Voters in Boynton Beach, Palm Beach County’s third-most populous city, picked a new Mayor and kept a sitting Commissioner in office on Tuesday.
With all precincts reporting, Rebecca Sheltonsecured 56% of the vote, earning the right to succeed Mayor Ty Penserga, who must leave due to term limits. She won handily against three opponents: Court McQuire, Golene Gordon and David Merker, who took 28%, 12% and 4% of the vote, respectively.
In the race to represent District 3, which spans the city’s southeast portion, incumbent Republican Commissioner Thomas Turkin took 58% of the vote to defeat political operative Dominick Vargas, who carried an endorsement from the Florida Democratic Party.
Incumbent District 1 Commissioner Angela Cruz coasted back into office unopposed.
(L-R) Boynton Beach Mayor’s candidates Golene Gordon, Courtlandt McQuire, David Merker and Rebecca Shelton. Images via the candidates/Facebook.
The Mayor’s race featured a politically diverse field of candidates. Gordon and Merker are both registered Democrats, McQuire is a Republican, and Shelton has no party affiliation.
Shelton, a 49-year-old real estate broker, carried endorsements from the Palm Beach County PBA, Boynton Beach Association of Firefighters, Palm Beach Fraternal Order of Police, South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Ruth’s List Florida into Election Day.
She ran on a platform that prioritized government transparency and neighborhood cleanliness, supported a strong local economy, and supported “sustainable growth.”
Through March 6, Shelton reported raising nearly $70,000 and spending $43,000.
A longtime resident, Gordon, 51, ran on her record of community service — she chaired Boynton Beach’s Community Agency Advisory Board and sat on its Planning and Arts panels — and a promise to leverage her business expertise for the city’s benefit.
Gordon vowed, as Mayor, to improve the city’s management, boost government transparency and involve the community more in city decisions.
She reported raising more than $38,500 through the end of February, a significant chunk of which was her own money.
McQuire, a 55-year-old marketing executive, said his goal as Mayor would be to lower taxes, cut government spending and boost public safety. He promised to prioritize “smart growth and development that makes sense” while helping small businesses thrive and ensuring the city’s clean drinking water.
Through March 6, he reported raising and spending more than $27,500 to win the job.
Merker is a 79-year-old insurance pro who served on the City Commission from 2013 to 2016 when he unsuccessfully ran for Mayor. He told the Palm Beach Post last week that supporting first responders is a priority.
City records show he raised just shy of $3,400 and sent $2,200 by New Year’s Day, after which he reported no campaign finance activity.
Incumbent District 3 Commissioner Thomas Turkin (left) faced a challenge from political operative Dominick Vargas. Images via Boynton Beach and Dominick Vargas.
Turkin, a veterinarian and real estate agent who joined the City Commission in 2022, prioritized public safety and touted his record at City Hall, supporting fiscally responsible and community-first measures.
The 33-year-old, who serves in the U.S. Navy’s construction battalion and on the Palm Beach County League of Cities, reported raising more than $38,000. He had about $15,000 left heading into the last week of the race.
Vargas, 25, worked on several political campaigns before launching his own. His platform focused on affordable housing, public safety, addressing traffic congestion, improving government transparency and a promise to establish guidelines to encourage environmentally sustainable development.
Vargas amassed $16,500 through March 6, with about $5,000 left to spend.
The District 3 race turned ugly in January when the Florida Department of Law Enforcement confirmed that it was investigating an altercation between the two candidates. When the pair met at City Hall, Vargas accused Turkin of grabbing his phone.
A five-second video Vargas showed WPTV, which the outlet posted on its website, shows Turkin grabbing Vargas’ phone and saying, “You’re not allowed to videotape me. I didn’t approve that.”
House candidate Brian Hodgers sent out an email blast saying political opponents fabricated his arrest record. “I was NEVER ARRESTED,” Hodgers wrote.
But he admitted in an application for a Florida real estate license that he once pleaded no contest to selling a minor a beer.
Hodgers is one of three candidates running in the Republican Primary in a House District 32 Special Election to replace outgoing Rep. Debbie Mayfield.
He fired out the email blast after appearing in a Florida Today forum in which opponent Terry Cronin said, “I’m the only candidate who doesn’t have a criminal record.” Hodgers also alludes in letters to paid attacks from “one of our opponents and his liberal allies” that attempt to “frame me as having a criminal past.”
“On the issue of the criminal past, my father and I owned a gas station together about 30 years ago,” Hodgers wrote. “One of our clerks was cited for selling beer to an underage adult, and our business had to pay a fine. I was NEVER ARRESTED. My opponent is making things up and using a falsified document to suggest that I was arrested.”
But a LexisNexis search shows court records indicating that he was cited in May 1996 and required to appear in court on a second-degree misdemeanor. The document indicated he pled “nolo contendere” and adjudication was ultimately withheld. The document lists a sentence of two days in jail.
A license application with the Department of Business and Professional Regulations reveals further details. A portion of that form asks if applicants have ever been convicted of a crime, been found guilty or pleaded no contest. Hodgers marked “Yes.”
He also lays out a more detailed narrative explaining the crime, and acknowledging that the clerk cited was himself.
“I also realize that my application may be held up due to a misdemeanor offense in which I received adjudification with held for selling an alcoholic beverage to an underage minor while working for a gas station convenience store in 1996,” Hodgers wrote in the application.
In the candidate forum, Hodgers said there was no record of him being arrested with Broward County, which does not publish records on its website dating back to 1996. He said Cronin had “embellished” a minor offense. He again said that he and his father owned multiple gas stations, and he again blamed someone else for the offense.
“We had a clerk who was caught up in, I guess what you would call a sting operation where they brought in an underage person and they sold a beer to this underage person. And I, as the business owner, received a citation,” Hodgers said. He denied ever spending “days in jail.”
But that differs significantly from the account he hand-wrote in the state application for his license. There, he made clear he was the one who made the sale.
“As a cashier at a gas station, I mistakenly sold a can of beer to a underage minor,” he wrote. “I paid court costs and adjudification was witheld.”
The application also includes further written explanation about the incident, including that a Judge had informed him the sting was conducted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and that the incident was a “lesson to be learned” but “should not show up on my record.” “I have never been in any kind of trouble and have a clean record except for this one instance,” Hodgers wrote.
The LexisNexis document shows the court costs amounted to only $45. Hodgers was 23 at the time of the offense.
Dr. David Weldon had been out of the national spotlight for more than 15 years when he was nominated to head the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But many anti-vaccine advocates knew him well.
“He is one of us!! Since before our movement had momentum,” the co-director of Mississippi Parents for Vaccine Rights wrote on Facebook. And on X, formerly known as Twitter, the Autism Action Network credited the former congressman with introducing legislation two decades ago “to stop the vaccine pedocide.”
Weldon, who was nominated by President Donald Trump, needs to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate before he can lead the nation’s top public health agency. His confirmation hearing is to be held Thursday.
The 71-year-old retired Florida congressman is considered to be closely aligned with his presumptive boss, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the U.S. health secretary who for years has been one of the nation’s leading anti-vaccine activists.
Department of Health and Human Services officials declined to make Weldon or Kennedy available for an Associated Press interview.
When he made the nomination announcement, Trump said Weldon “will proudly restore the CDC to its true purpose, and will work to end the Chronic Disease Epidemic, and Make America Healthy Again!”
The CDC was created nearly 80 years ago to prevent the spread of malaria in the U.S. Its mission was later expanded, and it gradually became a global leader on infectious and chronic diseases and a go-to source of health information.
Today, the Atlanta-based agency has a more than $9 billion core budget. It had about 13,000 employees when Trump took office, but more than 500 were fired as part of a dramatic — and continuing — push by the president and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk to cut staffing across federal agencies.
Weldon has no experience in federal public heath, but that isn’t unusual. The last few presidential administrations — both Democratic and Republican — have appointed outsiders with no CDC experience.
Unlike Weldon, however, those outsiders had been public health researchers or had run state health departments. He is an Army veteran and internal medicine doctor whose main claim to fame was representing a central Florida district in Congress from 1995 to 2009.
After he left Congress, Weldon practiced medicine in Florida, taught at the Florida Institute of Technology, served as board chairman for the Israel Allies Foundation and made unsuccessful runs at federal and state elected office. In a March 1 letter to HHS, Weldon said that if confirmed he will resign from the foundation and from two Florida health-care organizations. He also promised to sell his holdings in funds investing in energy, pharmaceutical and health-care companies.
Weldon was a leader of a Congressional push for research into autism’s causes, which began around 2000. It was fueled by a controversial — and ultimately discredited — study by British researcher Dr. Andrew Wakefield that claimed to find a link between the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine and autism.
The action in Congress was driven largely by U.S. Rep. Dan Burton, an Indiana Republican whose grandson had autism. Weldon was a prominent voice in Burton’s hearings and co-sponsored a bill that would give responsibility for the nation’s vaccine safety to an independent agency within HHS — an idea that not everyone in public health opposes.
But Weldon also rejected studies that found no causal link between childhood vaccines and autism, and accused the CDC of short-circuiting research that might show otherwise.
Meanwhile, Weldon was a friend to practitioners of fringe medicine. When Weldon invited Wakefield to testify before Congress, he also brought in Dr. James “Jeff” Bradstreet, who used alternative medicine to try to treat autistic children. Bradstreet died in 2015, after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration raided his office, of a gunshot wound that police labeled a suicide.
Weldon later appeared in “Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe,” a 2016 documentary directed by Wakefield and produced by Del Bigtree, an activist who later became the manager of Kennedy’s 2024 presidential campaign. In the movie, Weldon repeated suspicions and accusations about CDC that he’d made as a congressman.
Kennedy has argued that experts who advise the CDC on vaccine policy have conflicts from working with, or receiving money from, pharmaceutical companies. Those advisers routinely disclose conflicts in public meetings, but the CDC last week launched a web tool “to increase the transparency of conflicts of interest.”
At Thursday’s hearing, Democrats are likely to press Weldon on his vaccine views and his plans for the agency under a health secretary who has shown disdain for it.
Dr. Anne Schuchat worked at the CDC for 33 years before retiring in 2021, and twice served as acting director. She said she doesn’t know Weldon, but that agency directors gradually develop an appreciation and respect for its work.
If Weldon follows a similar pattern, she said, he could be a great asset: His Capitol Hill experience could help CDC secure funding and political support.
“With an optimistic view, there’s lot you can build on, with what he has on paper,” she said. “With a pessimistic view, if he wants the job to tear the place down, that would be disappointing — and dangerous.”
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
A bill that could impose capital punishment for attempted assassinations on heads of state is finally moving, with the Criminal Justice Committee unanimously voting to advance it.
Rep. Jeff Holcomb’s legislation (HB 653) contemplates adding to Florida law that the death sentence applies when a “capital felony was committed against the head of a state, including, but not limited to, the President or the Vice President of the United States or the Governor of this or another state, or in an attempt to commit such crime a capital felony was committed against another individual.”
Holcomb, a Republican from Spring Hill, said his bill extended to heads of state the protections currently afforded to cops.
“Members, just think back to about a year ago, July 13, 2024, when President Trump had an attempted assassination. If that perpetrator had not been taken out by law enforcement, he would have gone on trial. If he had done that in Florida after this bill, he’d be eligible for the death penalty,” Holcomb said, alluding to the rally shooting in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Trump, however, was not in office at the time, so he technically wouldn’t have been a head of state.
Democrats peppered Holcomb with questions, including about federal penalties for assassination attempts and why in that context a state would replicate them.
Holcomb said current laws “don’t necessarily treat assassination or attempted assassinations for a head of state with the heightened severity that it deserves.”
He also said the bill would provide “deterrence.”
“If you’re going to look to assassinate a head of state, you choose someplace else and not Florida,” he said.
Vice Chair Webster Barnaby extolled the “very, very important bill,” saying it would “ensure that when people come to Florida, they’ll know how to conduct themselves.”
This bill has one stop to go before the House floor.
Meanwhile, the Senate version (SB 776) of this proposal is being carried by another Spring Hill Republican, Sen. Blaise Ingoglia. It has yet to be heard in committee.