Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
Ed. Note — While Peter is on the road for his speaking tour, Sunburn will be taking tomorrow off. Don’t worry, your morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics will return to inboxes Monday morning. Thanks again for your support. Have a great weekend, and please stay safe.
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Happy early birthday to Debbie Milner. And enjoy the Disney Cruise!
First Shot
House legislation that matches a Senate bill has been filed and, if passed, would remove law enforcement officers’ ability to anonymize themselves in the field.
SB 316/HB 419, carried by Orlando Sen. Carlos G. Smith and Jacksonville Rep. Angie Nixon, proposes requiring “covered immigration officers to wear specified visible identification during public immigration enforcement functions” and “prohibits covered immigration officers from wearing face coverings that impair visibility of identifying information or obscure covered immigration officer’s face.”
The measure would also “prohibit law enforcement officers from wearing face coverings in performance of their official duties.”
Smith’s version is called the “VISIBLE Act.”
Immigration officers would be required to show their faces during “any activity that involves the direct exercise of federal immigration authority through public-facing actions, including a patrol, a stop, an arrest, a search, an interview to determine immigration status, a raid, a checkpoint inspection, or the service of a judicial or administrative warrant.”
Agency names would have to be “displayed in a size and format that is clearly legible from a distance of not less than 25 feet, using materials or markings suitable for visibility in both daylight and low-light conditions under normal operational conditions.”
The names and identification numbers of officials must be “clearly visible and readable during direct engagement with the public.” The sponsors said the bill was necessary given what’s happening nationally and locally.
Read more on Florida Politics.
Evening Reads
—“In Matt Gaetz scandal, circumstances left teen vulnerable to exploitation” via Michael S. Schmidt of The New York Times
—”The GOP’s fight over Nazis is about who controls the party’s future” via Miles Bryan and Noel King of Vox
—”Donald Trump is kneecapping some of the boldest plans to fight climate change” via Thor Benson of Rolling Stone
—”Wait, are the Jeffrey Epstein files real now?” via Jonathan Chait of The Atlantic
—”What did Trump know about Epstein?” via Judd Legum of Popular Information
—”Billionaire Lake Nona developer Joe Lewis pardoned by Trump” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel
—“FIFA will use Kennedy Center free of charge for World Cup event, contract says” via Janay Kingsberry and Rick Maese of The Washington Post
—”France is awash in museum heists” via Noemie Bisserbe, Stacy Meichtry and Bertrand Benoit of The Wall Street Journal
—”Another poll shows Byron Donalds dominating GOP field in Governor’s race” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics
—”Experts debate potential property tax measure at USF: ‘This is policy malpractice’” via Mitch Perry of the Florida Phoenix
Quote of the Day
“These are some of the worst child molesters, rapists, murderers, convicted criminals that have been in and out of your community for a long time. And we’re not going to stand for it anymore.”
— FDLE Commissioner Mark Glass on “Operation Dirtbag.”
Put it on the Tab
Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.
Send 230 Dirt Bags to Miramar to celebrate the successful 10-day statewide operation.
U.S. Sen. Ashley Moody is serving up Star Powers in Senate District 14, where she’s backing ‘conservative champion’ Josie Tomkow.
With UF/IFAS and FloridaCommerce mixing agricultural technology and artificial intelligence, there might be some new Farm2Cocktail options on the horizon.

Breakthrough Insights
Tune In
Hurricanes’ path to playoffs is clear
When the College Football Playoff Committee released the latest Top 25 this week, Miami found itself ranked 15th. That, in and of itself, would not be enough to make the field of 12. However, because the playoff field is not just the top 12 teams, Miami finds itself in a good position if it takes care of business the rest of the season.
The Hurricanes’ next test comes on Saturday as they host North Carolina State (3:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).
According to ESPN’s projected bracket, Miami would be in the College Football Playoff as the 11-seed if the playoffs kicked off this week. ESPN has the Canes facing the projected Big 12 champions, Texas Tech, in the first round.
For that scenario to play out, Miami (7-2, 3-2 in ACC) must not lose again, and the Wolfpack should not be overlooked. NC State knocked off previously unbeaten Georgia Tech last time out, taking a 48-36 decision at home behind 340 passing yards from quarterback CJ Bailey (a Miami native) and 196 rushing yards from Jayden Scott.
After Saturday, two more regular-season games remain on the schedule for the Hurricanes, at struggling Virginia Tech and at 22nd-ranked Pitt. Then, perhaps, the ACC championship game.
Miami holds its playoff fate in its hands. Simply, they must win.
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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.