Politics
Jane Castor highlights economic growth, public works as Tampa heads into 2026
Published
2 hours agoon
By
May Greene
As 2025 comes to a close, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor says the city is entering the new year with momentum built on economic growth, major infrastructure investments and continued recovery from last year’s hurricanes.
Castor outlined the city’s progress in her year-end remarks, pointing to national recognition for Tampa’s economy and a slate of public works projects completed or launched over the past year.
Tampa ranked second among mid-sized U.S. cities for economic growth, with the local economy expanding 43% and paychecks rising 38%, according to a national study. The city also earned the top ranking for U.S. Cities for Foreign Businesses by the Financial Times, climbing from No. 26 in just one year.
“As we close out 2025, I am raising a toast to a year full of big wins and even bigger plans for our city in the year ahead,” Castor wrote in her newsletter.
Castor highlighted several projects as examples of the city’s success, including the October groundbreaking of the $57 million West Riverwalk expansion. Once completed, the project will create 12.2 miles of continuous waterfront trail connecting West Tampa, Tampa Heights, downtown and surrounding areas.
The city also completed a $17 million upgrade to the Bayshore Wastewater Pumping Station through its PIPES program, part of an ongoing effort to strengthen long-term infrastructure.
Tampa’s Mobility Department resurfaced 76 miles of roadways in 2025 with the addition of a second paving machine and crew. City officials reported a record 21 miles paved in November.
Castor also pointed to continued rebuilding efforts following last year’s hurricanes, including the reopening of community centers and the restoration of parks across the city.
Castor’s newsletter also highlights end-of-year events that continue this week, with the ReliaQuest Bowl Parade returning to Ybor City on Tuesday ahead of the Dec. 31 college football matchup between the University of Iowa and Vanderbilt University at Raymond James Stadium.
To promote safe travel during New Year’s Eve, the Farah & Farah law firm is offering $50 Uber credits through its 10th annual Safe Ride Home Program. Credits are available from 6 p.m. Dec. 31 through 6 a.m. Jan. 1.
City offices will be closed Thursday, Jan. 1, in observance of New Year’s Day. Free Christmas tree collection begins Jan. 2. Residents are asked to remove all decorations, cut limbs to 4 feet or less and place trees at the curb on their regular yard waste collection day. Plain paper, cardboard and paper cards can be recycled in green carts, while foil paper, ribbons, bows and string lights should be placed in the trash and sent to the McKay Bay Waste-to-Energy Facility.
Additional seasonal events include the city’s fourth annual Three Kings Day Celebration on Jan. 3 at Al Lopez Park and Winter Village at Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park, which runs through Jan. 4. The Sulphur Springs Neighborhood Action Plan survey remains open through Jan. 5, and residents can register for free composting workshops through the city.
Upcoming community opportunities also include a Saturday Session focused on neighborhood trees on Jan. 17 and the annual Point-in-Time Homeless Count on Feb. 26.
“The City of Tampa is heading into 2026 with big plans and even bigger gratitude for this community,” Castor said. “Here is to a happy, healthy, and peaceful new year.”
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Politics
Eileen Higgins taps former Sheriff candidate, county Public Safety Chief James Reyes for Miami City Manager
Published
45 minutes agoon
December 29, 2025By
May Greene
Miami Mayor Eileen Higgins has chosen a man familiar to Miami-Dade County voters to run the city’s day-to-day operations.
She’s tapping Miami-Dade Chief of Public Safety James Reyes to serve as Miami’s City Manager.
If confirmed to the post — a decision Higgins is asking the City Commission to make Jan. 8 — it would mark Reyes’ fourth, and arguably loftiest, job title in as many years.
Higgins said in a statement Monday that Reyes is more than up to the task, citing Reyes’ swift work — within just 11 months — bringing the Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department under federal compliance for the first time in more than a decade.
“James Reyes brings the executive leadership skills essential to municipal management: fiscal accountability, process improvement, strategic planning, and the ability to develop high-performing teams,” she said.
“His servant leadership approach emphasizes transparency and empowering others to succeed. He shares my commitment to serving all Miami residents with respect and dignity.”
Reyes said he is “honored” and “grateful for the trust” Higgins is giving him.
“My career in public service has been guided by a commitment to listening to our community, leading with integrity, and delivering results that make a real difference in people’s daily lives,” he said. “I look forward to working with the City Commission through the confirmation process and helping deliver results for residents while restoring trust in City Hall through transparent, accountable leadership.”
Miami Herald reporter Tess Riski was first to report on Reyes’ pending appointment Monday morning. The outlet’s County Hall reporter, Doug Hanks, first flagged Higgins’ memo shortly thereafter.
A longtime jail warden in Broward County, Reyes — whose legal first name is Jems — joined Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava’s administration in January 2022 as Director of the county’s Corrections and Rehabilitation Department. He previously spent 22 years with the Broward County Sheriff’s Office, where he rose to the rank of colonel and joint posts as Executive Director of the Department of Administration and Department of Detention.
In November 2023, less than two months after then-Police Director Freddy Ramirez dropped out of the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s race following a failed suicide attempt, Levine Cava — who supported Ramirez — promoted Reyes to a newly created Chief of Public Safety position. In that role, Reyes oversaw the county’s Police, Fire Rescue and Corrections Departments.
Two and a half months later, Reyes entered the county Sheriff’s race and notched a Levine Cava endorsement the month after.
Higgins, Levine Cava and Reyes are all Democrats. All have long enlisted the services of influential political consultant Christian Ulvert and his Miami-based firm, EDGE Communications.
Reyes ultimately placed second in the Sheriff’s contest behind Donald Trump-endorsed Rosie Cordero-Stutz.
He has since kept his Chief of Public Safety title, which pays nearly $358,000 per year. But Miami-Dade’s law enforcement responsibilities are no longer under his purview, and each of the six Departments that still are — Fire Rescue, Corrections, Emergency Management, Animal Services, Community Services and the Medical Examiner’s Office — have their own Directors who earn six-figure salaries.
“Chief Reyes is also the County’s liaison to the Sheriff’s office given the ongoing close coordination between County departments and the Sheriff on public safety initiatives,” a spokesperson from Levine Cava’s administration told Florida Politics in October.
“He also worked hand in hand with Corrections leadership to spearhead the department’s transformative work to come into full compliance with federal standards — resulting in the termination of the federal consent decree in November 2024 after 13 years, a major milestone in the County’s long-term reform efforts to improve jail conditions.”
Levine Cava’s Office added that Reyes’ salary “was reduced by 3%” in the county’s Fiscal Year 2025-26 budget, “like others in executive leadership in the Mayor’s office.” Reyes’ reported 2023 salary, per his candidate qualifying paperwork, was $331,301.
In a Monday memo to City Commissioners, Higgins touted the executive management abilities Reyes has honed in top Broward and Miami-Dade posts, including most recently overseeing operations of Departments that jointly serve nearly 3 million residents and a budget exceeding $1.2 billion.
“Our residents have made clear what they expect: faster permitting to help homeowners and businesses, streamlined processes that put customer services first, and a city government that works efficiently for everyone,” she wrote. “James Reyes has proven he can modernize operations, accelerate service delivery, and build cultures of excellence. His track record directly aligns with our vision for responsive, efficient city services.”
Levine Cava said in a memo that Reyes has tentatively accepted the City Manager job. She wished him well and congratulated Miami, which she said is “gaining a proven leader whose executive experience continued to develop at Miami-Dade County.”
Reyes, a Hialeah High School graduate who joined the Broward Sheriff’s Office as a detention deputy cadet in November 2000, earned a master’s degree in criminal justice from the University of Cincinnati and a bachelor’s degree in criminology from Barry University.
He also completed an executive leadership program at Nova Southeastern University and an officer’s development course at the University of Louisville.
Reyes, if confirmed, will replace City Manager Art Noriega.
Politics
John Guard says he’s willing to withdraw from consideration as federal Judge to serve on Florida Supreme Court
Published
3 hours agoon
December 29, 2025By
May Greene
Former acting Attorney General John Guard’s bid to serve on the Florida Supreme Court is moving ahead without questions about his role in money moving from a Medicaid settlement to the Hope Florida Foundation.
But that doesn’t mean the issue isn’t affecting his path forward.
Guard interviewed with the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission as one of several candidates to potentially replace Justice Charles T. Canady.
Guard, who is the chief deputy AG for the state, had faced questions over the optics of the unorthodox $10 million appropriation that ultimately was used for political advertising in 2024 before being selected for a U.S. District Court judgeship by President Donald Trump.
The White House reportedly didn’t want a “nasty confirmation fight” while the issue was in suspense, sources said in October while explaining a pause in the nomination moving forward since June.
While Guard said he doesn’t know why his bid has been slow-walked, he is willing to walk away if that helps assure the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission that he wants this job.
“I don’t know why it has not gone through confirmation. It’s not something other than to tell me that they still fully support me and await my confirmation. I don’t have any details of when that will occur,” Guard said.
“My understanding is that the Governor’s Office is going to consider whatever list this Commission produces first, and then proceed to the 2nd DCA (Second District Court of Appeals) list. And so, I have presumed from the beginning that if I’m selected for any of these spots where if my confirmation all of a sudden goes warp speed, whichever occurs first is where I’m going to end up and likely be. If that means that I need to call the White House Counsel’s Office and tell them that I would request the President to withdraw my nomination, that’s what I will do.”
Guard was among those subpoenaed over his role in the Hope Florida scandal. He signed the controversial settlement with Medicaid insurer Centene, but not before privately raising concerns, according to the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times, which obtained emails documenting the conversations.
The emails show Guard removed references to his office in drafts of the settlement in a series of back-and-forth conversations over the course of 22 days.
Guard said there was nothing in his background that could embarrass the Gov. Ron DeSantis administration should he ultimately be appointed to replace Canady, who left the court to become a director and a tenured professor at the University of Florida’s Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education.
Guard also said his first choice was the one he interviewed for Monday.
“I think the best legal job is probably to serve on the Florida Supreme Court. And I say that because you’re the head of the judicial branch. You’re kind of responsible for helping with the legitimacy of our core system and maintaining the rule of law,” Guard said.
“If I were to rank them … I would say Supreme Court Justice, District Court Judge, and District Court of Appeals Judge. But I think between the District Court and the District Court of Appeals, there’s not that much difference,” he added.
Guard also said irate citizens were the biggest problem the judiciary faces, though he said the Florida Supreme Court itself does a “pretty good job” of mitigating the threat.
“I’ve heard from the Chief Justice that threats are up at the Florida Supreme Court. I’ve heard that there are threats at courthouses around the state, and so I think that is probably the biggest kind of threat, which is a threat to the legitimacy and the role of courts,” he said.
Much of the interview focused on Guard’s admiration for the late SCOTUS Justice Antonin Scalia, though Guard did break with the conservative icon on certain First Amendment cases, in which Scalia sided with “more liberal” colleagues.
___
Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics contributed to this report.
Politics
Here are the Top 10 federal stories impacting Florida in 2025
Published
4 hours agoon
December 29, 2025By
May Greene
There’s an old saying in Sunshine State newsrooms when it comes to covering national stories: “There’s always a Florida angle.” This past year showed that, at least for the moment, that angle is from the top.
Political historians may well remember 2025 as the year Florida took over American politics. That’s most clearly illustrated with the return of a certain Mar-a-Lago resident (and all his Florida consultants) to the White House.
Many of the nation’s most important political issues centered around the Sunshine State. From health care issues to sex scandals, Florida was featured in headlines generated by the Oval Office, the Hill and the campaign trail.
Here are the top 10 federal stories in 2025 that impacted Florida:
— No. 1: Trump returns a Florida man

Florida history doesn’t typically occur at below freezing temperatures. But the 20-degree weather served as a fitting backdrop to President Donald Trump’s return to power. The indoor event capped off what Campaign Manager Susie Wiles called the “greatest political comeback in history.” It also marked the first time the oath of office for President was ever administered to a Florida man.
While Trump arrived in Washington in 2017 as an unquestionable Manhattanite, his entire political operation worked from Mar-a-Lago leading into the 2024 election. Not only that, but Sunshine Staters would fill the ranks of his administration, from high-profile posts like Attorney General and Secretary of State to Ambassador positions around the globe.
“Floridians overpopulate the West Wing in a really big way,” said Wiles, whom Trump named as White House Chief of Staff.
The new Trump era would eventually usher a Floridian into power to lead the Republican National Committee, while a Florida area code turned into political capital on K Street.
The arrival of Trump back in the Oval Office arguably served as the biggest political event in the world in 2025. In Florida, it served to elevate and remake the entire political landscape. Elections would be decided by Truth Social posts. Mar-a-Lago memberships would become vital parts of administration résumés. Florida constituencies reshaped international relations.
Florida served as Trump’s Winter White House in his first term. This time, it’s the heartbeat of his presidency.
— No. 2: Looming war with Venezuela

Will World War III have a Caribbean front? Even as Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio cast this administration as negotiators of world peace, the most notable foreign policy choices in the last months of 2025 involved the sinking of dozens of boats allegedly running drugs from Venezuela.
The actions, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s alleged “kill them all” directive regarding vessel occupants, capitalized the attention of Florida’s congressional delegation. That’s little shock, as 49% of Venezuelans in the U.S. call Florida home. That’s part of why Rubio, for years as Florida’s Senator, urged regime change from Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and labeled the communist leader a “narcoterrorist.”
Rubio has continued to defend the attacks in his new role as the nation’s top diplomat. “This has been a highly successful mission that’s ongoing and continued,” Rubio told press in December.
Meanwhile, South Florida Republicans served as the most emphatic defenders of the administration’s unilateral actions. House Foreign Affairs Chair Brian Mast, a Stuart Republican, fought against Democratic efforts to limit strikes, saying the cartels manning boats deserved no protection.
“They are kidnapping Americans, extorting families, trafficking women and children, and flooding our towns with fentanyl to maximize death and addiction on American soil,” he said from the floor.
But Democrats from Florida also pushed back on legally questionable actions even as they called for other solutions to Maduro. Florida’s eight congressional Democrats issued a joint release criticizing the end of protections for Venezuelans in the U.S. even amid the saber-rattling. “It is hypocritical to claim Venezuela is safe enough to send back innocent people, while also declaring it dangerous enough that we need to send in troops,” the statement read.
— No. 3: Epstein files explosion and fallout

It’s been five years since Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide in federal custody. But thanks to his onetime friendly relationship with Trump, the long-delayed release of files pertaining to a sex trafficking investigation became one of the most politically damaging the sitting President ever faced.
Trouble within the administration stirred after Attorney General Pam Bondi in February claimed the “Epstein list” was on her desk and would be released soon. But the supposed release of a first batch of files to right-wing influencers turned out to largely be a retread of old material already in the public domain. Soon, Trump went from campaigning on transparency to deriding the Epstein scandal as a Democratic hoax.
Along the way, Justice Department lawyers would conduct a fresh interview with Epstein girlfriend/accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell in a Tallahassee prison and quickly relocate her to a new facility.
Fast forward through a government shutdown that some blamed on Speaker Mike Johnson’s desire to delay the release of files, the issue became an explosive dividing line between a largely compliant GOP-controlled Congress and the restored-to-power Republican President. Through a bipartisan discharge petition, Congress ultimately voted to demand a full release of all court discovery with minimal redactions.
The complete fallout for Trump may continue to unfold. But heading into the Christmas holiday, newly published materials caused further headaches for Trump even in the final days of 2025. Among the latest tranche of documents were records Trump had reportedly flown on Epstein’s private jet multiple times in the 1990s, at least once on a flight with only Epstein and a 20-year-old whose name was redacted.
— No. 4: Ashley Moody appointed to Senate

Rubio’s elevation to Secretary of State created a rare political opportunity for Gov. Ron DeSantis to hand-pick a U.S. Senator. He did so in January, when he appointed then-Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody to represent the state in Washington.
At an Orlando press conference announcing the Senate pick, DeSantis said he vetted contenders for months to replace Rubio when the seat opened and promised to name a replacement that could hit the ground running from the start of Trump’s second term. He chose a close political ally, one who first won statewide office in 2018 at the same time DeSantis won his first term as Governor. Moody notably proved to be Florida’s top vote-getter both in that election and when she won re-election in 2022.
The Plant City Republican quickly made clear she intends to stay in the Senate, opening a re-election account for 2026 and quickly aligning herself with U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, now Florida’s senior Senator, and with the Trump agenda.
By March, Trump endorsed Moody’s re-election campaign, largely squelching the opportunity for a Republican Primary challenge. While Democrats have lined up to wage a challenge from the left, Moody over the course of 2025 established herself as a front-runner for next year’s campaign, which will decide who serves the final two years of Rubio’s term.
“I’ll continue to hold the line and NEVER stop fighting to Make America Great Again,” Moody said.
— No. 5: Cory Mills goes from contender to pariah

But before Trump backed Moody, chatter persisted that Trump may endorse an alternative for Senate. U.S. Rep. Cory Mills made known early that he would like a move to the upper chamber. “You can probably guarantee my hat is going to be thrown in the ring,” he told press at a Republican meeting in January.
Those ambitions, however, predated a series of personal scandals that put his electability to his own House seat in jeopardy. While a House Ethics investigation from last year lingers, the future for Mills seemed immediately hazy after a live-in girlfriend of the married Congressman reported a domestic assault to police. Ultimately, Sarah Raviani dropped her accusation and that investigation quietly died.
The reports prompted another live-in girlfriend in Florida to dump him. Months later, Lindsey Langston, a reigning Miss United States and Columbia County Republican Committeewoman, obtained a restraining order after turning over texts to law enforcement showing threats from Mills to release intimate images to her future romantic interests.
Soon, U.S. Reps. Kat Cammack and Anna Paulina Luna, among other Trump-aligned Republican Congresswomen, were calling for Mills’ censure and asserting he shouldn’t seek re-election.
Indeed, more Republicans openly fret that in an already challenging Midterm cycle for Republicans, Democrats may successfully unseat Mills, if GOP opponents can’t beat them to it.
— No. 6: Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick indicted

Questions surrounded U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick’s rapid accumulation of personal wealth almost immediately after her 2022 Special Election win for a seat in Congress. Years of scrutiny and revelations resulted in November in a federal indictment of the Miramar Democrat, with the Justice Department alleging she stole some $5 million in pandemic emergency funding to support her campaign.
The indictment alleges that Cherfilus-McCormick and her brother, Edwin Cherfilus, secured funding intended for a COVID vaccine distribution program. But when overpayments were made, she routed the spending through several accounts that later donated the funds as campaign contributions.
Should Cherfilus-McCormick be found guilty of all counts in the indictment, the 46-year-old could face up to 53 years in prison, according to the Justice Department. The nature of the allegations prompted U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, a Sarasota Republican, to prepare a resolution to expel his colleague from Congress, though he has set the measure aside for a period to give her time to simply resign.
But to date, Cherfilus-McCormick has publicly maintained her innocence, even as Democratic leaders in her caucus strip her of subcommittee Chair posts and Democrats at home increasingly clamor for her to step down.
— No. 7: Redistricting reaches Florida

Red states and blue states alike heated up a redistricting cold war to redraw lines ahead of the 2026 Midterms. In August, Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez said Florida will join the arms race as well.
The Miami Republican pointed to the Florida Supreme Court’s July ruling upholding Florida’s current congressional map. That decision not only left in place lines designed and signed by DeSantis in 2022, but opened questions about whether any districts drawn with race as a motivating factor should remain.
Perez in September appointed members of a select committee, being chaired by Rep. Mike Redondo, a Miami Republican in line for Speaker himself in 2030.
But while the committee met multiple times since then, no cartography has emerged to date. Moreover, there remain questions about timing and tension, considering the frayed relationship between the Speaker and Governor, not to mention lower-profile conflict with Senate President Ben Albritton.
In December, Albritton, a Wauchula Republican, issued a memo making clear he’s in no rush to work on a mid-decade redraw. Both he and DeSantis point to a still undecided redistricting case in front of the U.S. Supreme Court, suggesting lines may well wait until a Special Session in Spring. But forces in Washington, most notably Trump, seem eager for action sooner.
California, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Utah all implemented new maps in 2025, and Virginia remains in process. How long will the nation’s third-largest state take? Federal qualifying remains in April — for now.
— No. 8: Trump endorses Donalds

Even before U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds formally launched a campaign for Governor, he secured what may be the most important endorsement in Florida politics right now.
Trump in a Truth Social post all but endorsed the Naples Republican to run as the state’s next chief executive in 2026. A formal endorsement would follow Donalds’ official launch in March, where the Congressman made clear he will make a statewide run instead of running for re-election to the U.S. House.
“My plan for Florida is bold and clear,” Donalds said at a rally in Bonita Springs, in the heart of Florida’s 19th Congressional District. He has since raised upward of $40 million, with the campaign declaring itself “the most dominant gubernatorial candidate in Florida history.”
To date, Donalds faces former Florida House Speaker Paul Renner and Azoria CEO James Fishback in a GOP Primary, while Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings and former U.S. Rep. David Jolly compete for the Democratic nomination.
But in federal politics, Donalds’ entry into the state race means at least one vacancy in Florida’s congressional slate. A dozen candidates already filed in 2025 with the Federal Election Commission to succeed Donalds, with others rumored to enter the field. As 2026 begins, the contest remains the only federal office in Florida with no incumbent, once again turning the Southwest Florida district into a hotbed of political activity and spending.
— No. 9: Special Elections in CD 1 and 6

When a new Congress took over at the start of 2025, Florida’s delegation initially saw little turnover from past elections. Only U.S. Rep. Mike Haridopolos, who won an open and safe Republican seat in 2024, joined the incoming freshman class of House members.
But further change was already in the air.
Trump’s various political appointments created openings in Florida’s 1st and 6th Congressional Districts. That prompted Special Elections on the Atlantic Coast and in the Panhandle, contests ultimately won by now-U.S. Reps. Randy Fine and Jimmy Patronis. Both were Republican holds, but the margins would rock the political landscape nationwide.
After some polling had shown Fine at risk of losing a district Trump carried in 2024 by 30 percentage points, the former state Senator beat Democrat Josh Weil by 14 points. Patronis took the same share of the vote over Democrat Gay Valimont in a seat Trump took by 38 points.
By traditional measures, these outcomes were blowouts. But Democrats chopping Trump’s margin in half signaled political risk for Republicans looking toward 2026.
The races also prompted millions in spending by both parties in areas of the state with little exposure to competitive congressional elections. Fine and Patronis individually rode Trump endorsements through Republican Primaries and ultimately to Washington. Both have that political trump card in hand already for 2026.
But the Special Elections also offered Florida Democrats a glimpse at something rarely seen in the post-pandemic area: hope. The results also spurred House Democrats to announce aggressive plans to target four Florida GOP incumbents heading into 2026: U.S. Reps. Laurel Lee, Luna, Mills and María Elvira Salazar.
— No. 10: Florida central in health care debate

Stalled budget talks led this Fall to a record 43-day federal government shutdown. But Democrats ultimately failed to secure their top priority: an extension of pandemic-era tax credits for users of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) health insurance marketplace.
As 2026 begins, no state will feel the impact of that more than Florida.
That became vividly clear in October with the release of Kaiser Family Foundation statistics verifying Florida boasts more ACA users than any other state in the union — about 4.7 million. Moreover, Florida serves as home to the top 10 congressional districts in the nation with the highest enrollment levels. Miami-Dade County’s four congressional districts make up most of the top 5.
“We don’t know how to even approach this in Miami-Dade County,” said U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, a Miami-Dade Democrat representing 258,000 individuals on “Obamacare” plans. While most of the high concentration districts are represented by Democrats, U.S. Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart represents the highest number of constituents relying on subsidies. But to date, he remains opposed to the three-year extension of tax credits that Democrats in Congress want.
While a discharge petition from Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries secured enough signatures to force a vote on such an extension when lawmakers return to Washington in 2026, no Florida Republicans signed on. But U.S. Reps. Carlos Giménez and Salazar, both Miami-Dade Republicans, did jump onto other discharge petitions supporting extensions, signaling potential interest in bringing back subsidies for some period.
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