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Last Call for 1.8.26 – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida

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Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.

First Shot

Americans for Prosperity Action released another volley of endorsements in state legislative races this cycle, backing two Republicans running for Senate and 11 vying for a seat in the House.

The Senate nods went to Jake Johansson, who is competing to succeed term-limited Sen. Tom Wright in SD 8 and Rep. Lauren Melo, the leading candidate to replace former Senate President Kathleen Passidomo in Southwest Florida-based SD 28.

AFP Action’s House slate stretched from the Panhandle to South Florida. The endorsements: Jon Fay for HD 2, Jacksonville City Council member Terrance Freeman for HD 12, Chad Johnson for HD 22, Erika Booth for HD 35, Emily Duda Buckley for HD 38, Erin Huntley for HD 45, Samantha Scott for HD 52, Ryan Gill for HD 68, Liesa Priddy for HD 82, Anthony Bonna for HD 85 and Eric Stelnicki for HD 100.

“Floridians deserve to be represented by officials who are passionate about making the lives of all Floridians better. These candidates will do just that, championing policies like deregulation, school choice, and housing policy reforms. We look forward to mobilizing our grassroots network to ensure these principled candidates are elected come November,” said Skylar Zander, AFP Action’s senior Florida adviser and State Director of AFP-FL.

The races AFP weighed in on Thursday aren’t expected to be competitive in November. Even-numbered Senate districts weren’t on the 2024 ballot, but Wright won re-election handily in 2022 while Passidomo went unopposed. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump carried 10 of the 11 House districts where AFP is issuing endorsements, six by double-digit margins.

HD 38 was the only exception — former VP Kamala Harris earned 50% of the vote there, compared with Trump’s 48%. On the same ballot, Republican state Rep. David Smith was elected to a fourth term with just over 50% of the vote in a head-to-head with Democratic nominee Marsha Summersill.

HD 45 was also close but went for Trump by about half a point as Democratic Rep. Leonard Spencer ousted the scandal-plagued former Republican Rep. Carolina Amesty, 51%-49%.

Many of the races on AFP’s radar will see action in August, however.

The field in HD 2, currently held by term-limited Rep. Alex Andrade, features a half-dozen Republicans. Fay, a U.S. Naval Academy graduate and former Navy flight officer, has the most momentum thus far, with AFP’s endorsement coming just after his campaign landed support from the Associated Industries of Florida, an influential business lobby.

AIF bundled Fay’s endorsement with one for Priddy, who is in a four-way Primary contest. Her quiver also includes Melo, who is vacating the seat to run for SD 28 — Melo is currently the lone candidate in that race.

Evening Reads

—”Donald Trump’s oil grab could lead to more violence in Venezuela” via Nikki McCann Ramirez of Rolling Stone

—“Cracks in Democrats’ Venezuela response reveal foreign policy muddle” via Liz Goodwin and Yasmeen Abutaleb of The Washington Post

—”Trump relaxes Venezuelan oil embargo, benefiting MAGA billionaire” via Judd Legum of Popular Information

—”Cuba is already on the brink. Nicolás Maduro’s ouster brings it closer to collapse.” via Deborah Acosta and José de Córdoba of The Wall Street Journal

—”Can anyone stop Trump from seizing Greenland?” via Joshua Keating of Vox

—”MAGA is already rewriting the ICE shooting in Minneapolis” via David Gilbert of WIRED

—”How ICE makes raids go viral” via Taylor Lorenz of User Mag

—”First the shooting. Then the lies.” via Adam Serwer of The Atlantic

—“With army of loyalists, Ron DeSantis built a conservative higher-ed empire” via Michael Vasquez of The Tributary

—”Nick DiCeglie bills would address growth, hurricane reconstruction and public safety pressures” via Jesse Mendoza of Florida Politics

Quote of the Day

“I do not normally respond to online rumors, but feel the need to do so at this moment. I will not be a candidate for the currently vacant HC and GM positions with the Miami Dolphins. While you never know what the future may bring, right now, my focus must remain on global events.”

— A very busy Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, clarifying his priorities. 

Put it on the Tab

Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.

Based on his latest campaign pledge, Death in the Afternoon would be the state drink if Paul Renner is elected Governor.

The DNC can huff and puff about redistricting, but all they’re doing is serving DeSantis his favorite drink: Liberal Tears.

Serve an Ante to Rep. Kevin Steele, who just deposited $5 million into his campaign account as he presses forward in challenging sitting CFO Blaise Ingoglia.

Breakthrough Insights

Tune In

Hurricanes one win from national title game

The Miami Hurricanes are one win away from playing for the College Football Playoff national championship as they face Ole Miss tonight in a national semifinal in the Fiesta Bowl (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).

Miami (12-2) won a postseason game for the first time in nine years when it beat Texas A&M in the first round of the playoff. The Hurricanes then beat second-seed Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl to advance to the national semifinals.

From 1983, when Howard Schnellenberger led the program to a national championship, until 2001, when Miami won a sixth title in program history, the Canes won 11 bowl games. Since 2001, the program had only won four bowl games until this season.

So, is Miami back?

For now, yes. But in the modern era of college football, with the transfer portal and name, image, and likeness making the game a different version of professional football, it is likely much harder for any program to be dominant.

For example, Indiana had not won a bowl game since 1991 and had played in the postseason only six times in that stretch, including a loss in last year’s CFP first round. But in the second season under head coach Curt Cignetti, the Hoosiers went 13-0, then added a win in the Rose Bowl to advance to tomorrow’s other national semifinal. Even basketball schools can become national powers, for at least a few years, in the era of free player movement.

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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.



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Massive immigration package targets employers hiring undocumented immigrants

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Florida businesses that purposely ignore whether employees are legally in the United States could face hefty fines or even criminal charges if they hire more than 50 undocumented immigrants, according to a sweeping new immigration package.

Filed Wednesday by Republican Sen. Jonathan Martin, the 34-page bill would presume certain noncitizens are at fault in car accidents, severely restrict their employment, and prevent state banks from loaning them money.

It’s the most wide-ranging immigration bundle proposed so far ahead of the 2026 Session, and would extend a 2025 crackdown that removed in-state tuition for undocumented students, impose state-level penalties for illegally entering Florida, and require all counties to partner with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The nationwide push to quash all avenues for undocumented immigration has been exemplified in Florida, the first state to create a state-run migrant detention center. Since President Donald Trump’s inauguration last January, Sunshine State officials have mirrored his anti-illegal immigration agenda.

This includes deputizing hundreds of state and local officials to act as immigration officers; Florida is the only state to have all of its (67) counties entering into 287(g) agreements, which are partnerships with ICE.

Martin didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

E-Verify penalties

SB 1380 would create civil penalties for employers who fail to properly use E-Verify, a federal database that checks whether new hires are legally authorized to work in the country. This builds off of another Martin bill, which would require all businesses to use E-Verify.

Employers who fail to check workers’ immigration status through E-Verify before submitting workers’ compensation claims would be personally liable for any costs, expenses or benefits for undocumented employees.

Purposely not checking their status, however, would result in suspension of business licenses for one year and fines up to $10,000. Doing it again would result in a five-year license suspension alongside a $100,000 fine, and a third violation would mean permanent license revocation and a $250,000 fine.

If the employer purposely flouts this section and the undocumented worker then ends up injuring another person, the employer’s license would be suspended for five years with a $100,000 fine. If the worker kills another person, the licenses would be permanently revoked with a $500,000 fine.

In a similar vein, the bill would impose a third-degree felony charge for an employer who knowingly hires more than 50 undocumented workers. The business would permanently lose its license. The bill would create a cause of action against the employer for any person injured or the next of kin of a person killed by the actions of an undocumented worker.

These provisions evoke a recently closed, two-year federal investigation into Archer Western, a road-building company hired by the state that employed undocumented immigrants for years, as the Tampa Bay Times has reported.

Officials opened the investigation after an undocumented Archer Western employee driving heavy machinery in 2022 hit and killed a Pinellas County deputy. At least 18 of his coworkers on that state-funded construction site were also undocumented.

Car accidents, foreign remittances, and licensing

SB 1380 would create a rebuttable presumption of fault in car accidents involving undocumented immigrants from other states. This means if an out-of-state driver who is undocumented is involved in a car accident in Florida, authorities could presume he or she was at fault — as long as the other motorist wasn’t driving recklessly, under the influence, or clearly at fault.

Insurers could not pay benefits or settle claims with an unauthorized out-of-state driver, the bill says.

Additionally, the bill requires law enforcement officers investigating car accidents to verify whether the parties are legally in the country.

Other provisions would ban the state Division of Risk Management from approving a claim submitted by an adult undocumented immigrant. Unauthorized immigrants would be barred from sending money to other countries and state banks could not accept IDs traditionally used by undocumented immigrants or those illegally in the state with down payments or loans.

All licensing procedures, relicensing instruction and licensing testing must be conducted in English, the bill says. Interpreters, translators or alternate language accommodations would be banned.

The 2026 Session begins on Jan. 13.

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Reporting by Liv Caputo. 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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Gov. DeSantis appoints business, education leaders to the St. Petersburg College Board

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The Trustees will help oversee governance, budgeting and strategic direction for St. Petersburg College.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has appointed two new members and reappointed three incumbents to the St. Petersburg College District Board of Trustees.

DeSantis announced the appointment of Richard Franz III and Danielle Marolf, along with the reappointment of Jason Butts, Katherine Cole and Thomas Kidwell.

Franz serves as Chief Operating Officer and Southeast regional managing partner at Sorren Inc. He is a member of both the American and Florida Institutes of Certified Public Accountants and previously worked as a CPA at PricewaterhouseCoopers. He earned a bachelor’s degree in accounting from the University of Florida.

Marolf is President, founder and head of school for Wellmont Academy. She also serves as Vice Chair and Treasurer of the Florida Coalition of Christian Private Schools Accreditation. Marolf holds bachelor’s degrees in psychology and music from Houghton College.

Butts is President of SimplyIOA, a division of the Insurance Office of America. He’s a member of the Citizens Property Insurance Corporation Board of Governors and the Florida Association of Insurance Agents, and earned a bachelor’s degree in telecommunications from the University of Florida.

Cole is a lawyer and shareholder at Hill Ward Henderson. She is Chair-elect of the Clearwater Regional Chamber of Commerce, serves on the Morton Plant Mease Hospital Board of Directors, and has previously served on both the Pinellas County and City of Clearwater charter review committees. Cole earned her undergraduate degree from the University of Tennessee and her law degree from Stetson University.

Kidwell is Vice President of Wealth Management at Cyndeo Wealth Partners. His background includes time as an account Vice President at UBS and time as a minor league baseball player and coach within the St. Louis Cardinals organization. He earned a bachelor’s degree in American Studies from Yale University.

All five appointments are subject to confirmation by the Senate. If confirmed, the Trustees will help oversee governance, budgeting and strategic direction for St. Petersburg College.



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State leaders take action against toxic baby formula

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If you’re tired of questionable additives in your baby’s bottle, good news: Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state leaders are as well.

During a press conference in Bartow, DeSantis and other state leaders condemned toxic filler in formula, introducing members of the Florida MAHA Commission and lauding their efforts to test “staples” like infant formula.

“What we just want is, basically, transparency and the truth, and we want people to be able to make the best decision for them — not necessarily what would be in the best decision of some, you know, manufacturer or something like that,” DeSantis said.

First Lady Casey DeSantis, a survivor of breast cancer and a mother of three, said “small, repeated toxins” can add up to consequences, particularly in what’s being fed to babies.

Baby formula contamination “affects the most vulnerable among us,” she said, noting that Friday’s action is just the first of many “major announcements” regarding toxic additives to food in the coming days and weeks.

Florida’s Department of Health tested 24 formulas for contaminants, with 16 of them having at least one heavy metal that exceeded federal standards, the First Lady said, evidencing “systemic problems” and showing the need for manufacturers to test for “harmful chemicals.”

“Of the 24 infant formulas tested, 16 of those formulas contained at least one, if not more, heavy metals that exceeded federal standards. Mercury was the most common detected above federal benchmarks in 16 formulas. Arsenic exceeded benchmarks in five formulas; cadmium, three; and lead, two.”

The First Lady said this initiative showed Florida’s willingness to help out the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Stork Speed operation, and called on other states to join the effort and be a “force multiplier.”

She also said that families in the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program will now have more formula options covered by financial assistance, in the event people want to change, and urged them to check out ExposingFoodToxins.com to find out specifics about given products on the market.

Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, a father of three himself, noted that many families supplement with, or exclusively use, baby formula for nursing infants, and said neurological development could be harmed by the heavy metals found in formula.

“I wish I could say this was an isolated finding,” Ladapo said.

Lt. Gov. Jay Collins said a “medically-complex child” of his could only take formula, and noted that one of those identified in the state testing was one that his kid used.



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