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Jacksonville Bold for 10.22.25: Chamber cash

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It looks as if the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce will get its $750,000 in marketing money after all.

The money is typically in the budget. But this year, the measure was not in the final spending plan, leading to a push to move the funding through in one cycle of Committee hearings and a full Council vote.

Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce secures $750,000 in marketing funds after brief City Council budget drama.

Happily, for the Chamber and its JAXUSA marketing arm, there wasn’t much controversy in the process.

The Neighborhoods Committee alluded to political positions the Chamber’s JAXBIZ political committee took over the years on some issues but not others, and the Finance Committee basically told the Chamber to start substantiating its expenses with receipts.

It’s set to pass City Council on Tuesday; why wouldn’t it be?

The Chamber endorses candidates and supports the majority of the City Council.

There are those on the outside of this process who still warn that the Chamber may face issues with the Council down the road.

But when?

There is one more budget cycle left ahead of the 2027 election.

Time is running out.

No competition

The view remains the same in Northeast Florida’s 5th Congressional District.

As of the end of September, four-term incumbent John Rutherford continues to dominate in terms of donor support.

The former Jacksonville Sheriff has $337,169 on hand, putting him well ahead of his only Primary challenger to report financial activity, podcaster Mark Kaye.

Kaye has $5,106 on hand at last report.

John Rutherford dominates fundraising in Florida’s 5th District, leaving challenger Mark Kaye far behind.

While four Democrats have opened campaign accounts, three of them have reported no fundraising at all.

The other one, Peter Mark Heggestad, has raised less than $300.

Rutherford raised more than $83,000 in Q3, and more than $56,000 of that comes from individual contributors.

His associated “Strengthening the American Republic” Leadership PAC also has nearly $33,000 on hand.

Kaye, who recently joked that Rutherford was “ready to retire,” continues to fall short of what he promised when he got in the race in terms of fundraising.

The challenger said earlier this year that “donations are pouring in from across the country,” and that he expects to “lean heavily on grassroots energy, digital outreach, and the loyal support of thousands of his listeners called ‘Kayetriots’ across Florida and beyond.”

Thus far, those supporters are pacing themselves.

The incumbent has faced Primaries consistently.

In 2022 and 2024, he got roughly 2/3 of the vote against conservative populist Mara Macie.

The district, which includes some of Duval and St. Johns counties, is designed for a Republican win in any General Election, with more than 250,000 GOP registrants and fewer than 145,000 Democrats.

Bean counting

U.S. Rep. Aaron Bean, a Fernandina Beach Republican, continues his steady fundraising as he runs for a third term in the 4th Congressional District.

As of the end of September, Bean had more than $961,000 on hand, per records from the Federal Elections Commission.

Aaron Bean nears $1 million cash on hand as Northeast Florida challengers struggle to raise funds.

He raised more than $261,000 in Q3, with more than $141,000 coming from individual contributors. The vast majority of those donations came from people who live in Northeast Florida, including House Speaker Pro Tempore Wyman Duggan and Adam Brandon, a candidate for Jacksonville City Council.

Political Action Committees related to Florida companies, such as Publix and Raytheon, also contributed.

Bean has a substantial fundraising lead over his challengers.

Michael Kirwan, a Jacksonville Democrat who entered the race months ago, is currently the best-positioned to compete. He raised more than $250,000 according to his first fundraising report.

Democrat Ricky Knoles had under $1,000 on hand as of the end of Q3, while Brittany Robinson had just over $2,000.

Former Democratic nominee LJ Holloway says she is looking to run again as well, which could create a four-way Primary in August if she enters the fray. But despite running for Congress several times since the 2016 cycle, she has never raised the kind of money Kirwan is reporting.

Two candidates without party affiliation have also opened FEC accounts.

No fundraising activity has been reported.

The district includes Nassau, Clay and part of Duval counties. It is 41% Republican and 34% Democrat.

Complete and Total

President Donald Trump has officially endorsed U.S. Rep. Kat Cammack’s re-election bid. He praised the Gainesville Republican in a Truth Social post.

“Congresswoman Kat Cammack is doing a fantastic job representing the wonderful people of Florida’s 3rd Congressional District,” Trump wrote.

Donald Trump backs Kat Cammack’s re-election, bolstering her standing ahead of potential redistricting changes.

“In Congress, Kat is working tirelessly to Grow our Economy, Cut Taxes, Promote MADE IN THE U.S.A., Support our Amazing Farmers and Ranchers, Advance American Energy DOMINANCE, Keep our now very Secure Border, SECURE, Champion our Military/Veterans, and Protect our always under siege Second Amendment. Kat Cammack has my Complete and Total Endorsement for Re-Election — SHE WILL NOT LET YOU DOWN!”

Cammack embraced the support.

“Honored to be in the fight with Donald Trump for the future of our country,” she wrote on her X account. “We’re defending conservative values, protecting our communities, and getting the job done.”

The support for the three-term Congresswoman isn’t surprising, but it should help insulate Cammack from a Republican Primary challenge. That could be especially important if lines for her district change substantially as the Florida Legislature begins an unprecedented mid-decade redistricting effort.

No other Republicans have filed for Cammack’s seat in Congress. But when she first ran for the seat in 2020, Cammack faced nine other Republican opponents for the open seat. She ultimately succeeded U.S. Rep. Ted Yoho after working in his congressional office as Deputy Chief of Staff.

Should lines remain similar for CD 3, more than 60% of voters in the district supported Trump for President, compared with under 39% who voted for Democrat Kamala Harris, according to MCI Maps. Trump outperformed Harris in every North Florida district.

The support for Cammack’s re-election could also diminish speculation about whether Cammack intends to run in Florida for Agriculture Commissioner in 2026 should incumbent Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson not seek re-election.

Dolphin Cost

Jacksonville University (JU) President Tim Cost will step down from the top slot at the private college on the First Coast next year but will remain heavily involved in the institution.

JU announced Tuesday that Cost has agreed to leave the presidency and become Chancellor of the school in Summer 2026. Cost became president of JU 14 years ago. An alum who was a JU Dolphin baseball player and standout pitcher when he attended the school more than four decades ago, Cost left an executive position with PepsiCo to take the helm at the campus on the St. Johns River in Northeast Florida.

Jacksonville University’s Tim Cost to step down as president, transition to chancellor amid fiscal strain.

“President Cost’s exemplary leadership over the past 14 years has transformed our university in remarkable ways,” said JU Board of Trustees Chair John Miller. “Under his guidance, we’ve enjoyed growth in undergraduate and graduate enrollment, developed countless strategic partnerships in and outside of our community, and elevated our profile both in the region and beyond. The Board is grateful for his extraordinary commitment as President and his dedication to students, and we are confident he will help further advance our mission and expand our impact as Chancellor.”

A JU press release said Cost had reached an agreement with the Board of Trustees in 2022, stating he would transition into Chancellor and primarily focus on fundraising, alumni, community and government relations.

But despite that agreement, Cost and JU ran into financial difficulties in the Spring. Due to the challenges of dollars and cents, there was a 10% faculty cut and several academic programs were eliminated as Cost and the school engaged in financial restructuring.

The financial developments and hits to faculty and curriculum sparked student protests on campus and heavy criticism from many of the faculty who remained employed. Still, the Board of Trustees stood behind Cost and agreed with his proposals to right the financial ship.

The university plans an extensive search process before selecting the next President of the 91-year-old school.

Pedal patrol

Palm Coast is the latest Florida municipality to step up regulations on e-bikes that are increasingly popular across the Sunshine State.

The City Council in Flagler County this month approved an ordinance that defines “use and operation of electric bicycles.” City officials acknowledged there have been growing concerns about the safety of the easy-to-use bicycles that have a battery-powered engine and can scoot up to speeds in excess of 30 mph. They’re akin to a low-speed motorcycle with pedals. But a simple push of a button can propel them.

Palm Coast cracks down on modified e-bikes, setting age limits and ID rules to boost safety.

On that end, the Palm Coast Council ordinance makes it illegal for e-bike owners to modify the vehicles so they can exceed state-defined speed limits on streets, sidewalks or paths. The new law also stipulates a minimum age of 11. Anyone using an e-bike must follow all local traffic regulations and must provide an audible signal when passing other vehicles on the road.

Anyone operating an e-bike in Palm Coast must also have a photo identification that is issued by a government agency, which must be presented to any law enforcement officer if requested. Those identification cards can include a driver’s license, passport, military identification or a school ID.

Fines for violations can be up to $100 for each offense and law enforcement is empowered to impound the vehicle if necessary.

The Palm Coast move comes after St. Johns County approved an e-bike public awareness campaign in August, following two separate accidents involving the vehicles that injured two different 15-year-old boys.

I’m walkin’ here

A new analysis shows Jacksonville is one of the worst walkable cities in the United States.

According to the study by StorageCafe, Jacksonville is the 17th-worst city for supporting residents who prefer not to drive vehicles. According to the analysis, Jacksonville doesn’t really offer a pedestrian-friendly environment, with limited public transit and few amenities for those who want to traverse the city on foot.

Study ranks Jacksonville among America’s least walkable cities, where cars rule and sidewalks disappoint.

It could be worse, though. The analysis ranked Cape Coral as the top town in the country where car culture still dominates. Port St. Lucie followed in second. Pembroke Pines was ranked sixth. Only Texas had more cities in the top 25 worst cities for pedestrians, with six towns on that list.

Miami was ranked the second-best metro area in the country for a pedestrian-friendly environment.

Book ’em

The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Jacksonville is holding a book launch event that will feature its new publication called “The Armory South: The 1924 Jacksonville Woman’s Club Exhibition Rediscovered.”

The publication is written and researched by P. Scott Brown, the Interim Dean of the Hicks Honors College at the University of North Florida. The catalog features an in-depth analysis of the current exhibition of the same name on display at MOCA.

MOCA Jacksonville launches book by author P. Scott Brown rediscovering 1924 Modernist exhibition celebrating women’s impact on Southern art.

“The Armory South: The 1924 Jacksonville Woman’s Club Exhibition Rediscovered reassembles core works from a forgotten but seminal Modernist exhibition mounted in March 1924 by the Woman’s Club of Jacksonville and the newly founded Jacksonville Fine Arts Society (now MOCA). Planned to mark the beginning of the museum’s second century in 2025, The Armory South tells several related stories of essential importance to the history of women in Modern art, the introduction of Modernism to the American South, and the ideas and relationships shaping American art in the mid-1920s,” a MOCA press release said.

The launch party is Oct. 25 at 7 p.m. at the MOCA museum in downtown Jacksonville.

Word wars

University of North Florida professors are being urged to watch what they say amid a climate of ideological policing.

The Tributary reports the state ordered “certain taboo words” removed from “all class syllabi or course descriptions in the university’s teacher-education department.”

On the chopping block: “diversity,” “equity,” “inclusion,” and “culture.”

UNF professors told to remove ‘diversity,’ ‘equity,’ and ‘inclusion’ from syllabi under new state rules.

UNF leadership defends the move as according with state law that mandates instructional material “may not distort significant historical events or include a curriculum or instruction that teaches identity politics … or is based on theories that systemic racism, sexism, oppression, and privilege are inherent in the institutions of the United States and were created to maintain social, political, and economic inequities.”

Palm Coast plans

With two finalists in the running to be the next Palm Coast City Manager, the city is calling for public input.

Palm Coast officials are opening up public participation in the selection process for the new top administrator for the city government. The city is hosting interviews with the two finalists for the position on Nov. 13 at City Hall. City leaders are encouraging residents to take part in what they are calling a day of public engagement, and the city will post exact times for the event as it draws closer.

Palm Coast seeks public input as finalists David Fraser and Michael McGlothlin vie for City Manager.

The finalists for the top slot include David Fraser, who has three decades of municipal experience and administration. He’s currently the Interim County Manager in Adams County, Colorado. He also has experience involving strategic planning, intergovernmental relations and development of major grants and revenue for municipal projects.

Michael McGlothlin is the other finalist who has four decades of public service experience. He’s currently the Town Administrator for Redington Shores in the Tampa Bay area. McGlothlin is a former city administrator and police chief in Oregon.

Touch grass

St. Johns County formally dedicated a new athletic facility that will serve as a new site for soccer leagues and other sports.

The facility isn’t technically new, but it has a new surface at the Solomon Calhoun Community Center at 1300 Duval St. in St. Augustine. The event held Saturday morning commemorated the transition of the former grass field into the new artificial turf field.

St. Johns County unveils new artificial turf sports field in St. Augustine for year-round community use.

The drum line from the St. Augustine High School Marching Band performed at the official ribbon-cutting ceremony.

“This project was focused on converting a grass field into an artificial turf field,” said Chris Gatchell, project manager for St. Johns County Public Works. “That way, the field can be utilized year-round. Regardless of weather, it is designed not to flood — there’s plenty of drainage under this.”

A familiar spot

The Jaguars have a wide receiver problem. And some other problems, too. But the most glaring issue on the team is among the pass catchers.

More specifically, the players who are supposed to catch passes, but aren’t.

Let’s start at the top, where second-year wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. has been a shadow of the player he was as a rookie. Thomas has been targeted 55 times this season. Only 12 players have more targets in the NFL. That’s more targets than the Minnesota Vikings’ Justin Jefferson, more than the Philadelphia Eagles’ A.J. Brown and more than anyone on the Jaguars, including rookie Travis Hunter, who has been targeted 45 times.

The issue is not the opportunities he’s getting. It’s what Thomas is doing with the opportunities. Thomas has dropped six passes. Only Cleveland’s Jerry Jeudy has dropped more this season. And there are a handful of other players where Thomas has shied away from contact, leading to incompletions.

Jaguars wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. struggles with drops as Trevor Lawrence keeps faith — for now.

Apparently, Thomas has been dealing with an injury this season, but he has not appeared on the injury report. Of the 55 targets, Thomas has caught less than half (27 receptions). Last season, Thomas averaged 14.7 yards per reception. This season, his per catch average is down to 13.5 yards.

That’s a problem.

To this point of the season, quarterback Trevor Lawrence has not appeared to have lost confidence in Thomas, but it would be understandable if he did. On Sunday in London, Lawrence tried to connect with Thomas 10 times, but Thomas only caught four of the passes.

Perhaps it is no coincidence that on Sunday Hunter was targeted a season-high 14 times, resulting in eight catches for 101 yards and Hunter’s first NFL touchdown reception.

The Jaguars relied on a rookie wide receiver in the second half of last season, and it appears they’ll have to do so again — this time with a different rookie.

The other pass catchers have been pedestrian. Parker Washington has been the best of the bunch, but his most significant impact has come as a punt returner. Dyami Brown, signed as a free agent on a one-year, $10 million contract, has been a non-factor.

With tight end Brenton Strange on injured reserve, no other pass catchers have been reliable or impactful.

So, what is the solution?

First, the offense line must give Lawrence consistent time to throw. Second, Hunter has to become a bigger focus of the passing game. Third, the Jaguars have to take the pressure off the passing game by running the ball more often (and effectively). And finally, Lawrence has to play more consistently.

If they do, they can make something of this season. As they stand today, the Jaguars would be the last team in the playoffs.

Suppose they do not, then expect more changes to the roster in the offseason. Yep. We’re on the edge of being back here in the same old place at midseason.



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Florida ranks fourth-most deadly state for road travel during Christmastime

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5 of the 10 most dangerous states were in the Southeast.

In a place known for warm Winter getaways, Florida’s highways deliver a chilling dose of danger near Christmas.

The Utah-based personal injury law firm of Steele Adams Hosman conducted a study of the most dangerous roads for travelers at Christmastime using National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data. The study ranked Florida as the fourth-most dangerous.

Looking at data spanning Dec. 21 to Dec. 28 between 2014 to 2023, the study found Florida recorded about 16.48 car-crash deaths per 1 million residents annually. That’s 54.62% higher than the average among U.S. states.

In total, 355 road fatalities were posted in Florida in that decade. In terms of raw numbers, that’s more than double than any state listed in the top 10 and more than triple most of those states. But Florida also has a much bigger population than any of those states.

“As we enter the busiest travel period of the year, drivers need to be especially mindful of safety,” said Justin Hosman, a partner at the Steele Adams Hosman firm. “Whether you’re traveling across the country or just across town, staying focused, driving sober, and eliminating distractions can help ensure everyone reaches their destination safely.”

Out of Florida’s fatalities on the road surrounding Christmas, 57.51% were drivers, which ranks 28th in the nation. Another 20.96% were pedestrians, landing Florida 15th in the nation in that respect.

The five most deadly states for road travel during the Christmas holiday were all in the Southeastern United States. Mississippi was at the top, followed by Louisiana in second, Alabama in third and South Carolina in fifth.

Southern states made up most of the top 10, with Georgia at No. 7, Arkansas at No. 9 and Oklahoma at No. 10.



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How much sense would a David Jolly-Gwen Graham ticket make for Governor?

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Could Gwen Graham add heft to David Jolly’s candidacy for Governor by becoming his running mate in Florida next year?

That question occurred when the former Tallahassee-based U.S. Representative appeared with Jolly last week during a political rally in Pinellas County that drew 400-plus attendees.

Jolly has been crisscrossing the Sunshine State since entering the Democratic race for Governor in June, and the event at 535 Nova — a wedding venue — was his 130th public gathering since he entered the contest, but the first time he appeared with Graham, the closest thing to Florida Democratic Party royalty. She’s a daughter of Bob Graham, the former Florida Governor and U.S. Senator who died last year at 87.

In an interview before the Thursday event, Gwen Graham, who served in Congress with Jolly from 2015-2017, said it was a “no-brainer” that she would support the former Republican for Governor.

“I would not be standing here if I didn’t know he could win,” she said. “This election is too important. We’ve got to have a candidate in November who can win so we can start reversing the damage that has been done to the state that I love and my father loved, and David can win. So, I’m going to do whatever I can to help him do that.”

Many political analysts considered Graham the favorite to capture the Democratic nomination for Governor in 2018, but she ended up losing to then Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum by 3 percentage points in that year’s Primary. She went on to serve in President Joe Biden’s administration as assistant secretary for legislation and congressional affairs at the U.S. Department of Education from 2021 to 2025.

In introducing Jolly to the audience in St. Petersburg last week, Graham said she was nervous because it was her first public appearance since the death of her father, who served as Florida’s 38th Governor from 1979 to 1987 and in the U.S. Senate from 1987 to 2005.

“I hear my dad’s voice in David’s commitment to the values that I have grown up with and lived,” she said in her speech.

“I hear David’s voice talking about what he cares about for the future of this state. So, while David knows this race will be difficult, the moment is too important. We must all stand together and do our part to define what Florida will look like as a state for the next century.”

Jolly deflected when asked before the event whether he was considering Graham to serve as his running mate, but did say, “We’re going to name a Lieutenant Governor candidate very early. We’re not going to wait until the Primary. And I hope we see Gwen Graham in office again in the state of Florida.”

Considering a Jolly-Graham ticket

Longtime Hillsborough County Democratic strategist Victor DiMaio served at one time as a Press Secretary for Bob Graham. Having Gwen Graham on Jolly’s ticket makes sense on several levels, he said.

“Gwen would be an excellent choice if that’s what (Jolly) decides to do,” he said. “It didn’t hurt other Governors who have selected women as Lieutenant Governors.”

Angela Birdsong, President of the Hillsborough County Democratic Black Caucus, believes Gillum would have defeated Ron DeSantis in 2018 if he had selected Graham, instead of Chris King, to serve as his running mate.

“She would bring in more conservative Democrats, and independents would love her,” Birdsong said of Graham’s appeal in 2026. When asked if that ticket might prove to be too moderate for Florida Democrats, Birdsong disagreed. “I’m with Jasmine Crockett — I think that we’re going to have to run some vanilla candidates for a while.”

(Crockett. a progressive Democratic member of Congress from Texas, said in an interview on Sirius/XM radio in May that, following the Democratic Party’s losses to Donald Trump with Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton, “we just want to win.”

(She added, “So, there’s a lot of people that are like, ‘You know what? Like, let’s go find the safest White boy we can find.’ I mean, I’m just saying.”)

Some political consultants believe a Democratic gubernatorial ticket consisting of Jolly, a former Republican, and Graham, a political moderate, may offer a General Election appeal to a Florida electorate that has moved considerably to the political right during the past eight years.

But it might be a dead letter within the more progressive precincts of the Florida Democratic Party.

Carolina Ampudia is a former Chair of the Democratic Progressive Caucus in Florida. She sees a Jolly-Graham ticket as “a pathetic retreat, not a step forward.”

“Jolly has a Republican record and ties to Scientology. Graham voted to fast-track the Keystone pipeline and built her career on centrism. Neither of them represents the communities that have been fighting on the frontlines for labor rights, racial justice, LGBTQ+ protections, public education, or environmental survival,” she said in a text message.

“Florida doesn’t need a rebranded Republican and a legacy name,” she continued. “We need leadership that reflects the courage and clarity of the people — not the fears of consultants and donors.”

Florida’s last two elected Governors, DeSantis and Rick Scott, both named women as their running mates (DeSantis selected Jeanette Nuñez in 2018 and Scott picked Jennifer Carroll in 2010). Charlie Crist selected female running mates in his two unsuccessful bids as a Democrat for Governor in 2014 and 2022 (Annette Taddeo in ’14 and Karla Hernández-Mats in ’22).

Meanwhile, discussion about a potential running mate for Jolly comes amid a challenge for the Democratic nomination by Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings, who announced his candidacy a month ago. No major polls comparing the two Democrats have been published since his entry.

Uphill climb

On the GOP side, Southwest Florida U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds is dominating in the polling. According to a survey of 800 likely Republican voters conducted by Florida pollster Ryan Tyson for the American Promise last month, Donalds, who has been endorsed by President Trump, received 43% support while a majority of the electorate (51%) remained unsure. Former House Speaker Paul Renner received 2% of the vote. Lt. Gov. Jay Collins, who has not formally entered the race, received 1%.

A poll conducted by the University of North Florida’s Public Opinion Research Lab of 728 likely voters between Donalds and Jolly in October (before Demings entered the contest) showed Donalds leading both Jolly and Demings by double digits.

The eventual Democratic nominee will be a decided underdog. Florida has not elected a Democrat to lead the state since Lawton Chiles in 1994.

Even before he entered the race for Governor in June, Jolly had been talking about affordability, which has emerged as a buzzword in U.S. politics following Zohran Mamdani’s victory in the New York City Mayor’s race last month.

Thursday night, Jolly said concerns about the quality of life for everyday Floridians encompasses “more than affordability.”

“Affordability is, ‘Am I going to be able to afford rent or housing this week or this month.’ That is real. That’s a crisis. But we’re at a generational inflection point,” he said.

“I think that if Republicans continue with their policies, we’re going to lose the middle in the state of Florida and people are going to begin leaving at a quicker rate than we’re already seeing.”

Among the issues he addressed during his 50-minute-plus speech was the state’s universal school choice program, which expanded significantly in 2023 and was found by a state audit to feature “a myriad of accountability problems.”

“They don’t have to provide an individual education program,” Jolly said of private schools that accept state tuition subsidies.

“They don’t have to provide excellence in academics. Trigonometry in the 10th grade. Access to the trades. Access to the arts. They don’t have to provide any of that because there’s no standards on our choice schools. And so, just like Jeb Bush 25 years ago made the argument that he’s siding with Florida’s kids and families, guess what? Now we are. Because he used to say that public schools were leaving the kids behind. Now are choice schools leaving your kids behind? That’s what’s happening in the state of Florida.”

A plan to add funding for public education

Jolly has proposed a “10-year renaissance” in public education, advocating for a proposed constitutional amendment that would steer a portion of tourist development tax receipts into public education to pay teachers 30% more.

Tourist development taxes are levied in 62 of Florida’s 67 counties with rates ranging from 2% to 6% on sales. State law requires at least 40% of all tourist development tax revenues collected in a county to be spent to promote and advertise tourism.

“We build convention centers with it. We advertise beaches on the Chicago ‘L’ in January. … But guess what? We don’t have a crisis of convention centers in the state of Florida, we have a crisis in education,” Jolly said.

___

Reporting by Mitch Perry. Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: [email protected].



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Ron DeSantis ‘most electable’ in 2028 GOP poll, but not first choice

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Republicans don’t want to vote for Gov. Ron DeSantis.

But they think others might.

That’s the takeaway from the latest Yale Youth Poll, which shows both Gov. Ron DeSantis and Secretary of State Marco Rubio mired in the mid single digits at 6% and 5%, respectively, far behind the 51% backing Vice President JD Vance for first-choice support.

But when the survey asked respondents who is more “electable,” the Governor and the nation’s leading diplomat are in better shape.

“In a MaxDiff test, Republicans viewed DeSantis (79%) and Vance (75%) as the most electable against a hypothetical Democrat in a General Election, followed by Rubio (71%) and Donald Trump Jr. (67%); results did not differ significantly between younger Republicans and all Republicans,” Yale notes.

The result here, particularly for DeSantis, could bolster the hopes of those who want him to run to succeed term-limited Donald Trump in 2028.

The Governor keeps getting that question from reporters but tells them he’s not looking, saying he has his “hands full” and that he’s “not thinking about anything” regarding his next political move.

Rubio is also an also-ran in the polls, compared to Vance.

However, President Donald Trump seems to think Rubio and Vance would be a functional ticket, one that could clear the still-evolving field of his potential successors.

“I’m not sure if anybody would run against those two. I think if they formed a group, it would be unstoppable,” the President said, according to POLITICO Playbook.



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