in August. The trust fund supporting the program, which covers nearly 200,000 enrollees, is expected to end the current fiscal year in the black before slipping into a $360 million deficit by mid-2027 and continue to deteriorate. Rising medical costs are driving the gap. Lawmakers may need to inject cash, raise premiums or cut expenses after DeSantis vetoed a drug formulary proposal last year and recommended keeping premiums flat in his budget.

— BIG BILL OF THE DAY —

Florida Senate panel advances data center bills amid industry concerns” via Bruce Ritchie of POLITICO — A state Senate Committee on Tuesday unanimously advanced legislation aimed at regulating data centers, a fast-growing sector tied to artificial intelligence, signaling continued momentum for the industry even as lawmakers weigh utility and transparency concerns.

The Senate Committee on Regulated Industries voted 8-0 to approve a regulatory bill directing the Public Service Commission to establish minimum rate requirements to ensure utility customers are not saddled with higher costs driven by the significant power demands of data centers.

Lawmakers advance data center bills as developers pitch Orlando-area projects tied to artificial intelligence growth. Image via HostDime.

Supporters framed the measure as a way to provide certainty and fairness while allowing data center development to continue. Representatives of Associated Industries of Florida raised caution about potential hurdles but stopped short of opposing the bill.

Developers emphasized Florida’s competitiveness. Jon Brown of DCIP Group, which is planning a 2 million-square-foot data center in DeSoto County, urged Senators to exempt self-powered facilities, noting his project will rely on a gas-fueled generating plant rather than the grid.

The Committee also advanced a second bill creating a 12-month public records exemption for local government data center planning documents, a move supporters say protects sensitive negotiations and encourages investment during early development stages.

The legislation advances alongside DeSantis’ broader artificial intelligence agenda, though Senate leaders appear to favor a more streamlined approach than the proposals pending in the House, which include additional approval layers and site restrictions.

Despite criticism from some open government advocates and a dissenting vote from State Sen. Jason Pizzo on the records bill, sponsor State Sen. Bryan Ávila said he will continue refining the measures. Both bills now head to additional Committees, as Florida positions itself to attract and retain large-scale data center projects critical to future economic growth.

— LEGISLATIVE —

Protecting vaccines, patients and public health — Lawmakers are considering a bill that could weaken the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, a long-standing system that helps people with rare vaccine injuries while protecting public health. The program allows claims to be handled without lawsuits and helps keep vaccines available and affordable. Senate Bill 408 would allow new state-level lawsuits related to vaccine advertising and give people up to three years to file claims. Critics warn the change could raise costs, increase legal risk, and create confusion without making vaccines safer. They also say it could discourage manufacturers from producing vaccines. The bill passed narrowly in the Senate Committee on Regulated Industries and will next be reviewed by the Senate Health Policy Committee.

Bill could weaken the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program as Senate panel advances measure raising liability concerns.

Vax manufacturers could get hauled into court under bill moving in the Senate” via Christine Sexton of Florida Phoenix — Manufacturers that advertise vaccines in Florida that cause injury or harm could be sued under a bill sponsored by Erin Grall. Over objections from lobbyists representing organized medicine and business interests, the Senate Committee on Regulated Industries voted 5-3 Tuesday to pass the proposal, SB 408. Specifically, the bill would amend Florida law regulating drugs and cosmetics to allow an individual to file a lawsuit within three years following an alleged vaccine-related injury. The bill would provide one-way attorney fees, allowing any claimant who wins to recover “reasonable attorney fees” but not allowing winning defendants to do the same. Traditionally, in Florida, one-way fees have been intended to balance the interests of ordinary people against those of deep-pocketed interests.

—“House panel approves bill to expand Uthmeier’s power to target physicians” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics

—”Bill targets ‘aiding and abetting’ gender-affirming care for minors” via Tristan Wood of WFSU

Joe Gruters’ bill restricting public pot smoking clears first Senate stop” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics — A proposal that would ban smoking and vaping marijuana in public places has cleared its first Senate Committee stop. The Senate Regulated Industries Committee voted to advance a bill (SB 986) sponsored by Sarasota Republican Sen. Gruters to amend the Florida Clean Indoor Air Act to prohibit smoking or vaping marijuana products in public places. The measure was presented to the Committee by Doral Republican Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez, the bill’s co-sponsor, on Gruters’ behalf. “There is currently no prohibition on smoking marijuana in public places if adult use is approved by the voters,” Rodriguez told the Committee.

Nick DiCeglie’s fix to an unpopular hurricane recovery law gains steam with Judiciary Committee approval” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics — A bill aimed at dialing back unintended consequences of Florida’s post-hurricane recovery law cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee without opposition. SB 840, sponsored by Pinellas County Republican Sen. DiCeglie, would revise portions of a bill approved last year (SB 180) that was intended to prevent local governments from delaying rebuilding after major storms. SB 180 has since drawn criticism from cities and counties statewide for limiting policy decisions not related to storm recovery. DiCeglie said the law largely achieved its emergency preparedness goals, but that SB 840 clarifies two provisions that create roadblocks for local governments making comprehensive plan updates or policy decisions not directly related to storm recovery.

Development bills get go-ahead” via Jim Turner of the News Service of Florida — Proposals that would allow single-family homes on some property zoned for agriculture and make it more difficult for local governments to increase impact fees started to move forward Tuesday in the Florida Senate. The Senate Committee on Affairs approved two bills by Chair Stan McClain that are being watched closely by environmental groups.

Stan McClain advances development bills that ease agricultural zoning limits and tighten rules on local impact fees.

Senate Committee passes bills on curtailing ‘forever chemicals’ use” via Kylie Williams of POLITICO — Two bills aiming to protect residents and the environment from harmful “forever chemicals” passed unanimously through a state Senate panel, with one moving to bar local governments from paper straw use mandates. The Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources approved SB 958, a measure that requires local governments to uphold specific environmental and public health standards when regulating drinking straws. Under the bill, straws must be renewable, biodegradable and compostable in order to be enforced as an alternative. Sen. Jennifer Bradley, Fleming Island Republican, sponsored the bill and said it will prevent local ordinances from mandating the use of paper straws.

House panel OKs bill to restore the Ocklawaha River” via Gabrielle Russon of Florida Politics — A House Subcommittee unanimously approved a bill to restore the Ocklawaha River that drew strong praise from environmentalists and fierce opposition from local officials in Putnam County. The mixed public feedback on HB 981 makes it clear that the legislation to remove the river’s dam remains controversial, following DeSantis’ veto of $6.25 million in funding for Ocklawaha River restoration during the 2025 Session. “It’s a local decision. It’s a local issue. It needs to stay local,” said Putnam County Commissioner Larry Harvey, who voiced concerns about West Putnam lakes drying up. “Putnam County wasn’t considered locally. We’ve never been asked about this. We don’t want this.

— MORE LEGISLATIVE —

Adam Anderson’s push for more genetic counselors in Florida clears first hurdle” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Rep. Anderson has successfully ushered through its first Committee stop legislation that would address a shortage of genetic counselors and strengthen the state’s capacity for advanced medical care and genetic research. Anderson’s bill (HB 1115) cleared the Careers and Workforce Subcommittee. It would establish the Genetic Counseling Education Enhancement Grant Program within Florida’s State University System to support the development of American Board of Genetic Counseling-accredited graduate-level genetic counseling programs to eliminate Florida’s status as a genetic counseling desert. “The need for health care professionals in the Sunshine State cannot be understated,” Anderson said.

Adam Anderson advances legislation to expand genetic counseling programs and address Florida’s health care workforce shortage.

Senate advances Jason Pizzo bill extending PTSD workers’ comp coverage to 911 dispatchers” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Legislation that would classify 911 dispatchers as first responders for purposes of workers’ compensation coverage for work-related psychological injuries advanced Tuesday unanimously in the Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee. The bill, SB 774, would allow dispatchers to receive benefits for conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety stemming from traumatic calls, placing them under the same mental health claims framework as other first responders. Sponsor Sen. Jason Pizzo said dispatchers routinely experience repeated trauma that does not end when calls conclude. Dispatchers, mental health professionals and law enforcement groups testified in support, describing graphic and cumulative exposure to emergencies. Lawmakers said the bill corrects a long-standing oversight. SB 774 now heads to the Senate Appropriations Committee, while a House companion awaits its first hearing.

Bill boosting student athlete protections clears Senate Committee — Sen. Shevrin Jones’ bill to require the Florida High School Athletic Association adopt bylaws allowing coaches to use their personal funds — within reasonable limits — to provide essential support such as food, transportation and recovery services to the students they coach earned unanimous approval in the Senate Education Pre-K-12 Committee. Under SB 178, coaches may contribute up to $15,000 per team per year, provided that all such contributions are made in good faith and reported to the FHSAA. These contributions, used for critical needs, such as transportation, food, and health care, will be presumed not to be “impermissible benefits,” ensuring that coaches can assist students without fear of violating compliance rules. “Coaches play such an important role in kids’ lives and development, stepping in with much-needed support when student athletes need it most,” Jones said. “This bill ensures fairness, accountability, and flexibility to provide the resources students need.”

Senate panel advances bill establishing task force to propose e-bike regulations” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — A Senate bill proposing more regulations on e-bikes and scooters is gaining traction, though with some modifications. The Senate Transportation Committee unanimously approved a measure (SB 382) sponsored by Sen. Keith Truenow, a Tavares Republican, which calls for increased regulation and data collection on e-bikes and scooters. Those devices have grown in popularity in recent years, and more accidents involving them have occurred. In the Committee meeting, Truenow said he provided a strike-all amendment to revise his original draft of the bill. “As we know, it’s been a fad for a lot of reasons,” Truenow said of the growing popularity of e-bikes. “They’re causing more and more problems.”

Lawmakers take second look at law seen as gift to developers” via John Kennedy of USA Today Network — A law blocking cities and counties from enacting new restrictions on developers would be scaled back under a measure advancing in the Florida Senate – although it may not go far enough, some critics say. The law approved last year is a broad emergency management measure that bars local governments from imposing planning requirements seen as “more restrictive or burdensome” than those already on the books. Opponents derided it as a political gift to builders and developers, whose industry lobbied hard for its passage during the last Legislative Session. The measure now is being challenged in court, with more than two dozen cities and counties calling it the “largest incursion into local home rule authority” in Florida’s modern history. It’s also led to a host of planning proposals being put on hold or repealed outright, drawing loud complaints from many community groups.

‘Bumper crop’ of public records exemptions face tests in Session” via Margie Menzel of Florida Trident — Florida lawmakers are considering roughly 40 proposals this year that would create new exemptions to the state’s public records laws, alarming open government advocates who say transparency is being steadily eroded. Florida has long been viewed as a national leader on access to government, but critics warn that the volume and scope of the exemptions mark a troubling shift. The proposals range from shielding personal information of judicial employees to restricting access to records involving local governments, law enforcement, health professionals and regulatory agencies. Advocates argue that many bills fail to meet the legal requirement of proving a public benefit that outweighs the Sunshine Law. At the same time, bipartisan legislation is moving to strengthen access, underscoring a broader debate over privacy, safety, and the public’s constitutional right to know how government operates.

‘Our laws allowed this to happen’: Legislators take action after child’s murder” via the Tallahassee Democrat — Legislation dubbed “Missy’s Law,” named for 5-year-old Missy Mogle, cleared its first Committee stops Tuesday in both chambers of the Florida Legislature, advancing a proposal to require judges to immediately jail defendants convicted of certain dangerous crimes while they await sentencing. The House version passed the House Criminal Justice Subcommittee 16-1, while the Senate measure received unanimous approval in the Senate Criminal Justice Committee. The bills stem from Missy’s abuse-related death in 2024, which occurred while her stepfather was free on bond following a conviction in an unrelated case. Supporters, including Missy’s grandparents, urged swift passage, saying the change is needed to protect children and public safety. Critics raised concerns about judicial discretion and constitutional issues as the measures move forward.

— LEG. SKED. —

Big day for advocacy — It’s a packed advocacy day in Tallahassee as the Florida Capitol fills up with Santa Fe College Day at the Capitol, Florida Young Republicans Legislative Days, Kappa Alpha Psi Day, Junior Leagues of Florida Day, LeadingAge Southeast Florida Legislative Days, Florida Tourism Day, Clerks’ Day at the Capitol, FSU Day at the Capitol and YMCA Advocacy Days, all unfolding across the Capitol Complex. Adding to the bustle, the Florida Association of Counties holds its Legislative Day at the FSU Turnbull Conference Center, while the Florida Cattlemen’s Association brings its Boots on the Hill to the Florida Historic Capitol Museum, turning the entire downtown area into a full-scale policy pressure cooker.

8 a.m.

House Commerce Committee, Room 212, Knott Building.

— HB 0433, Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (Alvarez).

— HB 0543, Transportation (McFarland).

— HB 0863, Arbitration for disputes with Citizens Property Insurance Co. (Benarroch).

House Health and Human Services Committee, Room 17, House Office Building.

— HB 0013, Social Work Licensure Interstate Compact (Hunschofsky).

— HB 0085, Swimming Lesson Voucher Program (Kendall).

— HB 0301, Advanced Practice Registered Nurse Autonomous Practice (Shoaf).

— HB 0375, Autonomous Practice by a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (Giallombardo).

8:30 a.m.

Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee, Room 110, Senate Office Building.

— SB 0214, Special District Funding (McClain).

— SB 0482, Artificial intelligence bill of rights (Leek).

— SB 7030, Public records investigations by the Department of Legal Affairs (Commerce and Tourism).

— SB 0554, Nonprofit corporations (Bernard).

— SB 0994, Florida Kratom Consumer Protection Act (Gruters).

— SB 0998, Department of Commerce (Yarborough).

— SB 1004, Sale of dogs and cats (Gaetz).

— SB 1074, One-cent piece (Gaetz).

— SB 1076, Research and development tax credit (Calatayud).

— SB 1266, Cybersecurity internships (Calatayud).

Senate Education Postsecondary Committee, Room 301, Senate Office Building.

— SB 0194, Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance (Martin).

— SB 1246, Health science workforce shortages (Davis).

Senate Ethics and Elections Committee, Room 37, Senate Office Building.

— SB 0964, Financial disclosures (Wright).

9 a.m.

State Board of Education Meeting, Tallahassee State College.

9:15 a.m.

House Civil Justice and Claims Subcommittee, Room 404, House Office Building.

— HB 0105, Local government enforcement actions (Brackett).

— HB 0131, Curators of estates (Maggard).

— HB 0135, Self-storage spaces (Smith).

— HB 0481, Public nuisance abatement (Booth).

— HB 0737, Persons disqualified from being appointed as a guardian (Botana).

— HB 0797, Nonprofit corporations (Tuck).

— HB 1009, Governmental agency publication of advertisements and public… (Griffitts Jr.).

— HB 1105, Interpersonal violence injunctions (Booth).

9:30 a.m.

Joint EDR Revenue Estimating Conference, Room 117, Knott Building.

10 a.m.

House Health Professions and Programs Subcommittee, Room 102, House Office Building.

— HB 0867, Dry needling by occupational therapists (Anderson).

— HB 0303, Human trafficking training for nursing students (Bartleman).

House Insurance and Banking Subcommittee, Room 17, House Office Building.

— HB 0381, Office of Financial Regulation (Barnaby).

— HB 0427, Public adjuster contracts (Melo).

— HB 0767, Residential property insurance (Benarroch).

— HB 0777, Public Records Office of Financial Regulation (Barnaby).

— HB 0893, Trust fund interest for purposes approved by Supreme Court (Koster).

— HB 0895, Trustee settlement and discharge (Hodgers).

— HB 1399, Property insurance affiliates (Berfield).

11 a.m.

Senate Appropriations Committee on Transportation, Tourism and Economic Development, Room 110, Senate Office Building.

— SB 0216, Verification of reemployment assistance benefit eligibility (McClain).

— SB 0246, Specialty license plates Ultimate Fighting Championship UFC… (Gruters).

— SB 0356, Utility terrain vehicles (Wright).

— SB 0388, Specialty license plates Florida wildflower (Arrington).

— SB 0470, Fraternal Order of Police license plate (Wright).

— SB 0488, Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (Massullo Jr.).

— SB 0490, Public records email addresses collected by the Department… (Massullo Jr.).

— SB 0528, Manufacturing (Truenow).

— SB 0584, Commercial driving schools (Ávila).

— SB 0594, Local housing assistance plans (Burton).

1 p.m.

House Government Operations Subcommittee, Room 404, House Office Building.

— HB 0031, Recognizing Judea and Samaria (Tramont).

— HB 0125, Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance (Benarroch).

— HB 0437, Public records (Andrade).

— HB 0603, Ethics for public employees (López).

— HB 0807, Noncriminal traffic infractions resulting in vehicle crashes (Melo).

— HB 0813, Firefighter cancer benefits and prevention (Busatta).

— HB 4005, City of Naples Airport Authority, Collier County (Botana).

— HB 0243, Electric bicycles, scooters and motorcycles (Benarroch).

House Housing, Agriculture and Tourism Subcommittee, Room 17, House Office Building.

— HB 0273, Special district funding (Johnson).

— HB 0637, Farm equipment (Griffitts Jr.).

— HB 0657, Community associations (Porras).

— HB 0837, Affordable housing (Busatta).

House Justice Budget Subcommittee, Room 314, House Office Building.

— HB 0397, Violations of pretrial release conditions for violent crimes (Daley).

— HB 0623, Felony battery (Gentry).

— HB 0759, Court fees (Smith).

House Student Academic Success Subcommittee, Room 102, House Office Building.

— HB 0461, Volunteering at polling locations (Michael).

— HB 1071, Education (Trabulsy).

1:30 p.m.

Senate Appropriations Committee on Agriculture, Environment and General Government, Room 412, Knott Building.

Senate Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice, Room 37, Senate Office Building.

— SB 0032, Injunctions for protection (Sharief).

— SB 0210, Public records petitions for injunctions for protection Protection Against Serious Violence by a Known Person (Sharief).

— SB 0432, Controlled substances (Yarborough).

— SB 0504, Code inspector body cameras (Burgess).

— SB 0506, Public records body camera recordings recorded by a code ins… (Burgess).

— SB 0524, Department of Law Enforcement (Simon).

— SB 0676, Criminal offenses (Arrington).

Senate Appropriations Committee on Higher Education, Room 110, Senate Office Building.

4 p.m.

House Education Administration Subcommittee, Room 102, House Office Building.

— HB 0901, Diabetes research (Kincart Jonsson).

— HB 1119, Materials harmful to minors (Bankson).

— HB 4027, Hillsborough County Public Schools, Hillsborough County (Owen).

House Health Care Facilities and Systems Subcommittee, Room 404, House Office Building.

— HB 0697, Drug prices and coverage (Kincart Jonsson).

House State Administration Budget Subcommittee, Room 17, House Office Building.

5:30 p.m.

Florida Cattlemen’s Association Boots on the Hill, Florida Historic Capitol Museum.

Lunch is served — The Governors Club buffet menu for Wednesday: country fried steak with gravy topped with crispy onions, grouper gratinee with a Cajun cream sauce, baked mac and cheese, succotash, salad bar plus Caesar salad bowl, black bean soup, and sweet treats of the day for dessert. Buffets include a deluxe salad bar and chef’s daily soup. A full buffet is $15; soup and salad are $12. Both prices include a beverage, a choice of coffee, tea and soda.

— D.C. MATTERS —

European nations weigh retaliation after Donald Trump’s Greenland threats” via Ellen Francis, Kate Brady, Leo Sands and Tobi Raji of The Washington Post — In London on Monday morning, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer issued his sharpest criticism yet of Trump’s threats, telling a news conference, “The use of tariffs against allies is completely wrong.” Starmer, citing harm to British workers and businesses, added: “A trade war is in no one’s interests.” Members of the European Union are considering imposing tariffs or measures targeting U.S. firms if diplomatic efforts fail to find an off-ramp with Trump, two European diplomats speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter told The Washington Post. The 27-nation bloc’s ambassadors debated the prospect of retaliation during a closed-door meeting in Brussels on Sunday afternoon, but there was a broad preference to try to de-escalate. France has pushed for a tougher response, using an instrument often dubbed the E.U.’s trade “bazooka,” which would allow targeting or restricting American services in Europe, a major profit center for U.S. tech giants.

European leaders consider retaliation after Donald Trump renews threats over Greenland and tariffs against allies.

GOP’s culture of rebellion in slim majority imperils Mike Johnson agenda” via Emily Brooks and Mike Lillis of The Hill — In the earliest days of the new Session, Speaker Johnson and his leadership team have already had to swallow passage of Obamacare subsidies — a vote forced by a handful of GOP mavericks — then watched in helpless frustration as some of those same centrist rebels blocked a series of Republican labor bills that were expected to pass easily and return some wind back in the party’s sails. “It’s now become acceptable to use your leverage, because it’s a slim majority, to kind of just shift last-minute — shift the House, one way or another,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, a senior appropriator, said of the dynamic. And the way to change that? “Increase the numbers,” Diaz-Balart said. That won’t be easy. The struggle to pass even partisan messaging bills has not only highlighted the internal divisions within the restive Republican conference but also forecasts a stormy election year for GOP leaders.

Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick arraignment put off again as lawyer retention remains an issue” via David Lyons of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — U.S. Rep. Cherfilus-McCormick of Broward County returned to a Miami federal courtroom to be arraigned on charges related to her alleged theft of $5 million in government relief funds. But the law firm that has been temporarily representing the Congresswoman requested and was granted another postponement after Miami attorney David Markus of Markus Moss PLLC advised a federal magistrate that there are still financial and “other complications” that need to be resolved before the firm can be permanently retained. U.S. Magistrate Enjolique Lett noted that the representation issue has been pending since Thanksgiving, about the time Cherfilus-McCormick made her first appearance.

To their shock, Cubans in Florida are being deported in record numbers” via The New York Times — Cubans have long been treated differently than other immigrants, even when they entered the country illegally. That has changed under Trump. He has repatriated more than 1,600 Cubans in 2025. That is about double the number of Cubans who were repatriated in 2024. And in the years that Trump has been President, he has sent more Cubans back than his three predecessors. Those numbers are greater for Cubans who were deported by land into Mexico. Some of them had been in the United States for decades and built families and businesses, but were removed because of an old criminal conviction — say, from Miami’s infamous cocaine cowboys days in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Nowhere has the shock of treating Cubans like other migrants been felt more than in Florida, which was shaped in modern times by exiles of the 1959 Cuban Revolution.

— ELECTIONS —

Kat Cammack backs Evan Power for CD 2 — Republican U.S. Rep. Cammack is endorsing Republican Party of Florida Chair Power in the open race for Florida’s 2nd Congressional District. “I don’t back candidates who seek permission slips. I back fighters. That’s why I’m proud to endorse Evan Power for Congress,” she said. “… Evan doesn’t just talk about freedom, the Constitution and fiscal responsibility; he delivers. He knows our job is to serve the people, not grow government, appease special interests, or play nice with the swamp. If you want a rubber stamp, look elsewhere. If you want a conservative who will join me to secure the border, protect parents, defend life, back law enforcement, and put America First, then Evan Power is the fighter we need in Congress.” Power filed for CD 2 last week after incumbent U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn announced he wouldn’t seek another term representing the district, which covers parts of the Panhandle and Big Bend, including Tallahassee.

Kat Cammack endorses Evan Power in the open race for Florida’s 2nd Congressional District.

Ola Hawatmeh’s CD 19 campaign notches endorsement from ‘MAGA Meg’ Weinberger” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Hawatmeh’s bid to succeed fellow Republican Byron Donalds in Florida’s 19th Congressional District is getting a boost from one of South Florida’s most prominent Trump-aligned state lawmakers. Palm Beach Gardens state Rep. Weinberger, dubbed “MAGA Meg” for the support she has given and received from Trump and his supporters, just threw her political influence behind Hawatmeh’s CD 19 campaign. She believes Hawatmeh, a health and wellness entrepreneur, is most likely to win in November and keep the U.S. House in GOP hands after the Midterms. “With Republicans needing to keep their slim majority in the U.S. House of Representatives,” Weinberger said in a statement, “we need more loyal America First Republicans like Ola to help President Donald Trump.”

Michael Carbonara amasses $1.7M to challenge Debbie Wasserman Schultz” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Carbonara says he has raised $1.7 million to challenge Democratic U.S. Rep. Wasserman Schultz. “For far too long, Debbie Wasserman Schultz has been a fixture in Washington, and she’s done nothing to help working families struggling with inflation, high taxes and needless bureaucracy, while pushing policies that harm Florida families and take away their freedoms,” Carbonara said. “Her approach to government is rooted in Washington bureaucracy and big spending, not in accountability or affordability.” Of note, Wasserman Schultz had just over $1.6 million in cash on hand at the close of the third quarter. The Weston Democrat hasn’t announced quarterly numbers for the final three months of 2025.

Lois Frankel backs Robin Peguero, says he’s ‘uniquely positioned’ to win race for CD 27” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — U.S. Rep. Frankel is joining a widening tent of supporters backing Democrat Peguero’s campaign for Florida’s 27th Congressional District. Frankel, a two-time Congresswoman representing parts of Palm Beach County, said Peguero has what it takes to “flip this seat and change the trajectory of South Florida.” “As a prosecutor and educator, Robin has a proven record of fighting for affordability and public safety. And as a first-generation Latino leader, he is uniquely positioned to connect with voters,” she said in a statement. “I am proud to endorse Robin and to get to work on his behalf.” Frankel is the first member of Florida’s Democratic congressional delegation to endorse Peguero in the CD 27 race.

‘Ready to lead’: Uthmeier endorses Jon Maples for HD 87” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Fresh off a commanding Republican Primary win in the Special Election for the empty House District 87 seat, former Lake Clarke Shores Council member Maples has notched an endorsement from Florida’s top cop. Uthmeier announced on X that he is fully behind Maples, who he said will be “a principled voice in Tallahassee.” “Jon Maples brings real-life experience, strong values and a deep commitment to Florida families. He understands the challenges facing our state and is ready to lead with common sense,” he said. “I’m proud to endorse Jon Maples for FL House 87.”

— LOCAL: S. FL —

White House task force was at Hard Rock Stadium to prep for World Cup security” via Michelle Kaufman of the Miami Herald — Among those in the Hard Rock Stadium crowd Monday night for the College Football Playoff national championship was Andrew Giuliani, executive director of the White House Task Force on the 2026 World Cup. Giuliani, son of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, was there as part of the preparation for the monthlong soccer tournament, which is being co-hosted this Summer by the United States, Mexico and Canada. Hard Rock Stadium will host seven matches, including the most in-demand group-stage game between Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal and Colombia on June 27. “We’re going to be taking notes here,” Giuliani said.

White House task force officials observed operations at Hard Rock Stadium while preparing security plans for the 2026 World Cup.

Miami Beach Committee leadership reshuffle excludes women from every top post” via Jesse Scheckner of Florida Politics — Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner unveiled his new Committee appointments for 2026, and there’s a commonality among them: no women Chairs. In all three of the city’s Commission Committees, which are appointed solely by the Mayor and composed exclusively of City Commission members, men hold the top post. That’s despite three of the Commission’s six non-Mayor members being women. On the Land Use and Sustainability Committee, Meiner elevated previous Vice Chair David Suarez to Chair and demoted prior Chair Alex Fernandez to Vice Chair.

Miami Beach’s Vendôme apologizes after influencers seen partying to ‘Heil Hitler’” via Sofia Saric of the Miami Herald — Miami Beach nightclub Vendôme apologized Sunday for a “deeply offensive and unacceptable” video circulating online, which appears to show a group of popular and controversial influencers partying to Kanye West’s anti-Semitic song, “Heil Hitler.” People took to social media platforms over the weekend, including Instagram, TikTok and X, about “how this requested song came to be played during a bottle parade,” according to Vendôme’s social media post. In a video captured inside a van, influencers Andrew Tate, Tristan Tate, Nick Fuentes, Clavicular, Sneako, Myron Gaines and Justin Waller appear to be blasting West’s song while arriving at a nightclub.

Miami Beach launches new water taxi across the bay. Will it succeed this time?” via Aaron Leibowitz of the Miami Herald — Miami Beach has tried running water taxis to downtown Miami before. A 2017 pilot program failed due to low ridership. Similar concerns led to the sinking of the “Poseidon Ferry” in 2020 and 2022. When the Poseidon set sail again in 2024, persistent maintenance issues led to its swift demise. But at the launch of a new, free water taxi service, city officials were bullish. “This is a historic day for Miami Beach,” Meiner said on a cool morning at the Maurice Gibb Memorial Park dock in Sunset Harbour with city officials, media and residents in attendance. “I literally have chills seeing that water taxi standing behind me.”

Money flows in West Palm Beach Mayor’s race” via Jane Musgrave of StetNews — West Palm Beach City Commissioner Christina Lambert has raised $1 million with 14 months to go before the 2027 Mayoral Election, a fundraising pace her campaign calls historic. Her opponent, Palm Beach County Commissioner Gregg Weiss, has raised about $269,000 but said the disparity does not concern him, questioning whether such spending is necessary in a city where roughly 12,000 voters are expected to participate. Both candidates rely on traditional campaign accounts and political action committees, sparking debate over how funds are counted and traced. Lambert maintains she is drawing broad city support, while Weiss argues his campaign will focus on experience and policy rather than money. The race is open because Mayor Keith James is term-limited.

— LOCAL: C. FL —

Orange Commissioner wants to block potential ICE facility in Orlando” via Ryan Gillespie and Stephen Hudak of the Orlando Sentinel — Citing concerns over “public perception” affecting tourism, Orange County Commissioner Nicole Wilson is seeking a way to prevent a potential immigration processing facility in east Orlando after ICE officials toured a potential site last week. But County Mayor Jerry Demings, a Democratic candidate for Governor, didn’t directly address Wilson’s proposal, instead echoing his previous comments about continuing to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement “as statutorily required.” In a memo and draft language sent to Demings and other Commissioners, Wilson called for a temporary ban on detention facilities operated by entities other than cities or the county. In particular, Wilson raised questions about how the notoriety of an ICE facility would impact Central Florida’s biggest industry.

Nicole Wilson pushes to block a proposed ICE facility in Orlando over tourism and public perception.

Triple murder case in Kissimmee leads to more Uthmeier criticism of Monique Worrell” via Cristóbal Reyes of the Orlando Sentinel — The murders of three tourists in Kissimmee over the weekend have now become fodder for Florida’s Attorney General to again attack Orange-Osceola State Attorney Worrell, claiming her office botched an earlier case against the suspect. Worrell said Uthmeier was trying to “politicize” a tragedy. The Osceola County Sheriff’s Office announced the arrest of 29-year-old Ahmad Bojeh for the killings of James Puchan, 69, Robert Kraft, 70, and his brother Douglas Kraft, 68. They were shot dead while waiting for assistance in their rental car. “These three wonderful men did not deserve this,” the families of the three men said in a statement issued by the Sheriff’s Office.

— LOCAL: TB —

Ron DeSantis backs Rays’ Hillsborough College stadium idea, but says team needs to do more to compete” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — DeSantis said he is optimistic that a proposed Tampa Bay Rays stadium at the Hillsborough Community College’s Dale Mabry campus could improve the franchise’s future and deliver broader benefits to the region. DeSantis said the concept could be good for the college, the state and the surrounding area, particularly if paired with nearby hotels, restaurants and redevelopment that could spur renovations to the aging football stadium. His comments come as the Hillsborough College District Board of Trustees prepares to consider a memorandum of understanding that would begin negotiations to cede 110 acres for a mixed-use project in exchange for a new campus. New owners Ken Babby, Patrick Zalupski and Bill Cosgrove have said they want to keep the Rays in the Tampa area, targeting a 2029 opening, though public subsidies may be required. DeSantis warned that if a local deal fails, other markets are ready to pursue the team.

Ron DeSantis voices support for a Rays stadium at Hillsborough Community College while urging stronger on-field competitiveness.

Rays’ deal with Hillsborough College gets first nod” via Emma Behrmann of the Tampa Bay Business Journal

Tampa makes national top 5 ranking for headquarters relocations” via Anastasia Dawson of Florida Business Observer — For the first time, the city of Tampa has made the top five in a national ranking of cities where businesses seek to set up corporate headquarters. Tampa landed in a four-way tie for the fifth most desirable city with Richmond, Kansas City and Houston. This is the first time Tampa has ever made the list. Site Selection cited Tampa’s favorable tax climate, highly skilled workforce, direct foreign investment, and quality of life among the factors that put the city in the top five this year. “This milestone is a reflection of the momentum our community has built together,” Mayor Jane Castor says. “We’re creating an environment where businesses thrive, families succeed, and big ideas feel right at home.”

—”Have Democrats given up on the Pinellas County Commission?” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics

St. Pete explores public record request improvements” via Mark Parker of the St. Pete Catalyst — A comprehensive report on St. Petersburg’s public records procedures provided insight into an esoteric process and the sheer volume of requests received. It also highlighted the need to incorporate new technology. A resident sued the city in November after his public records request went unfilled for over a year. Council Chair Lisset Hanewicz has encountered similar issues and subsequently requested the Jan. 15 Committee discussion. Hanewicz stressed the importance of government transparency and couldn’t recall any previous public discussion of the 2012 record request policies. “I also have the belief that if you do come across something that can be improved, then you improve it. And that’s my goal here,” she said.

— LOCAL: N. FL —

Duval County School Board expected to discuss controversial ‘Schools of Hope’ law amid community pushback” via Brianna Andrews of News4Jax — The Duval County School Board is set to discuss Florida’s controversial Schools of Hope law during a meeting Tuesday morning, nearly two weeks after rejecting charter requests tied to the program. Recent expansions to Schools of Hope allow certain charter operators to move into neighborhoods with struggling public schools and require Districts to provide rent-free space, including shared facilities. The Board earlier denied proposals from Miami-based Mater Academy to co-locate charters at Merrill Road Elementary and Fort Caroline School of the Arts, calling the arrangements impracticable. Mater had initially sought space at 25 campuses before scaling back its requests. Schools of Hope was added to the Board’s legislative agenda on Jan. 6 amid divided votes and vocal community opposition. The meeting begins at 9 a.m.

Duval County School Board prepares to debate the Schools of Hope law after rejecting charter co-location requests.

Watchdog group calls for FBI, FDLE to investigate city cybercrime” via Arianna Otero of the Tallahassee Democrat — A Tallahassee watchdog group is calling for an independent investigation into the reported theft of more than $1 million from City Hall, saying it has lost confidence in the city’s handling of the case. Citizens for Government Accountability announced Tuesday that it has asked the FBI or the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to take over the probe, which involves a cybercrime committed by someone posing as a city vendor and first reported in March 2024. Chair David Van Williams said residents no longer trust the city to resolve the matter or be transparent. The group filed a complaint with federal authorities and questioned whether Tallahassee Police Chief Lawrence Revell should oversee an investigation involving city leadership. City officials have not yet commented, while police say the investigation remains active.

— LOCAL: SW. FL —

‘It would be my privilege to serve’: John Harshman announces Sarasota City Commission bid” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics — Business leader Harshman has entered the race for the Sarasota City Commission, running for an at-large seat in the city’s next municipal election. Harshman, a longtime Sarasota commercial real estate executive, said decades of local business experience and civic involvement have prepared him for his bid for office. He faces incumbent Jen Ahearn-Koch, Flo Entler and Rob Rominiecki for two at-large seats. “I fell in love with Sarasota and have built my career and life here,” Harshman said. “It would be my privilege to serve all members of our community on the City Commission.” Harshman, who moved to Sarasota more than five decades ago, founded Harshman & Co., Inc. in 1989. The firm has since grown into one of Southwest Florida’s top commercial real estate companies.

John Harshman enters the Sarasota City Commission race, citing decades of local business and civic experience.

Former Oakes Farms’ executive fled to California, feared for his life” via Laura Layden of the Fort Myers News-Press & Naples Daily News — A former Oakes Farms’ executive has implicated the local company and its high-profile owner in a COVID-related fraud conspiracy. The accusations appear in federal court filings related to a civil lawsuit filed by Oakes Farms and its affiliates against Steven A. Veneziano Jr. and two of his now-dissolved Florida companies. In his latest court filings dated Jan. 14, Veneziano claims that he quietly moved from Florida to California in November 2024 in fear for his safety after cooperating with the federal government in an investigation of the COVID conspiracy.

— TOP OPINION —

What happened to Pam Bondi?” via Stephanie McCrummen of The Atlantic — Bondi’s first oversight hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee marked a public turning point for the former Florida Attorney General, who arrived armed with sharp, personal retorts for Democratic Senators and left basic questions unanswered. Once known in Florida legal circles as mild and approachable, Bondi instead delivered a confrontational performance that stunned former allies.

Now U.S. Attorney General, Bondi has overseen a sweeping transformation of the Justice Department during her first year, critics say, subordinating long-standing norms of independence to the political demands of Trump. Hundreds of career prosecutors have been fired or resigned, civil rights and public corruption units have been hollowed out, and the department has aggressively pursued Trump’s political opponents.

Bondi has also provided legal cover for controversial actions, including extrajudicial killings tied to drug enforcement operations and the seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Former Justice Department officials say the changes represent the most dramatic erosion of institutional autonomy in decades.

Her loyalty has still failed to satisfy Trump at times. He has publicly complained that Bondi has moved too slowly on investigations targeting his critics, even as pressure mounts over her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, which remain largely unreleased despite a federal disclosure deadline.

Bondi has released only a fraction of the documents, fueling backlash from both Democrats and Trump supporters. The controversy has placed her under intense scrutiny and legal risk.

Once resistant to political ambition, Bondi is now deeply embedded in Trump’s inner circle. Former friends in Florida say the transformation is complete.

The question facing Washington is no longer who Pam Bondi is, but how far she is willing to go.

— MORE OPINIONS —

Trump’s attack on democracy is faltering” via Quinta Jurecic of The Atlantic — American democracy endured a bruising year under Trump’s second term, marked by aggressive power grabs, punishment of dissent and authoritarian posturing that led some experts to argue the United States no longer qualifies as a democracy. Yet as the term progressed, Trump’s dominance weakened. Public support faded, protests surged nationwide, courts increasingly blocked administration actions, and opposition politicians grew more assertive. Heavy-handed moves, from immigration enforcement to media pressure campaigns, often backfired, fueling backlash and eroding approval. Trump’s governing style, defined by overreach and poor execution, has limited his ability to consolidate power. While serious threats remain, including election interference and escalation in response to setbacks, the resilience of institutions, civic resistance and political pushback suggest American democracy, though badly strained, still has a pulse.

Trump’s golden age of culture seems pretty sad so far” via Spenser Kornhaber of The Atlantic — Nicki Minaj’s appearance at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest underscored how politics, pop culture and spectacle have increasingly blurred in the Trump era. The rapper praised Trump and criticized past administrations, offering conservatives a high-profile cultural trophy while highlighting the movement’s reliance on trolling, memes and celebrity crossover to project momentum. The moment reflected a broader strategy by Trump and allies to consolidate cultural power, pressure traditional media, and test entertainers’ influence through provocation and propaganda. Yet the reaction to Minaj, along with fractures among podcasters, comedians and online influencers who once boosted Trump, suggests that culture remains resistant to full political control. Despite efforts at intimidation and mythmaking, dissent, irony and competing audiences continue to shape an unruly, democratic feedback loop.

Trump exhaustion syndrome” via Ashley Parker of The Atlantic — A year into Trump’s second term, the country has grown disturbingly accustomed to escalating norm-breaking that would once have sparked immediate outrage. The piece argues Trump’s strategy is maximalist: push institutions, rights, and public tolerance past the breaking point, then push again, choosing sympathetic “test cases” that make principled objections sound like defenses of villains. As a result, due process, free speech, press access, and independent government functions are increasingly treated as optional, while opponents struggle to frame the stakes in language that moves ordinary voters. Even when actions appear extreme, public reaction often lands somewhere between fatigue and resignation, reinforcing Trump’s sense that he can act with minimal consequence. Focus-group insights suggest many voters assume the system will “trudge along” and someone will stop him, even as they rationalize overreach as something a President can do simply because he can.

Unused K-12 scholarship funds are a feature, not a bug” via William Mattox for Florida Politics — School choice critics continue to attack Florida’s scholarship programs, but their latest complaint about unspent funds misses the point, supporters argue. After failed criticisms over allowable purchases and demands for burdensome monthly reporting, opponents now warn that families are not spending all their scholarship dollars. Sen. Carlos Guillermo Smith has framed those balances as money withheld from public schools. Advocates counter that unused funds are intentional rollover dollars, allowing parents to save for higher future education costs. That flexibility, they say, promotes price discipline among schools and rewards efficient use of taxpayer funds. Rather than eliminating rollovers, supporters urge lawmakers to expand them, potentially allowing graduates to use saved funds for small business startups, reinforcing choice, competition and long-term value.

Consumer protections for Hispanics, veterans, seniors, and retirees are smart policy” via Julio Fuentes for Florida Politics — Legislation advancing in Florida would strengthen consumer protections for vulnerable residents after disasters by curbing predatory public adjuster contracts. HB 427 and SB 266 target situations in which seniors, retirees, veterans, and especially Hispanic residents are pressured to sign complex agreements following fires, storms, or plumbing damage, often while dealing with medical emergencies or language barriers. Supporters say many Hispanic seniors face added risk because contracts are not required to be provided in Spanish or other clear formats, leaving them exposed to confusion and high-pressure tactics. The bills would allow affected residents to cancel public adjuster agreements without penalty if they could not fully understand the terms. Backers argue the measures preserve ethical business practices while reinforcing Florida’s tradition of protecting seniors, veterans, and retirees during moments of vulnerability.

Florida needs nurses who know what they’re doing, not scams and failures” via the Orlando Sentinel editorial board — A poll asked Americans which professions they trusted the most. 75% of those responding said they regarded the honesty and ethics of nurses as “high” or “very high.” Health care consumers want to believe that the nurses caring for them are trained to meet a baseline standard of knowledge and competence. In 2009, the Legislature lowered the standards for nursing education programs and gutted oversight. For-profit schools multiplied. Some offered high-quality education, but many did not. Some schools barely made it to Year 6 before being placed under probation. The dismal passage rate for the new group of for-profit nursing programs — 57%, as of 2024 — dragged Florida’s overall passage rate to the very bottom of a 50-state ranking. Last week, a key House Committee passed legislation that would go a long way toward fixing the biggest problems. They should take advantage of the opportunity to restore trust in nursing.

Florida shouldn’t gamble with patient safety on false promises” via Rebekah Bernard for Florida Politics — Florida lawmakers are weighing renewed calls to allow Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists to practice independently without physician anesthesiologist supervision, a proposal supporters frame as a way to expand access, cut costs and modernize care. Critics argue the change would fundamentally alter how anesthesia, one of medicine’s highest-risk services, is delivered. They contend evidence shows physician-led, team-based anesthesia care produces the safest outcomes, particularly when complications arise. Opponents also dispute claims of cost savings, noting Medicare reimbursement does not change based on physician involvement and that effective complication management can reduce overall expenses. Studies of states that allow unsupervised practice have not shown improved access in rural areas, critics say. They warn Florida should not base patient safety policy on broad comparisons that blur major regulatory differences among states.

Nonprofits will shape America’s civic future in 2026” via Sabeen Perwaiz for Florida Politics — Nonprofits are entering 2026 positioned to play a larger role in shaping policy and strengthening civic stability after a turbulent 2025, underscoring their importance, sector leaders say. Despite political tension, economic uncertainty and rising demand for services, nonprofits continued delivering aid while sharpening their engagement with public policy. Organizations increasingly are embracing advocacy as an extension of their mission, focusing on policy literacy and clearer communication with lawmakers. At the same time, mission clarity has emerged as a key driver of public trust, donor confidence and effective collaboration with government. Leaders also point to growing recognition that nonprofit capacity is a policy issue, as calls expand for sustainable funding, streamlined contracting and investment in operations. Together, the trends suggest an opportunity for a more resilient and influential nonprofit sector in the year ahead.

— INSTAGRAM OF THE DAY —

— ALOE —

New Universal Studios coaster will be Fast & Furious: Hollywood Drift” via Dewayne Bevil of the Orlando Sentinel — A Fast & Furious-themed roller coaster is the project that’s going up at Universal Studios Florida theme park. It will replace Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit, which closed in August. Fast & Furious: Hollywood Drift, an outdoor coaster, will open in 2027, Universal Orlando announced. Construction has been underway for months at the site, wedged between the former Blue Man Group building and Universal CityWalk. Universal also announced that its Fast & Furious: Supercharged attraction will close at the theme park in 2027. The big-screen dark ride opened in 2018, taking over the space previously occupied by the Disaster attraction.

Universal Studios Florida announces Fast & Furious: Hollywood Drift coaster replacing Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit in 2027. Image via Universal.

Emily Duda Buckley family business gets philanthropic, gives $200K to cancel student lunch debt” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — As part of its 100th anniversary, family-owned agriculture and real estate company DUDA donated $200,000 to the nonprofit All for Lunch to eliminate school lunch debt for qualifying students in Seminole County. The gift will clear balances for more than 3,600 students eligible for free meals and another 1,425 receiving reduced-price meals, helping more than 5,000 students focus on learning. The donation was presented on Tuesday at Pine Crest Elementary. Company leaders said eliminating lunch debt removes a quiet but significant barrier for families facing food insecurity. All for Lunch said the contribution provides immediate relief for parents navigating tight budgets, while Seminole County Public Schools leaders called the support a meaningful community partnership. The donation also launched a special fundraising page to encourage additional contributions.

— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —

Best wishes to former Sen. Tom Lee and Jon Costello.

___

Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Daniel Dean, Ryan Nicol, Jacob Ogles, and Drew Wilson.





Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © Miami Select.