Politics
Emoji meme — spaced out — Powell push — farm bill — FEMA
Published
1 week agoon
By
May Greene
Fist bump. America. Fire.
A political firestorm spread through Washington after a report that President Donald Trump’s hand-picked military leaders included a journalist from The Atlantic in a message thread on Signal about a recent attack on the Houthis. But one particular message became an instant meme.
National Security Adviser Michael Waltz, a former Northeast Florida Congressman who resigned his seat in January to take on his White House role, replied to developments of the counteroffensive attack with a series of emojis: a fist bump, an American flag and a flame.
The cartoon communication style, included in a thread intended to be private within a group of administration leaders, attracted criticism and was derided as immature and unprofessional. It also became the most imitated portion of the entire text conversation.
That came from Democratic critics, including some former colleagues of Waltz’s in the congressional delegation like Reps. Maxwell Frost and Jared Moskowitz. “No, this is not an article from The Onion,” posted Frost, an Orlando Democrat.
Moskowitz, a Parkland Democrat with a penchant for social media trolling, posted screenshots of the three emojis to his X feed on five separate occasions Monday, the day The Atlantic released news about the thread.
But perhaps more serious for Waltz, he was also quickly fingered as the reason The Atlantic reporter Jeffrey Goldberg ended up on the text chain. POLITICO reported that the episode prompted an internal conversation about whether Waltz should be forced from his White House role. “It was reckless to be having that conversation on Signal,” one official anonymously told the outlet. “You can’t have recklessness as the national security adviser.”
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, though, defended Waltz amid criticism. “As President Trump said, the attacks on the Houthis have been highly successful and effective. President Trump continues to have the utmost confidence in his national security team, including National Security Adviser Mike Waltz,” read a statement provided to CNN.
In Congress, Republicans expressed concerns about the thread but stopped short of demanding scalps. House Foreign Affairs Chair Brian Mast, a Stuart Republican and a close ally of Waltz during their time in the House, said he was “absolutely” concerned about using Signal to discuss classified information, according to The Hill. But Mast argued there was no “systemic thing” that warranted investigation.
Rocket roundtable
Sen. Ashley Moody convened space leaders from around the state as part of a push from Florida lawmakers to relocate NASA headquarters to the Space Coast.
The Plant City Republican led a roundtable discussion at Space Florida’s headquarters to discuss the benefits of such a move.
“We are working with leaders in the space industry to advance our efforts to bring NASA headquarters to Florida,” Moody said.

“Today’s discussion highlighted just how well-situated Florida’s Space Coast is for this monumental move, and how this effort would improve efficiency, foster collaboration with private space companies and capitalize on our well-trained, highly skilled aeronautical workforce. It would also boost our economy, increase tourism, and solidify Florida as the Space State. I am proud to be the sponsor of the CAPE Canaveral Act and will continue fighting in Washington to bring NASA headquarters here where it belongs.”
She filed a bill with Sen. Rick Scott to move NASA HQ to Florida. But Texas leaders also want the space agency there. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott launched a state commission to promote the industry there.
Rep. Mike Haridopolos, a Space Coast Republican, was also part of Moody’s forum, as was Florida International University Interim President and former Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez, who chairs Space Florida.
Space Florida CEO Rob Long participated, as did Embry-Riddle University President P. Barry Butler and Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Rodney Cruise, University of Central Florida physicist Dr. Philip Metzger, and EDC Florida Space Coast President Lynda Weatherman.
Pushing Powell
After years of criticism of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, Scott called for the economic leader’s resignation.
“Jay Powell proves time and time again that he is a failure at the Federal Reserve,” Scott wrote in a Fox News op-ed.
Much of the write-up criticized policies under former President Joe Biden. Scott said Powell has mismanaged the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet to the point that it grew to an “unsustainable $6.8 trillion.”

“I talk to Floridians who can’t afford a mortgage because of high interest rates,” he said. “They’re working 40+ hours a week but still relying on food banks for dinner, and they don’t understand why their federal government has been driving policies for the past four years that make things worse for them. That is unacceptable and I know that I am not the only one here in Washington (who) is hearing these heartbreaking stories. Now, it is incumbent on those who have the power to reverse these failures to act.”
The demand from Scott comes as Trump and Powell publicly debate whether interest rates should be lowered.
Farm bill frustrations
The farm bill was supposed to pass nearly two years ago but remains mired in negotiations between the House and Senate. Can it be included in the budget reconciliation process?
Rep. Kat Cammack, the top Florida Republican on the House Agriculture Committee, said that’s “absolutely feasible.” But in an interview with Agri-Pulse Newsmakers, she clarified that it could be a tough row to hoe.

“Reconciliation, it’s a beast. It is an arduous process from start to finish,” the Gainesville Republican said. “And so even though you avoid the 60-vote threshold in the Senate, you have to really reconcile the House and the Senate, and really be mindful of revenues, impacts, outlays. And the farm bill is a beast of a bill in itself.”
Cammack said the process could be so lengthy that it’s unlikely to get done this budget year. Meanwhile, she said agriculture producers in Florida and nationwide desperately need certainty about what a farm bill will contain.
“I’ve heard, OK, we’re going to try to get this done by the beginning of Fall. I’m sorry, but we can’t go until the Fall for answers,” she said. “And so, there is a lot of us aggies on the Hill that are concerned that this is going to end up getting pushed to the back burner, as it has in the past, and we just can’t keep kicking the can down the road.”
Leadership fights
As House leadership navigates a tight majority to pass significant legislation, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna voiced irritation at Speaker Mike Johnson for how he has managed members not perfectly in lockstep with his agenda.
The St. Petersburg Republican, a loyalist to Trump who has criticized House leadership, voiced frustrations on X shortly after complaining that Johnson would leak details of budget negotiations with the Senate to press ahead of informing members. She touched on several disagreements she has had with the Louisiana Republican.

“Leadership has been dragging their feet on codifying anything Trump has done. Yet they’re actively working against parents being able to vote,” Luna posted, before arguing she was retaliated against while pursuing a post on the House Armed Services Committee (HASC).
“Did you know they also kept me off HASC (a female vet) because I voted with Rep. Thomas Massie to try to stop FISA in current form? If we’re going to talk to the press, at least be honest with what you guys are doing behind the scenes. I like Johnson, but the swamp is still alive and well.”
Union busting
Rep. Scott Franklin has renewed an effort to limit labor representatives’ ability to perform union work on the taxpayer’s dime.
The Lakeland Republican reintroduced the Taxpayer-Funded Union Time Transparency Act, which requires agencies to report how much “official time” union leaders are paid to do work while being paid as public employees.

“Taxpayers shouldn’t pay for empty federal office buildings or for federal employees to unionize on the clock,” Franklin said. “It’s just common sense — Americans deserve a full, detailed account of how bureaucrats use both their official time and office space for union-related work.”
Sen. Joni Ernst, an Iowa Republican, will carry a Senate companion.
The bill as written would require agencies to report the total amount of official time authorized under federal law, provide data on person-hours used for union duties, including negotiation, mediation and arbitration, reveal the square footage of federal space set aside for unions, along with reimbursement information and show year-over-year comparisons on all of this data with justifications for any increased spending.
“This is exactly the kind of waste and abuse my friend, Sen. Joni Ernst, and I are fighting to root out alongside the Trump administration,” Franklin said. “The President was right to order federal employees back to the office — but if taxpayers are footing the bill, workers must be accountable for how they spend their official time. Our bill will provide critical transparency and expose entrenched bureaucrats who have been skirting these important reporting requirements for far too long.”
Elevating FEMA
Two Representatives who know more than they want about hurricane recovery would like to elevate the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) status.
Rep. Byron Donalds, a Naples Republican, joined Moskowitz to file a bill that would make FEMA a Cabinet-level agency reporting directly to the President, as reported by Fox News. FEMA falls under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) umbrella.

Donalds represents Southwest Florida, which in 2022 took a direct hit from Hurricane Ian as a Category 5 hurricane. Moskowitz, meanwhile, previously served as Florida’s Director of Emergency Management.
“As the first Emergency Management Director ever elected to Congress, I’ve seen firsthand the challenges of preparing for, responding to and recovering from disaster events,” Moskowitz said. “As these emergencies continue to grow larger and more widespread, the American people deserve a federal response that is efficient and fast.”
Donalds said it could also serve the mission of government efficiency.
“It is imperative that FEMA is removed from the bureaucratic labyrinth of DHS and instead is designated to report directly to the President of the United States.”
More TPS changes
The Trump administration’s revocation of temporary legal status for 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans will impact residents of Florida more than any other state.
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Miramar Democrat and Haitian American, slammed the decision as an attack on those at risk of persecution in their homelands.

“As I’ve stated before, the abrupt removal of nearly half a million individuals is inhumane, irrational, and it will have an irreparable impact on businesses across the country and our economy at large,” Cherfilus-McCormick said.
“Those with humanitarian parole status legally work and pay taxes in the U.S. Across South Florida and throughout the nation, they have strengthened our workforce, supporting our airports, our hospitals, our small businesses and our schools.”
According to the Migration Policy Institute, 49% of Haitian immigrants in the U.S. live in Florida, along with 51% of Venezuelans and 76% of Cubans. Similar breakdowns were not available for Nicaraguans, but 11% of immigrants in the U.S. from Central America live in Florida, and Nicaraguans make up roughly 7% of that group, according to Institute data.
Cherfilus-McCormick said those communities need to be heard in Washington.
“I continue to remain in communication with those who would bear the brunt of this decision and am strongly urging the administration to reverse course immediately,” she said.
Blasting Global Media
While the decision to dismantle the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), including Radio Martí in Miami, generated bipartisan pushback in South Florida, Mast clearly supported the move.
Mast, a Stuart Republican, chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee. In that capacity, he has criticized silencing broadcasts worldwide.

“The U.S. Agency for Global Media, its outlets and its grantees are blatant examples of how the far left has hijacked your money and your agencies to support terrorist sympathizers, give cover to the CCP, and push anti-American propaganda at home and abroad,” Mast said.
“For years, USAGM’s leaders have ignored serious concerns about fraud, corruption, and their failure to uphold American ideals. President Trump, Kari Lake, and the Foreign Affairs Committee are going to act. If one dollar comes out of your pocket, it has to be explained how that money is better used abroad than in your own wallet — and if we can’t defend it, we will defund it.”
Energy enthusiasm
The senior Democrat in Florida’s congressional delegation wants to strengthen the economic relationship between the U.S. and Israel and sees energy as a strong conduit.
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Weston Democrat, filed the BIRD Energy and U.S.-Israel Energy Center Reauthorization Act, extending the U.S.-Israel energy partnership through 2034.
That partnership calls for research and development collaboration between companies and researchers in both nations on renewable energy and energy efficiency.

“For over a decade, the BIRD Energy program has demonstrated the power of collaboration between the U.S. and Israel in advancing clean energy solutions,” Wasserman Schultz said.
“By reauthorizing and expanding this successful initiative, we are doubling down on our commitment to innovation, energy security and economic growth. This bill will help develop cutting-edge technologies like hydrogen and fusion energy while strengthening our shared energy infrastructure. Investing in this partnership is an investment in a cleaner, more resilient future for both nations.”
She filed the bill with Republican Reps. Buddy Carter of Georgia, Joe Wilson of South Carolina and Democratic Rep. Brad Schneider of Illinois.
“Israel is one of the United States’ strongest allies,” Carter said. “By expanding the mutually beneficial U.S.-Israel Energy Cooperation program, we will continue to grow our strategic partnership, increase our joint energy security, and ensure both nations have access to cutting-edge technology.”
Housing confirmed
Bill Pulte became the latest Florida man sworn into a key post in the Trump administration earlier this month. The Boca Raton resident was sworn in as Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency on March 14 by Vice President JD Vance.

The agency’s fifth Director, created amid the Great Recession to oversee Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Bank System, is the grandson of Pulte Homes’ founder. He has been a prominent philanthropist, supporting causes in Florida and Michigan for years.
“I am honored by President Trump’s trust as we usher in a Golden Age of housing and mortgage accessibility,” Pulte said.
“Safe and sound housing markets are the foundation of American homeownership, so I will be laser-focused on the safety and soundness of our regulated entities as we ensure that the dream of homeownership becomes a reality for as many Americans as possible.”
On this day
March 5, 1776 — “George Washington earns first Congressional Gold Medal” via the U.S. Navy — Boston was the American headquarters of the British army. After months of preparation, Gen. Washington, Commander of the Continental Army, ordered his men to begin bombarding the city. After a few days of heavy artillery fire, British Gen. William Howe, noticing he and his troops would not be able to defend the city with the decisive positioning of the Continental Army, decided it would be to withdraw. Because of his decisive victory during the Battle of Boston, Washington was awarded the first Congressional Gold Medal by the Continental Congress for his “wise and spirited conduct” in bringing about the British evacuation of Boston.
March 5, 1965 — “Martin Luther King-led march reaches Alabama capital” via The White House — Thousands of people joined along the way to Montgomery, with roughly 25,000 people entering the capital on the final leg of the march. The marchers made it to the entrance of the Alabama State Capitol building, with a petition for Gov. George Wallace. A few months later, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, which President Lyndon B. Johnson signed on Aug. 6. The Voting Rights Act was designed to eliminate legal barriers at the state and local level that prevented African Americans from exercising their right to vote under the 15th Amendment — after nearly a century of unconstitutional discrimination.
___
Peter Schorsch publishes Delegation, compiled by Jacob Ogles, edited and assembled by Phil Ammann and Ryan Nicol.
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Politics
Anti-BDS bills punishing ‘academic boycott’ of Israel advance in Senate, House
Published
19 minutes agoon
April 2, 2025By
May Greene
Florida’s tradition of pro-Israel legislation is on track to continue in 2025, as Senate and House measures punishing so-called academic boycotts are moving through committees.
An anti-boycott, divest, sanction (BDS) measure (SB 1678) that would defend Israel against its opponents in schools and non-governmental agencies advanced through the Senate Appropriations Committee with unanimous support. The companion measure (HB 1519) cleared the House State Affairs Committee by a 23-2 vote.
Sen. Tom Leek, the Senate sponsor, said the bill was necessary to stop “attempts to weaken the state’s ability to conduct trade and exchange with Israel” and to “close the loop on prior good work” by the Legislature in combating anti-Israel sentiment that “often amounts to ethnic and religious discrimination.”
Rep. Hillary Cassel, the House sponsor, extolled the “mutually beneficial relationship” and “economic partnership between Florida and Israel” by contextualizing previous anti-BDS laws and making the case for the proposal, which she said would ensure that “this is where antisemitism goes to die in Florida.”
The measures propose that anti-Israeli actions undertaken by “an educational institution, a nonprofit organization, an agency, a local governmental entity or unit thereof, or a foreign government” amount to an “academic boycott.”
They also would mandate cessation of state contracts and grants with those entities on the wrong side of the ideological conflict if they don’t change their ways.
These entities would have 90 days to correct their noncompliance and be removed from what would be called the Scrutinized Companies or Other Entities that Boycott Israel List under this proposal. Otherwise, the state would divest itself of contracts with them.
If the bill is passed, public funds, such as the State Board of Administration or State University System, cannot invest in these companies. Additionally, it requires that arts and culture grants not go to support antisemitic work.
The bill would also target agreements, like foreign exchange programs, with foreign universities deemed to be supporting antisemitism.
In the Senate panel, Leek was asked about “guardrails” protecting free speech, and cited court precedent establishing the right to pass anti-BDS laws.
The House discussion was more lively, with Cassel asked about whether an individual doing a “Nazi salute” would represent a violation of the law, whether “commercial speech” was protected speech, and whether “unscripted” remarks in art installations could merit a grace period for “correction.”
Democratic Rep. Debra Tendrich argued that the slippery slope from criticism of Israel to overt antisemitism in today’s culture make this legislation “extremely needed.”
“It now turns to beyond just being Israeli but being Jewish,” the legislator from Palm Beach said. “Many of you have heard this story where I’ve been out of gas station, someone’s seen my Jewish star and wished I crashed and died and called me a Jewish murderer.”
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Politics
With the clock ticking, Florida leaders should act now to save lives
Published
51 minutes agoon
April 2, 2025By
May Greene
Four words. That’s all it takes to unravel a parent’s world: “Your child is sick.”
The diagnosis is rare, the prognosis grim. He’s only six, but there’s hope: a new kind of treatment that can be customized to his DNA — a marvel of modern medicine promised for decades that is now a reality.
The potential cure has a gatekeeper, though. While the clock continues to tick, the government won’t allow your child to try this last chance at saving his life.
More than 2 million Floridians suffer from rare diseases, and for thousands of them, outdated federal regulations and the entanglement of bureaucracy continue to block cutting-edge treatments that could mean the difference between life and death. But now, lawmakers in Florida have an opportunity to place life-and-death decisions back in the hands of patients and their doctors, where they belong.
Florida leaders can enact a new law, the Right to Try for Individualized Treatments, that allows Floridians with rare diseases to access innovative, highly personalized treatments without first begging the federal government for permission.
The problem isn’t hypothetical. It’s tragically real.
Take Elijah Stacy, for example. At just 6 years old, doctors gave Elijah a crushing diagnosis. He had Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, a rare, incurable, and fatal genetic disease that slowly erodes muscle strength and robs young people of their independence. As they reach adolescence, DMD patients start losing strength in their arms. Eventually, their heart and diaphragm weaken, too. Death typically comes by the mid-twenties.
Waiting on the government to go through reviews and testing, granting approvals, and making recommendations isn’t a luxury someone like Elijah can afford.
When Elijah was only 11, the disease had already taken away his ability to walk. Now, at 23, he’s struggling to use his arms. But that hasn’t stopped him and he’s not saying goodbye. Elijah has led the fight for his life — and the lives of thousands of others — by advocating for the Right to Try for Individualized Treatments.
The reform, which is now law in nine states and currently under consideration in the Florida Legislature with HB 1333/SB 680, defies a federal system that prizes red tape over relief, rules over recovery, and leaves dying patients trapped as they wait for the end to come. It recognizes that those facing debilitating, rare diseases need action now and allows patients to access cutting-edge therapies tailored to their genetic profiles, even if the Food and Drug Administration has yet to approve.
“Right now, I can be willing to try a new treatment, the manufacturer of the treatment can be willing to allow me to try it, and a doctor can be willing to administer it — yet Uncle Sam is not willing and stops me from receiving a lifesaving treatment,” Elijah said. “This is completely backwards. After all, doctors know their patients better than a far-off bureaucrat who doesn’t even know the patient exists. Why should I have to beg the federal government for permission to try to save my own life?”
Elijah’s story is far from unique. Tens of millions of Americans, including thousands in Florida, live with rare diseases and want to try anything they can. Although new technology has ushered in an age of personalized care customized to a patient’s unique DNA, regulations have not kept pace, leaving many stranded. Too often, those suffering from degenerative or rare diseases have to wait years for a therapy that could help them today.
By enacting the Right to Try for Individualized Treatments, Florida lawmakers can advocate for some of the state’s most vulnerable, empowering them to fight to save their own lives despite distant regulators standing between them, their doctors, and a treatment.
“The reality for me is that I’m going to die, likely before I reach middle-age,” Elijah explains. “The average lifespan for people with Duchenne is 25. But it doesn’t have to be that way.”
___
Brian Norman is the director of State Affairs at the Goldwater Institute, where he assists in developing and implementing Goldwater’s national legislative affairs strategy.
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Politics
Claims bills to pay settlement balance over drowned Miami Beach rec leader await floor votes
Published
1 hour agoon
April 2, 2025By
May Greene
One day after its Senate companion cleared its final committee stop, a House bill allowing Miami Beach to pay the sizable balance of a wrongful death settlement is also headed for a floor vote.
Members of the House Judiciary Committee voted unanimously for HB 6519, which would authorize Miami Beach to pay $1.7 million to the family of Peniel “P.J. Janvier, a 28-year-old city employee who drowned in a community pool last year.
Miami Republican Rep. Juan Porras, the measure’s sponsor in the House, presented the bill to the panel Wednesday, but kept his comments short. The bill received nothing but “yes” votes in the chamber.
Its upper-chamber analog (SB 14) by Miami Gardens Democratic Sen. Shevrin Jones fared nearly as well; only Pensacola Republican Sen. Don Gaetz voted against the measure.
HB 6519 is known as a claims bill, a special classification of legislation intended to compensate a person or entity for injury or loss due to the negligence or error of a public officer or agency.
Claims bills arise when the damages a claimant seeks are above the thresholds set in Florida’s sovereign immunity law, which today caps payouts at $200,000 per person and $300,000 per incident.
The latter sum is what Janvier’s family has received since May 2024, when the Miami Beach City Commission approved a $2 million settlement.
Janvier, an Army Reserve member and recreation leader with the city’s Parks and Recreation Department, was visiting kids he oversaw during Summer camp on Aug. 16, 2022, at the Scott Rakow Youth Center’s outdoor pool.
Video footage recorded Janvier being pushed by a camper into the pool’s deep end. He struggled for 12 minutes as kids tried to save him and a lifeguard on duty was transfixed with his phone.
Miami Beach later suspended two employees and fired a third over the incident and agreed to pay Janvier’s family, who have only seen $300,000 of the agreed-to sum. Janvier’s LinkedIn page features a work history indicative of a civically engaged young man who enjoyed working with people. He worked as an activities coordinator for the Pompano Health and Rehabilitation Center before becoming a youth recreation specialist with Miami-Dade County, a job he parlayed into his recreation leader post with the city that he’d held for three years before his death.
He was also close to marking three years working as a sanitation inspector for the city of Miami and was nearing six years with the Army Reserve, where he was a heavy equipment operator.
His LinkedIn page says he held a master’s degree in health services administration and a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Florida International University.
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